Growth of Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy Market in Global Industry: Overview, Size and Share 2020-2029 – Cole of Duty

KandJ market research added a new market research report on 2014-2029 Global Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy Market by Player, Region, Type, Application and Sales Channel in the database of market research collaterals consisting of overall market scenario with prevalent and future growth prospects, among other growth strategies used by key players to stay ahead of the market.

Report Overview

It is our aim to provide our readers with report for Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market, which examines the industry during the period 2014 2029. One goal is to present deeper insight into this line of business in this document. The first part of the report focuses on providing the industry definition for the product or service under focus in the Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market report. Next, the document will study the factors responsible for hindering and enhancing growth in the industry. After covering various areas of interest in the industry, the report aims to provide how the Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market will grow during the forecast period.

The Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market report between the years 2020-2029 will highlight the current value of the industry. At the same time, there is also an estimate of how much this line of business will be worth at the end of the forecast period. As it is our goal to maintain high levels of accuracy at all times, we will take a look at the CAGR of the Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market. We make sure that all the information available in this report has excellent levels of readability. One way we achieve this target is by Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market segmentation. Going through the report for 2020 -2029 will bring our readers up-to-date regarding this industry.

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COVID-19 can affect the global market in 3 ways: by directly affecting the production and demand, by creating supply chain and market disturbance, and by its financial impact on enterprises and financial markets.

While examining the information from this document, one thing becomes clear, the elements which contribute to increase in demand for the product or service. At the same time, there will be a focus on what drives the popularity of these types of products or services. This report is for those who want to learn about Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market, along with its forecast for 2020-2029. Information regarding market revenue, competitive partners, and key players will also be available.

Segmentation

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Market Analysis By Key Companies

Market Analysis By Type

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Market Analysis By Applications

Market Analysis By Regions

Latest Industry News

From this Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market report, the reader will also get to learn about the latest developments in the industry. The reason is that these products or services have the potential to disrupt this line of business. If there is information about company acquisitions or mergers, this information will also be available in this portion of the Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy market report.Additionally, recent trends, mergers and acquisitions, region-wise growth analysis along with challenges that are affecting the growth of the market are also stated in the report.

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Growth of Global Testosterone Replacement Therapy Market in Global Industry: Overview, Size and Share 2020-2029 - Cole of Duty

As More Commuters Return To Work, Heres What It Looks Like On The Red Line – WBEZ

Soliciting and gambling arent the only focus of the CTAs announcements these days. Since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, Chicagos L train system has updated many of its protocols to encourage proper hygiene and social distancing.

There are new sanitation regimens, which include daily as well as regular deep cleanings using new electrostatic sprayers and an antimicrobial surface coating designed to prevent viruses from sticking to surfaces.

The CTA also established a passenger capacity limit of 22 riders per train car although its up to riders to enforce this limit and said it runs longer trains on some routes to provide more space for social distancing. CTA employees also monitor platforms at high-ridership stations via camera, and make announcements asking customers to spread out when theyre too close or to wait for the next train when the one at the station is too crowded.

While the CTA reports ridership is down 75% compared to this time last year, systemwide, more people are starting to take the train or bus for work and essential trips now that Chicago is in Phase 4 of reopening.

On a hot day last week, WBEZ spent a day on the Red Line to talk with riders and see how the new protocols work in practice. Some cars were eerily empty; others were near the passenger capacity limit. Heres how some people are navigating public transit during the pandemic.

Why are you taking the train? To get to work downtown

How often have you ridden since the onset of the pandemic? Every day starting in early May

Im actually immunocompromised, and I was taking Ubers to work for a little while. But I live in Avondale, and to Uber to and from Avondale for work 5 days a week is $600 a month for me. And thats not including surges. So I wasnt really able to afford that, so Im getting on the train. It is what it is.

I usually see people who are nurses and doctors getting on board. I work around a lot of hospitals, so thats pretty common. I usually see a lot of construction workers going on, or people getting off of night shifts. Its usually the people who are holding the city together.

Why are you taking the train? Headed to a construction job

How often have you ridden since the onset of the pandemic? Every day starting in mid-June

Before we get on the trains, at some locations [CTA workers] would come in and wipe them down, spray and sweep, sanitize the chairs and handlebars. And thats what I like.

Well get on and it smells fresh and were off. I [also] like that theyre doing the [social distancing] stickers. Some people follow it, some people dont. Its not like theyre directly on our backs.

