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Jul 10, 2022
Powerful Sand Batteries Are Literally Dirt Simple
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: energy
A startup from Finland called Polar Night Energy has developed an energy storage system based on sand. The idea is to store excess energy generated from clean electricity sources such as Wind, Solar, etc., to be reused days or even months later.
If it works, it will help solve the primary pain point of intermittent clean energy sources by making their final energy output more predictable and, therefore, more reliable.
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Jul 10, 2022
Solar-plus-storage microgrid replaces diesel in remote Alaskan village
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: energy
Blue Planet Energy has successfully deployed this first-of-its-kind project to support the residents of Shungnak, a remote community above the Arctic Circle in Alaska. The microgrid was designed to address the numerous challenges of operating in extreme conditions and break the community’s dependence on its expensive and polluting diesel generator power plant.
The resilient microgrid consists of a 225 kW solar array that can offset much of Shungnak’s energy needs. The system is integrated with 12 cabinets of 32 kWh Blue Ion LX battery systems, each storing excess energy for later use. In addition to reducing the village’s carbon footprint, the system also greatly decreases the high fuel and maintenance costs associated with running diesel generators in remote Alaska.
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Jul 10, 2022
Google announces cheaper alternatives to college degrees
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: futurism
Google’s new certificate program provides alternatives to college degrees that are cheaper to obtain, but potentially worth the same in the job market.
Jul 10, 2022
How to watch NASA reveal the first stunning James Webb telescope images
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
The cosmic images will be unprecedented.
A giant golden eye flying around the sun about a million miles from Earth will give humans an unprecedented view of the universe.
The James Webb Space Telescope, a powerful $10 billion observatory run by NASA, the European Space Agency, and the Canadian Space Agency, has chilled down to its optimal temperature. Engineers have finished calibrating its scientific instruments. Now the telescope with a 21-foot-diameter mirror is open for business.
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Jul 10, 2022
Researchers completely re-engineer yeast to make more biofuel
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: chemistry, sustainability
Circa 2020
A little while ago, we covered the idea of using photovoltaic materials to drive enzymatic reactions in order to produce specific chemicals. The concept is being considered mostly because doing the same reaction in a cell is often horribly inefficient, because everything else in the cell is trying to regulate the enzymes, trying to use the products, trying to convert the byproducts into something toxic, or up to something even more annoying. But in many cases, these reactions rely on chemicals that are only made by cells, leaving some researchers to suspect it still might be easier to use living things in the end.
Jul 10, 2022
Peter Tse — What Makes Brains Conscious?
Posted by Alan Jurisson in categories: chemistry, mathematics, neuroscience, physics
Everything we know, think and feel—everything!—comes from our brains. But consciousness, our private sense of inner awareness, remains a mystery. Brain activities—spiking of neuronal impulses, sloshing of neurochemicals—are not at all the same thing as sights, sounds, smells, emotions. How on earth can our inner experiences be explained in physical terms?
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To journey across the stars requires voyages of centuries or more, ensuring the crew will be long dead by the time they arrive. If you want your crew available to colonize new worlds after their interstellar voyage, you either have to extend their lives, train their descendants, or freeze them till they arrive. We will examine the third option day, freezing people with cryonics, using hibernation, or suspended animation, or some other form of stasis the future might offer.
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Jul 10, 2022
Humanity getting lost in the MATRIOSHKA Brain🤖
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: computing, finance, space travel
A Matrioshka Brain is a supermassive structure in space consisting of processors and connected to each other into a massive computer around a sun harnessing its energy completely. So far we haven’t built one as we don’t have the technology for it but when we do the question will be if people will be lost in the vast computing power of the Matrishka brain.
Watch all 3 videos with Brendan Caulfield:
3. Future of Humanity https://youtu.be/XbhWEDhcdFk.
2. The Rockets of SpaceX 🚀https://youtu.be/VPgVS9qgBEM
1. The CAR company that will take us to SPACE🚀 https://youtu.be/Y0jiGkAH-pE
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