Page 5527
Feb 11, 2022
The US Army throws $20 million into AI-equipped, foldable quadcopters
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: drones, mapping, robotics/AI, surveillance
The U.S. Army has awarded a $20 million a year contract to a California-based drone manufacturer, named Skydio, as part of its efforts to move away from foreign-made and commercially available off-the-shelf drones. Skydio revealed in a press release that it would supply its X2D drones for the U.S. Army’s Short Range Reconnaissance (SSR) Program.
With an aim to equip its soldiers with rapidly deployable aerial solutions that can conduct reconnaissance and surveillance activities over short ranges, the Army’s SSR program has been considering small drones for some time now. More than 30 vendors submitted their proposals to the Army, and five finalists were shortlisted for rigorous testing.
Continue reading “The US Army throws $20 million into AI-equipped, foldable quadcopters” »
Feb 11, 2022
IBM Announces Quantum Computing Partnership With Quebec
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: business, government, quantum physics, robotics/AI
IBM has just announced a partnership with the Government of Quebec to create the Quebec-IBM Discovery Accelerator in Bromont, Quebec. The accelerator will focus on using quantum computing, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and High-Performance Computing (HPC) to develop new projects, business/scientific/academia collaborations, and skills-building initiatives in research areas including energy, life sciences (genomics and drug discovery), new materials development, and sustainability. This is the fourth such center that IBM has announced. The three previously announced partnerships are with Cleveland Clinic, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and the UK’s Science and Technology Facilities Council Hartree Centre. IBM’s formal mission statement for these Discovery Accelerators is: “Accelerate scientific discovery and societal impact with a convergence of AI, quantum, and hybrid cloud in a community of discovery with research, academic, industry, startup, and government organizations working together.” IBM’s formal mission statement for these Discovery Accelerators is:
“Accelerate scientific discovery and societal impact with a convergence of AI, quantum, and hybrid cloud in a community of discovery with research, academic, industry, startup, and government organizations working together.”
In addition, the company has developed individual mission statements for each of the four Discovery Accelerators:
Feb 11, 2022
Giant Dinosaur Tracks Stump Paleontologists to Believe Sauropods Did Handstands
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: futurism
Feb 11, 2022
The world’s biggest optical telescope will explore the dark reaches of the universe
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: space
Feb 11, 2022
NTIA, NASA, NSF letter to FCC regarding Starlink Gen 2
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: internet
Feb 11, 2022
MIT engineers invent surgical “duct tape”
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: sustainability
MIT’s biodegradable surgical tape is designed to seal tears in the gastrointestinal tract, potentially preventing sepsis-causing leaks.
Feb 11, 2022
New plant-derived composite is tough as bone and hard as aluminum
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: nanotechnology, sustainability
The strongest part of a tree lies not in its trunk or its sprawling roots, but in the walls of its microscopic cells.
A single wood cell wall is constructed from fibers of cellulose—nature’s most abundant polymer, and the main structural component of all plants and algae. Within each fiber are reinforcing cellulose nanocrystals, or CNCs, which are chains of organic polymers arranged in nearly perfect crystal patterns. At the nanoscale, CNCs are stronger and stiffer than Kevlar. If the crystals could be worked into materials in significant fractions, CNCs could be a route to stronger, more sustainable, naturally derived plastics.
Now, an MIT team has engineered a composite made mostly from cellulose nanocrystals mixed with a bit of synthetic polymer. The organic crystals take up about 60 to 90 percent of the material—the highest fraction of CNCs achieved in a composite to date.
Feb 11, 2022
Hypoint opens UK hydrogen cell development unit to power eVTOL and other aircraft
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: chemistry, drones, life extension
Silicon Valley hydrogen fuel cell innovator Hypoint has inaugurated a new UK unit intended to speed development of its air-cooled aviation power technology, and ready it to supply zero-carbon power to next-generation aircraft like electric takeoff and landing vehicles (eVTOL) as they prepare to launch services.
HyPoint’s tech uses compressed air for both cooling and oxygen supplies delivered to its fuel systems, which are lighter, less polluting, have longer lifespans, and enable seven times more flight capacity than lithium-ion and other chemical batteries. Those attributes are luring developers of existing, new drone, and eVTOL craft to give emerging hydrogen cell products serious consideration as drivers of their vehicles – especially as the world seeks to reduce its carbon output. In 2018, aviation sector’s share of global CO2 emissions was 2.5%.