Its kind of difficult to have to wear a mask, especially for people who are working and have to wear a mask all day. Its already hard to breathe. The majority of people are wearing masks, but some people dont. I dont judge. Right now I had [a mask] on but couldnt breathe, so I took it off for a while.

Why are you taking the train? To visit family

How often have you ridden since the onset of the pandemic? Once a week

You would think the trains arent as crowded or as busy. No. When the buses were free, for those months, oh those buses were crowded. And Ill tell you this much, too. At 9 in the evening this train was crowded. I found out when I left my cousins house to go to the South Side it was from the North Side to the South Side. These trains were crowded. I mean, theyre crowded. They had more passengers than you would think at night than during the day. It was very surprising to me.

Why are you taking the train? To visit Wrigley Field

How often have you ridden since the onset of the pandemic? First time riding since arriving in Chicago from Chattanooga, Tenn.

Aaron: Were actually trying to get to Wrigley Field now. Were staying just up from here downtown and just getting out doing some sightseeing.

Sandy: Were here for a couple of days. I feel like its been pretty good so far. Weve traveled, weve been on a trip this month also, so we felt pretty safe about it.

Aaron: We just try to stay as clear from people as we can, wear the masks and wash our hands a lot. All the basic stuff. So were trying to live it up as much as we can but not be dangerous about it and just use common sense.

Why are you taking the train? To do computer installations at a customer site

How often have you ridden since the onset of the pandemic? Never, until yesterday.

I used to be a daily rider. Our company converted to working remotely for most of us that can, so I have not touched public transportation until yesterday when I was on this project to do computer installations on-site. There were about six people on the entire car during rush hour. And yesterday while coming back, one person sat behind me so I moved to another seat 5-6 feet away.

I suppose now since there are so few people on it, and with the regular cleanings, Im rather comfortable. I guess after a few months of anything, people tend to settle into a new routine. But for the first couple of months, I really preferred to avoid it. I also avoided the buses for the same reason.

Our office is going to an optional one-day-a-week attendance in the office. Im going to prefer to stay at home. I think my mother is a germaphobe, so I was raised with that attitude. So given the choice to avoid it, Ill avoid it. But there are some times when you need to be at the office or at a customer site to do the work, so thats why Im going in.

Why are you taking the train? To meet my wife at Union Station

How often have you ridden since the onset of the pandemic? Once in a while for outings with my kids

We come downtown and enjoy the scenery. Its more peaceful [on the train] because there are less people on it. [The kids] love it. It gives them a chance to get out.

Why are you taking the train? Heading home from work as a personal caregiver

How often have you ridden since the onset of the pandemic? Five out of every seven days

I take care of people, Im a caregiver. I go to their homes, and I assist with their daily duties. Im a companion and do various things for the clients depending on what they need and what their abilities are.

To me, for CTA, I think theyve been doing a good job as far as the social distancing, and the people thats on the trains that Ive been with, theyve been social distancing. I havent had a problem, not at all. Im blessed for that because Im a hygienic person anyways.

I rely on it, I really do, because it gets me from point A to point B. No matter where I have to go in the city, theres a bus or train that can get me there. Its very accessible. That is my transportation, public transportation.

Manuel Martinez is WBEZs photojournalist. Follow him@DenverManuel. Katherine Nagasawa is WBEZs audience engagement producer. Follow her @Kat_Nagasawa.

Read more: All of WBEZs coverage of the COVID-19 outbreak in Chicago and the region

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As More Commuters Return To Work, Heres What It Looks Like On The Red Line - WBEZ

Tissue Engineering Market Is Estimated to be Valued at USD 53424.00 Million and Is Expected to Register a CAGR of 17.84% By 2024 – Daily Research…

Tissue Engineering Market Highlights

The GlobalTissue Engineering Marketis estimated to be valued atUSD 53,424Million by 2024 and is expected to register aCAGR of 17.84%during the forecast period. The nano-fibrous material segment dominated the global tissue engineering market, by material, and is projected to reach USD 16,235.5 Million by 2024 owing to the cost-effectiveness of the product; moreover. However, the biomimetic material segment is projected to be the fastest-growing segment during the forecast period.

North America dominated the market, accounting for the largest share of the market in 2018, and the regional market is expected to register a CAGR of 17.17% during the review period. The European market was the second largest in 2018. The market is projected to reach USD 16,514.6 million by the end of 2024.

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Tissue Engineering Market Segment Analysis

The global tissue engineering market has been segmented based on material, application, and region. Based on material, the market has been divided into nano-fibrous material, biomimetic material, composite material. The nano-fibrous material segment held the majority market share in 2018. However, the biomimetic material segment is anticipated to be the fastest growing, followed by the composite material segment.

