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Sep 16, 2019
Watch all-electric air taxi ‘Volocopter’ make debut urban flight in Stuttgart
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in category: transportation
Volocopter, an electric air taxi startup backed by Daimler, had its urban flight debut during a presentation at the Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart.
We previously reported on Volocopter in 2017 when they received a €25 million ($30 million) investment led by Daimler, Mercedes-Benz’s parent company, and a few other investors.
Continue reading “Watch all-electric air taxi ‘Volocopter’ make debut urban flight in Stuttgart” »
Sep 16, 2019
Tesla’s ‘Joe Mode’ in its V10 update is a lifesaver for parents
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: Elon Musk, sustainability, transportation
Tesla owners who travel with kids can breathe an extra sigh of relief with the electric car maker’s V10 Update, as the company has introduced a new feature known as “Joe Mode.” The new feature will allow drivers to lower the volume of alerts and prompts that will are engaged while the vehicle is in motion.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced some details on V10’s “Joe Mode” earlier this year while replying to numerous followers who speculated about what new features will be coming to be new update. As one follower asked for a mode that would help keep his children asleep during drives, Musk replied with introductory information about the V10 feature.
Hoping to get “Joe Mode” into V10. The default, of course, is normal volume, but selecting “Joe Mode” would lower the volume of strident beeps & chimes by half.
Sep 16, 2019
Researchers advance noise cancelling for quantum computers
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: computing, quantum physics
A team from Dartmouth College and MIT has designed and conducted the first lab test to successfully detect and characterize a class of complex, “non-Gaussian” noise processes that are routinely encountered in superconducting quantum computing systems.
The characterization of non-Gaussian noise in superconducting quantum bits is a critical step toward making these systems more precise.
The joint study, published in Nature Communications, could help accelerate the realization of quantum computing systems. The experiment was based on earlier theoretical research conducted at Dartmouth and published in Physical Review Letters in 2016.
See the Earth from 20 miles (32 km) above in this breathtaking 360° footage captured from a weather balloon.
Sep 16, 2019
EU agency starts space sustainability initiative
Posted by Adriano Autino in categories: business, security, space, sustainability
PARIS — The European Union’s equivalent of a foreign ministry is starting a new effort to promote the need for sustainable space operations, but that effort will not initially include any new regulation of European satellite operators.
Carine Claeys, special envoy for space and head of the Space Task Force for the European External Action Service, said in a Sept. 13 panel discussion at Euroconsult’s World Satellite Business Week that the Safety, Security and Sustainability of Outer Space (3SOS) public diplomacy initiative will promote “ethical conduct” in space amid concerns about orbital debris.
The acronym, she noted, has a second meaning. “It is also three times SOS,” she said, “to create the case and a sense of urgency.”
Sep 16, 2019
NASA Funds New Lunar CubeSat Orbiter Mission
Posted by Bruce Dorminey in category: space
NASA funds ambitious new CubeSat mission to prove navigation technology for crewed Artemis mission to the lunar surface.
Sep 16, 2019
How Southeast Asia’s start-up exit environment is maturing with tech in the vanguard
Posted by Derick Lee in category: futurism
The bottom line when it comes to Southeast Asia’s exit environment for start-ups is that the ecosystem is simply more built out today as a result of now having the right ingredients.
Tech companies in the region are now starting to change the question from – can we exit? – to – how would we like to exit?
Sep 16, 2019
Engineered Bioweapons Are the New Security Threat, Here’s What You Need to Know
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: alien life, government, military
;-;
Bioweapons have been around for centuries, but with advances in synthetic biology we’re now able to make them from scratch.
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Sep 16, 2019
Mentors, Encouragement, Hands-on Learning Boost Girls’ Interest in STEM Substantially
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: computing, education, employment, engineering, mathematics
Generally girls lose interest in STEM careers as they get older. But, according to a new study, small changes at school and at home can have a profound impact on how girls perceive STEM careers, how confident they feel in class and how likely they are to pursue STEM academically and into their careers.
The study, “Closing the STEM Gap,” published today by Microsoft, surveyed more than 6,000 girls and young women on their interests and perceptions of science, technology, engineering and math. It found that girls tended to lose interest in STEM as they headed toward adulthood. And, by the time they’d finished high school, their interest had dropped substantially. For example, the report found that interest in computer science among females dropped 27 percentage points between middle school and college. According to the report: “In middle school … 31 percent of girls believe that jobs requiring coding and programming are ‘not for them.’ In high school, that percentage jumps up to 40. By the time they’re in college, 58 percent of girls count themselves out of these jobs.”
But, the study found, countermeasures both large and small can have a profound effect, including: