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Feb 6, 2022
How Computer Vision Can Create Smart Transportation Systems
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
Bustling cities need the requisite transportation networks that can keep them running smoothly. AI and computer vision-powered smart transportation enables smart cities to achieve that objective with ease.
Feb 6, 2022
Your Cousin From Boston (Dynamics) :60
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: robotics/AI, security
**PARTY EDITION** Real robots. NO visual effects!
While working security at the Boston Dynamics robotics lab, Your Cousin From Boston gives a robot a Sam Adams. At least he brought a Wicked IPA Party Pack to share!
Feb 6, 2022
Radioactivity May Fuel Life Deep Underground and Inside Other Worlds
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: energy
New work suggests that the radiolytic splitting of water supports giant subsurface ecosystems of life on Earth — and could do it elsewhere, too.
Feb 6, 2022
How the World Really Works review: The tech that underpins society
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: energy, food
From how food is grown to how we generate power, Vaclav Smil’s new book outlines the basic technologies that keep society going and commands us to know them better.
Feb 6, 2022
Protons are probably actually smaller than long thought
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: particle physics
A few years ago, a novel measurement technique showed that protons are probably smaller than had been assumed since the 1990s. The discrepancy surprised the scientific community; some researchers even believed that the Standard Model of particle physics would have to be changed. Physicists at the University of Bonn and the Technical University of Darmstadt have now developed a method that allows them to analyze the results of older and more recent experiments much more comprehensively than before. This also results in a smaller proton radius from the older data. So there is probably no difference between the values — no matter which measurement method they are based on. The study appeared in Physical Review Letters.
Feb 6, 2022
This is the space graveyard where the International Space Station will be buried
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: space
Spacefaring nations have been dumping their junk in the area around the Pacific Ocean’s Point Nemo, the most remote place on Earth, since the 1970s.
Feb 6, 2022
Blood Test #1 in 2022: Supplements, Fitness, Diet
Posted by Mike Lustgarten in category: biotech/medical
Feb 6, 2022
Aquamarine Solar Project — Smart from Start to Finish
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: food, health, solar power, sustainability
By Helen O’Shea
On a windy, bright day in Lemoore, California another 250 megawatts of clean power was added to California’s energy mix with the dedication of the Aquamarine Solar Project. There are many new solar projects coming online across the country these days, but the Aquamarine project is notable for its innovative development model — it’s part of a 20,000-acre master-planned solar park on fallowed and salt-contaminated agricultural lands in the Westlands Water District in California’s Central Valley.
Disturbed lands farmed for years with no residual habitat value are the perfect place to locate utility-scale solar projects. In 2016 these lands, among many others, were identified as suitable for development by a diverse group of stakeholders through the San Joaquin Valley Least Conflict Solar Planning exercise.
Feb 6, 2022
How did the early Universe expand faster than light?
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: futurism
According to Einstein’s theories of relativity, no matter can travel faster than light. So how did the early Universe expand at a rate faster than light?