Based on application, the market has been divided into orthopedics, musculoskeletal and spine, cancer, skin/integumentary, dental, cardiology, urology, neurology, cord blood & cell banking, GI & gynecology. The orthopedics, musculoskeletal and spine segment accounted for the larger market share in 2018. However, the cancer segment is expected to exhibit higher CAGR during the forecast period.

Tissue Engineering Market Players

Market Research Future (MRFR) recognizes Stryker (US), Allergan (US), Medtronic (Ireland), Zimmer (US), Baxter International (US), Integra Life Sciences (US), Organovo Holdings Inc (US), Cook Medical (US), DePuy Synthes (US), Acelity (US) as the key players in the Global Tissue Engineering Market.

Tissue Engineering Market Regional Analysis

Geographically, the global tissue engineering market has been segmented into North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and the rest of the world. As per MRFR analysis, North America was the largest market for tissue engineering in 2018 and is expected to remain dominant during the review period. Europe accounted for a significant market share and is projected to be the second-largest market during the forecast period. The rising prevalence of chronic diseases is a major driving factor for the growth of the tissue engineering market in Europe.

Tissue Engineering Market Key Findings:

The Global Tissue Engineering Market is projected to reach over USD 53,424.00 million by 2024 at a 84% CAGR during the review period of 2019 to 2024.

North America accounted for the largest market share.

The nano-fibrous material segment is projected to register the highest CAGR of 18.08% during the forecast period.

Key manufacturers are adopting geographic expansions, corporate acquisitions, and product launches as growth strategies. Moreover, they are focusing on e-commerce for distribution.

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Tissue Engineering Market Is Estimated to be Valued at USD 53424.00 Million and Is Expected to Register a CAGR of 17.84% By 2024 - Daily Research...

New multidisciplinary task force to combat COVID-19 pandemics is backed by Manchester expert – The University of Manchester

Professor Yi Li added that the new research and innovation group will focus on key, interrelated themes, including:

To progress research in these exciting areas the IDH-IF-STIO is planning to organise a range of international activities, including hosting regular scientific and technological cooperation forums and platforms, running international academic conferences, as well as setting up international committees for academic and technical professionals.

The proposed new network will be introduced at the 13th Textile Bioengineering and Information Symposium on Friday, July 10 which will have the theme Combating COVID-19 Pandemic with Science and Technology Innovations.

Professor Yi Li will also be a keynote speaker at the online symposium and his talk will be entitled Combating COVID-19 pandemic with science and technology innovations.

Professor Yi Li is an expert across the biomaterials field including smart functional fibres, nano functional textile materials, wearable devices, tissue engineering and nanoscale drug delivery systems and has led on innovation to develop and produce PPE equipment in response to pandemics.

The International Digital Health and Intelligent Fibre Science and Technology Innovation Organization (IDH-IF-STIO) is supported by over 20 universities, organisations and enterprises across Europe and Asia, including State Key Laboratory of Fiber Material Modification, Donghua University, China; State Key Laboratory of Intelligent Textile Materials and Products, Department of Materials, University of Manchester, United Kingdom; Xi'an Polytechnic University, China; ENSAIT, France; Textile Bioengineering and Informatics Society (TBIS), United Kingdom.

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New multidisciplinary task force to combat COVID-19 pandemics is backed by Manchester expert - The University of Manchester

TSET awards Healthy Living Program Grant to Gateway to Prevention and Recovery – Shawnee News Star

Vicky O. Misa|The Shawnee News-Star

The Board of Directors for the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) selected Gateway to Prevention and Recovery in Shawnee as a grantee for the next round of the TSET Healthy Living Program during their quarterly board meeting in May. The award in the first year of the grant is up to $220,000.

The grant initiative will utilize county and municipal health data, along with community feedback to customize a data-driven plan to tackle the barriers associated with healthy eating, physical activity and tobacco use in high risk areas within the funded county. The approach involves collaboration with leaders and key stakeholders at the local level.

The coronavirus pandemic has shown that prevention is more important than ever for public health, said TSET Board of Directors Chair Bruce Benjamin, Ph.D. Those with underlying conditions like diabetes, high blood pressure, or heart of lung disease are more likely to experience serious complications and death from the coronavirus.

At Gateway, we believe that local people solve local problems and people help support what they create, said TSET Healthy Living Consultant Holly Gordon. The Healthy Living Program allows community partners, organizations, and Gateway staff to work together to reduce the number of preventable deaths in Oklahomans.

