Menu

Blog

Page 5862

Nov 23, 2020

Will the physics add up for near-silent, ion-propelled cargo drones?

Posted by in categories: drones, physics

Florida’s Undefined Technologies claims it has managed to increase the thrust levels of ion propulsion systems to “unprecedented levels” with its “Air Tantrum” technology, enabling near-silent drones with no moving parts, that look like flying pallets.

All aircraft propulsion systems provide thrust by moving air or another propellant, and for the vast majority of drones that means some kind of fan or propeller spinning angled blades to push air through and create thrust in the opposite direction. Ionic propulsion, on the other hand, is entirely electromagnetic.

The process uses a high-voltage electric field to ionize the nitrogen and oxygen molecules in the air, liberating electrons to create, primarily, a lot of positively-charged nitrogen molecules. These are drawn toward a negatively-charged electrode, usually in the form of a flat screen grid, and as they accelerate, they bang into other air molecules and bump them in the same direction to create an ionic wind.

Nov 23, 2020

‘It’s disgusting’: CFIB CEO slams Toronto, Peel lockdowns as unfair for small businesses

Posted by in categories: business, government

The president and CEO of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) blasted new lockdown measures ordered by Ontario in Toronto and Peel Region, saying it’s unfair that smaller businesses must limit sales to delivery and curbside pickup while big box retailers remain open to the public.

“I’m absolutely shocked that the Ford government would go down this road,” Dan Kelly said in an interview on Friday. “To allow big box stores and even department stores like The Bay to remain open while shutting down every single little independent retailer in Toronto and Peel – I can’t imagine on what planet that’s fair.”

Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced on Friday that the two hot spots will be entering lockdown, effective Monday.

Nov 23, 2020

SpaceX Engineers share details about the Starlink Internet Network

Posted by in categories: internet, satellites

SpaceX is deploying a constellation of internet-beaming Starlink satellites into low Earth orbit where they will beam broadband service globally. Starlink customers will be supporting SpaceX’s ultimate goal to make life multi-planetary. The network could one day provide additional funding to develop a fleet of Starships that will enable astronauts to colonize Mars. To date, SpaceX has deployed nearly 900 satellites out of over 4,400 it plans to launch. The company rolled out a beta service of the network for select customers living in the northern United States and southern Canada. To receive service from the satellites in space, users mount a phased-array antenna dish and connect via a Wi-Fi router device.

On Friday, SpaceX engineers shared details about the Starlink network via a Reddit ‘Ask Me Anything’ discussion. Currently, SpaceX sends invitations to potential customers living within range of the satellites in orbit, a Reddit user asked when SpaceX will offer Starlink service to the public. —“Steadily increasing network access overtime to bring in as many people as possible,” the SpaceX engineer responded, “Notably we’re planning to move from a limited beta to a wider beta in late January, should give more users an opportunity to participate.” To potentially become a Beta tester of the Starlink network you can sign up via Starlink.com.

SpaceX engineers also shared that as of today, SpaceX’s broadband service does not have data caps. “So we really don’t want to implement restrictive data caps like people have encountered with satellite internet in the past. Right now we’re still trying to figure a lot of stuff out—we might have to do something in the future to prevent abuse and just ensure that everyone else gets quality service,” they stated.

Nov 23, 2020

To Teach an AI to Pursue Goals, Scientists Made It Play an RPG

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Playing as a dragon, the AI agent had to complete quests using its words.

Nov 23, 2020

Opensource: The magic power of AI research

Posted by in categories: habitats, robotics/AI

As an open-source developer, the question I hear the most is “why would you want to give that away for free.?”

In the field of AI, there are many reasons why opensource is key. First, the code for building models does not give away any competitive advantage because the value comes from models+your own data. Second, it lets the whole world help you find and correct mistakes. Imagine building a house where every architect in the world can contribute one tiny idea. But more importantly, AI is a really hard problem to solve.

The problems in the field cannot be solved by any one individual or group.

Nov 23, 2020

How Our World Has Changed In Just 32 Years

Posted by in category: futurism

Amazing how much our world has changed since 1984 😱

Google Earth + UNILAD Adventure

Nov 23, 2020

Meet 10 Companies Working On Reading Your Thoughts (And Even Those Of Your Pets)

Posted by in categories: computing, neuroscience

Are brain-computer interfaces the next way we will communicate with machines and even with one another? Here are 10 companies working on decoding our thoughts.

Nov 23, 2020

Topic: Universal Basic Income

Posted by in category: economics

Read more

Nov 23, 2020

Full-Body Holograms Are Here, and They’re Amazing

Posted by in category: holograms

Dan Lovy


Holograms have been around for decades now, but more as a novelty than a crucial technology that everyone uses. PORTL thinks it can change that.

Nov 23, 2020

Radical liquid-mirror ‘Ultimately Large Telescope’ on the moon could study the very first stars

Posted by in category: space

Yes, a spinning vat of reflective liquid in a moon crater sounds awesome.