The TSET Healthy Living Program prioritizes work in communities where health risk factors tobacco use, poor nutrition and sedentary lifestyle -- are among the highest. At their May meeting, the TSET Board awarded nearly $7 million to 35 organizations that will serve 37 counties through the program. The new grant cycle begins July 1 and is renewable annually.

This initiative builds on years of success through multiple community-based programs funded by TSET, said Julie Bisbee, TSET executive director. It takes a comprehensive approach to partner with organizations that have a demonstrated ability to tackle high-impact interventions to help change health behaviors in our state.

TSET recognizes that local people are best at solving problems at the municipal level.

For a complete list of the grantees, visit tset.ok.gov.

The Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) serves as a partner and bridge builder for organizations working toward shaping a healthier future for all Oklahomans. Investing $45 million in prevention and research in Oklahoma each year, TSET has been a driving force in the decade-long decline in tobacco use in the state. TSET provides leadership at the intersections of health by working across Oklahoma, by cultivating innovative and life-changing research, and by working across public and private sectors to develop, support, implement and evaluate creative strategies to take advantage of emerging opportunities to improve the public's health. To learn more, visit http://www.tset.ok.gov.

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TSET awards Healthy Living Program Grant to Gateway to Prevention and Recovery - Shawnee News Star

Canadian health care isnt immune to racism, experts say. Heres why – Global News

Police in Ontario shot 62-year-old Ejaz Choudry in his home. In New Brunswick, they shot Chantel Moore in her home and Rodney Levi at a friends barbecue. Prior to that, Regis Korchinski-Paquet fell from her balcony in Toronto while police were in her apartment. All four have died in the last six weeks; police called not because they committed crimes, but to check on their well-being.

Amid national and international reckonings over racism and police brutality, there have been widespread calls to use mental health practitioners not cops in moments of crisis. But while mental health is just one aspect of overall health (albeit a very important one), Canadian health care is not immune to the systemic racism impacting the countrys police forces.

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Experts say thats evident in a myriad of ways, from the coronavirus pandemics disproportionate impact on Indigenous people and Black people to other, non-COVID-19 headlines.

In Alberta, the minister of health recently ordered an independent investigation into the health authoritys handling of a noose taped to an operating room at the Grande Prairie Hospital in 2016. In B.C., the province is looking into allegations that some staff have been engaging in a racist game of whats-the-blood-alcohol-level of the (primarily) Indigenous patients who come to them seeking care.

But where defunding the police is an option, defunding health care is decidedly not. Nor, says Dr. Suzanne Shoush, does adding more Black, Indigenous and other racialized health-care providers solve the problem on its own you have to change the system.

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Like policing, health cares racism problem is systemic, says Shoush, who is a Black Indigenous doctor of Sudanese and Coast Salish heritage and the Indigenous health faculty lead for the University of Torontos family and community medicine department. Much like policing, she says, tackling it will require facing up to some uncomfortable truths.

It really all has to do with the blindness of privilege. People who have privilege are really, really blind to the fact privilege plays a role in where they are today.

Start with thesocial determinants of health: key factors that contribute to how healthy you, as an individual, are, as well as the group of people living around you.

Some you can control (to a degree), others you cannot: income and social status, employment and working conditions, education and literacy, childhood experiences, physical environments, access to health services, biology and genetic endowment, gender, culture, race and racism, and historical trauma.

These factors merge together, making Indigenous people amongthe highest-risk groups for diabetes and complications from diabetes, over-represented in HIV infection cases, tuberculosis cases and sexually transmitted infections, with a stroke rate nearly twice as high as non-Indigenous Canadians and a suicide rate among First Nations youth five to seven times higher than their non-Indigenous peers.

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For Black people in Canada, the data is harder to come by (a factor experts sayserves to worsen Black health). Buta research review from the Wellesley Institute, a non-profit that seeks to improve health equity in the Greater Toronto Area, indicates Black peoples health is harmed in part because they live in a racist environment. Much like Indigenous people, any racism experienced during their interactions with the system impacts their access to future care.

Furthermore, statistics compiled by the Black Health Alliance reveal that Black people make up 18 per cent of Canadians living in poverty even though they only represent less than three per cent of the total population. In Ontario, the risk of psychosis for people of Caribbean, East African and West African origin is 60 per cent higher than for others. And the likelihood that breast cancer kills Black women is 43 per cent higher than for white women.

Epidemiologist Nancy Kriegerboils it down to six pathways through which racism harms a persons health, including economic and social deprivation, socially inflicted trauma, inadequate or degrading medical care, and ecosystem degradation and alienation from the land the latter a recurring theme in reports like theRoyal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and theNational Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

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When you are displaced, you are not healthy, says Shoush, who recently wrote about how Canada was founded without the consent of Indigenous and Black people.

When we have a society that reflects and was founded in a non-consensual relationship, its very displacing, and this is why we see huge disparities in wellness, in health, chronic disease, life expectancy, child poverty.

Where some Indigenous people in Toronto will not consider going to the doctor, they might consider chatting with Cheryllee Bourgeois. They see her, after all, with her three children out in the community, at a powwow, at Thursday night socials at the Native Centre.

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Bourgeois is an exemption Mtis midwife working with Seventh Generation Midwives Toronto, as well as a professor in Ryerson Universitys midwifery education program. She became the citys first exemption midwife in 2018, following in the well-trodden footsteps of exemption midwives in Six Nations in southern Ontario.

Working under the exemption allows registered midwives (Bourgeois was one for more than a decade) to provide a broader scope of care to their clients to do Pap tests, address sexual and reproductive health and provide other health care not confined to pregnancy and the first six weeks of a babys life.

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The job itself is a tacit reminder of systemic racism in health care and recognition that increasing Indigenous access to health care involves community accountability and acknowledging Canadian history.

The health-care system was a very critical, key piece of the whole colonial history of the subjugation of Indigenous people, Bourgeois says.

There were such things as Indian hospitals where you were provided substandard care and where you were not allowed to go to the mainstream hospital.

Even now, it doesnt matter if Indigenous people give birth in rural, remote or urban settings in Canada, she says, their outcomes remain the same.

So that leads to something deeper, which is this very pervasive and strong systemic racism that exists within the system, affecting health outcomes, she says. In other words, its good to look at improving access, but if thats the sole focus of change then it doesnt actually solve the problem.

But Bourgeois patients grow by word of mouth, so-and-so telling their aunt or brother or cousin or friend youll be treated well there.

When the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic struck Canada this spring, Bourgeois and Shoush started Call Auntie, an information hotline for Indigenous people to ask their COVID-19 questions. In only a few short months, its morphed into something more.

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Its a form of accountability, Bourgeois says health-care workers can call ahead to certain testing centres to let them know an Indigenous person is incoming, a warm referral. Some people also ask about how to apply for the Canada Emergency Response Benefitor how they can get food delivered to their house because they have a compromised immune system.

Sometimes, Bourgeois says, people just want to talk through their concerns with a supportive listener. It isnt always about COVID-19. People call to say theyre living on the street Black people and Indigenous people are over-represented in Torontos homeless population and theyre scared of going to a shelter, so what can they do?

Its low stakes, Bourgeois says, because nothing they ask will get them put on a list of trouble clients.

They want to keep the line going after the pandemic.

For the Indigenous community, there is literally I dont want to say zero but really, theres zero trust in the health-care system that theyre actually going to be able to give them what they need, Bourgeois says.

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In pain? Labelled as drug seeking. Having a trauma response to something? Youre non-compliant. Treated badly so you dont go to your next appointment? Youre kicked out of care.

Its about so much more than extra funding, she says, because the current funding models dont take into account that need for community accountability the need for health-care providers like Bourgeois, who deliver babies, give people birth control shots, answer the questions people are scared to ask and then bring their children to Thursday night socials.

When health care your whole life has basically worked against you, youre going to do everything in your power to avoid it, she says.

Youre really not going to do anything if you dont change the system If you actually want to see a change in outcomes or a change in people engaging, you need to build trust.

Its important to remember that equitable access is not the same as equitable outcomes, says Kwame McKenzie, CEO of the Wellesley Institute, but he thinks people spend a lot of time thinking about the former rather than the latter.

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Whatd he like people to think about is: if everybody gets the same service, is the outcome the same? And is giving everybody the same service a reasonable thing to do?

Take something simple like treating high blood pressure, McKenzie says. One size does not fit all because the commonly used drugs do not work well for people of Caribbean and African origin. In other words, he says, equal access might be the same drug for everyone but it wont translate into equal outcomes.

Outcomes can be not as good because the intervention is the wrong intervention and you need a completely different intervention for different groups, he says.

You need a system that interacts with the social determinants of health because both your risk of illness and chance of getting better are very linked to who you are, how you live, what your income is.

More than a decade before health-care workers in British Columbia allegedly made a game out of guessing the blood alcohol levels of (predominantly) Indigenous people seeking care, Brian Sinclair wasignored to death in a Winnipeg ER in September 2008 presumed to be another drunken Indian rather than a 45-year-old with a severe bladder infection.

Sinclair was not ill but simply sleeping or intoxicated. This assumption, made and remade over and over in the 34 hours while Sinclair sickened and died in a hospital ER, is a striking and painful example of one of the structures of indifference that cost Brian Sinclair his life, as it has cost the lives of other Indigenous people in Canadian cities, wrote Mary Jane Logan McCallum and Adele Perry in their book Structures of Indifference: An Indigenous life and death in a Canadian City.

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It isnt that people dont recognize when things are problematic, Shoush says they do, and that realization isnt new. She thinks here of the Jane Elliott clip thats been circulating on social media.

In it, Elliott, a diversity educator, asks a room full of white people in the 1960s to please stand if theyd like to be treated the way Black people are treated. Nobody stands. She asks again. Nobody stands.

Then, she tells the room, That says very plainly that you know whats happening, you know you dont want it for you. I want to know why youre so willing to accept it or to allow it to happen for others.

Decades later, Shoush says more people are starting to understand how the structure of systems be it child apprehension, policing, incarceration or health care impacts individual outcomes, but more is needed.

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We understand that there are deep, deep injustices in our culture, in our society, but we always say that they should somehow pull themselves up, we should pull ourselves up by the bootstraps, not realizing that some people have been resourced from birth, she says.

That myth of individualism has to be shattered across every aspect of our society.

with files from The Canadian Press

The Call Auntie information hotline for Indigenous people is open daily from 4 to 9 p.m. at 437-703-8703. All messages left after hours will be responded to.

2020 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Canadian health care isnt immune to racism, experts say. Heres why - Global News

Scientists Say You Can Cancel the Noise but Keep Your Window Open – The New York Times

Car alarms, jackhammers, a drunken argument and the rumble of the No. 7 train passing overhead. It is the glorious urban symphony that pours into a typical New York City apartment building day and night.

Sure, closing the window can help, but there goes your natural ventilation.

What if there were technology to cancel the offending clamor, like a pair of giant noise-canceling headphones for your apartment?

Researchers in Singapore have developed an apparatus that can be placed in a window to reduce incoming sound by 10 decibels. The system was created by a team of scientists, including Masaharu Nishimura, who came up with the basic concept, and Bhan Lam, a researcher at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

I grew up in Singapore, Dr. Lam said in a Zoom interview from his apartment there. Its a small city with a lot of noise, so I have some motivation to solve this problem.

Their results were published on Thursday in Scientific Reports. The prototype is not yet the most practical device in real world conditions, but it points the way toward the development of technologies that may help ease the strain of noisy city living.

Borrowing from the same technological principles used in noise-canceling headphones, the team expanded the concept to fit an entire room by placing 24 small speakers in a window. The speakers emit sound waves that correspond to the incoming racket and neutralize it or, at least some of it.

The system is based on the frequency of the sound waves and, for now, the optimal range is between 300 and 1,000 hertz.

In Singapore, a city near the Equator where temperatures are often high, overlapping transportation systems and the desire for natural ventilation in modern high-rise apartment towers can pose a healthy-living conundrum.

Dr. Lam explained that in places like Singapore, we want to keep the windows open as much as possible to reduce the use of carbon-intensive air-conditioners and to prevent buildup of stale air that can pose health risks for some people.

But with windows open, the constant din from city traffic, trains, jets passing overhead and construction equipment can rattle apartments. The Anti-Noise Control Window, as it is called, is the sonic equivalent of shutting a window.

With any sound, the best way to reduce it is at the source, like a guns silencer. So the researchers treated the window aperture itself as the noise source, because most noise enters a room that way.

The system uses a microphone outside the window to detect the repeating sound waves of the offending noise source, which is registered by a computer controller. That in turn deciphers the proper wave frequency needed to neutralize the sound, which is transmitted to the array of speakers on the inside of the window frame.

The speakers then emit the proper anti waves, which cancel out the incoming waves, and there you have it: near blissful silence.

If you sit in the room, you get that same feeling like when you flick on the switch of noise-canceling earphones, Dr. Lam said, splaying his hands to denote the calming effect.

The system is best at attenuating the audible blasts from the types of steady noise sources found within the optimal frequency range.

Unfortunately, human voices do not fit within most of that range. One of the next hurdles will be to find a way to silence loud conversations from across the way.

Another limitation is that the system is not good at neutralizing sporadic noises, like firecrackers, car horns or the occasional earsplitting crash of metal storefront shutters the kinds of noises that drive many New Yorkers to slam their windows shut.

One reason for the limitation on frequency is the size of the speakers. To cancel out lower frequencies would require larger bass speakers. But those would interfere with ventilation and your ability to see through the window.

Its a trade-off, and one solution might be installing larger windows, or discovering a way to make it work with smaller speakers.

As it is, the 24 speakers, each about 2 inches in diameter, are a bit of an aesthetic hindrance.

One complaint that we get is that its ugly, Dr. Lam said.

But if it can neutralize the sound of the jet taking off from Runway 13 at LaGuardia, that is (soft) music to the ears.

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Scientists Say You Can Cancel the Noise but Keep Your Window Open - The New York Times

Up, up, and away: A cosmic balloon ride to the edge of space – TechRepublic

Competition in the space tourism industry is heating up, and a new company is taking a unique approach to near-space exploration.

IMAGE: Space Perspective

The prospect of space travel has long-since enchanted humanity. Now, as competition heats up across the burgeoning spaceflight industry, this sci-fi fantasy may soon become reality. The company Space Perspective is offering a unique transport twist on the standard spacefaring business model. Rather than harnessing the latest propulsion technology or rocket busters, the company is using a pressurized cabin and a high-altitude balloon to chauffeur tourists to the cusp of the final frontier. But how much will it cost? Also, why balloons?

Space Perspective was founded by co-CEOs Jane Poynter and Taber MacCallum. While a balloon may not immediately strike some as the ideal mode of transport for such an undertaking, the "serial entrepreneurs" behind the company have a rich history of lofty ideas tethered to these buoyant instruments.

Prior to Space Perspective, the pair founded World View Enterprises, a company that uses high-altitude balloons for a host of applications ranging from remote sensing to communication. MacCallum was previously the chief technology and safety officer at StratEx, a project which culminated with Google Executive Alan Eustace's record-setting "space dive" from a balloon at 136,000 feet. The two have parlayed this experience to reimagine the space tourism model.

Space Perspective's balloon-bound capsule, known officially as Spaceship Neptune, is designed to reach an altitude of 100,000 feet, nearly 20 miles above the Earth's surface.

"You're above 99% of the atmosphere. So for all intents and purposes, you're in space, right? We call it the edge of space," said Poynter.

IMAGE: Space Perspective

SEE:NASA's unsung heroes: The Apollo coders who put men on the moon (cover story PDF) (TechRepublic)

For the full adventure, Spaceship Neptune occupants will need to set aside about six hours. After liftoff, the balloon will slowly make its ascent at a casual speed of about 12 miles per hour. At this rate, it will take about two hours to reach the upper levels up the atmosphere. Once at the apex of its trajectory, the balloon glides along the mere cusp of the final frontier for another two hours, offering occupants incredible views.

"If we can get the passengers up and the flight up to altitude before the sun rises, you might see just the most incredible star scape you've ever seen. And then you will start to see the sunrise over the limb of the earth, and, of course, you'll see the curvature of the earth. You'll see the thin blue line of our atmosphere, you'll see the terminus go across the Earth below you," Poynter said.

SEE:Rural America is in the midst of a mental health crisis. Tech could help some patients see a way forward. (cover story PDF)(TechRepublic)

The spaceship will slowly make its descent over the course of approximately two hours, before splashing down in the ocean. Although "splashdown" may be a bit of an overstatement. It's important to understand that the Spaceship Neptune design is strikingly dissimilar to the classic reentry capsules used for returning astronauts.

"When you look at a NASA capsule, when it comes in, it almost does a belly flop on the water," Poynter said.

A water landing in Spaceship Neptune should be an exceptionally more pleasant experience, she said. Instead of a blunted flat bottom, the capsule is attenuated like a spinning top; this allows the bottom of the capsule to gently penetrate the surface of the ocean and gradually reduce speed during landing.

"You won't have to brace for impact, it should be pretty comfortable. We're really aiming to make this entire flight really gentle and accessible from beginning to end," Poynter said.

Onboard, the vessel will feature a restroom, a refreshment bar, as well as Wi-Fi, so explorers can snap and share near-space selfies in real time.

IMAGE: Space Perspective

Spaceship Neptune will eventually launch from the Shuttle Landing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The company hopes to expand globally in select locations. The ability to take off from land, ride the winds of the upper atmosphere, and then land in water enables the company the ability to scale much more quickly than landing on terra firma.

"Landing on land is very difficult to take that around the world. It turns out that it becomes much more readily expandable around the planet by splashing down, because there [are] many, many locations, spectacular locations where you can launch from land and then splashdown. And it turns out that the winds, the stratospheric winds tend to go east and west depending on the time of year," Poynter said.

The company plans to conduct a test flight of the uncrewed capsule in the first quarter of 2021. The flight will include a full-scale capsule although the test capsule will not be at full mass, according to Poynter.

SEE:Hiring Kit: Computer Research Scientist(TechRepublic Premium)

Space Perspective has positioned itself squarely in the middle of the booming human spaceflight market. Competitors Blue Origin and Virgin Galactic are developing systems to take humans to suborbital space. Ballpark estimates for Blue Origin spaceflights range between $200,000 and $300,000. Virgin Galactic is charging prospective space tourists $250,000 a pop.

While some reports have listed a firm price for a ride on Spaceship Neptune, Poynter reiterates that a specific dollar amount has not been determined, however, the company is certainly taking the market into consideration.

"We are thinking that it's going to be somewhere in the neighborhood of half the price of the existing suborbital flight ticket providers. So you can do the math as well as anyone, that translates to about $125,000 a seat. But again, we haven't set that price," Poynter said.

IMAGE: Space Perspective

To date, a rather short list of humans have been fortunate enough to behold such an external view of planet Earth from the vacuums of space. For astronauts, staring back at one's home planet adrift in the cosmos is often a transformative experience. The emotional reaction and lasting impression of this moment is a phenomenon formally known as the Overview Effect.

"When you talk to astronauts about their experience of going to space, they really connect deeply with our planet. And not only the planet as this sort of cradle of humanity where all life exists as we know it, but also that we are all one human family," Poynter said.

Many describe the looking back at their home planet and being struck by the sheer beauty and fragility of Earth. Poynter hopes Spaceship Neptune can help bring this experience to more people in the years ahead.

"The reason that we called the company Space Perspective, is because we want to enable thousands, hundreds of thousands eventually, of people to have the experience of that space perspective, which is the experience of seeing our world as a planet in space. And then what does that mean we do with that experience?" Poynter said.

"We're all leaders in some aspects of our lives," Poynter continued. "So it is then up to each of us to internalize that experience and live our lives according to it."

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Up, up, and away: A cosmic balloon ride to the edge of space - TechRepublic

Moonwalker Buzz Aldrin Just Set Serious ‘Throwback’ Goals with Photo of Earth as Seen from Moon – News18

Dr Buzz Aldrin, the second man to walk on the moon, shared a throwback image of planet Earth, seemingly taken during the Apollo 11 mission | Image credit: Reuters/Reuters

Every Thursday, the internet starts to swarm with "throwback" images with people across the world taking to social media platforms to share old photos of themselves in a bid to remember the good old' times. This "Throwback Thursday", however, was owned by American astronaut Dr. Buzz Aldrin who also happens to be one of the first persons to step foot on the moon following Neil Armstrong. Taking to the microblogging site Twitter, Aldrin shared an image of Planet Earth as seen from the surface of the moon in 1969.

The image was seemingly taken in 1969 when Aldrin, along with Armstrong and Michael Collins, became the first humans to achieve a successful moon landing aborad the Apollo 11 spacecraft.

"This view of home never gets old," Aldrin tweeted with the hashtag #ThrowbackThursday.

The moonwalker's photo raked in thousands of likes on Twitter with many commenting on the breathtaking and unique beauty of the image. Yet others such as astronaut Richards Garriott even suggested Aldrin should give space travel another try since he was still in great shape.

Aldrin has been active in the last few months, speaking out about his experience of quarantine to help people get through the coronavirus pandemic. Aldrin along with the fellow moonwalkers on Apollo 11 had spent three weeks in quarantine after their return from the historic mission to ensure they did not spread any "space germs" on Earth.

In April, the 90-year-old Aldrin announced he will be auctioning off signed photographs of the quarantine period aboard the Airstream trailer in the USS Hornet aircraft to raise funds to help fight coronavirus

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Moonwalker Buzz Aldrin Just Set Serious 'Throwback' Goals with Photo of Earth as Seen from Moon - News18

The techno-thriller goes old-school – The Week Magazine

No one expected the future to be quite this ... well, boring. We were promised jet-packs and space elevators, bionic eyes and walkie-talkies implanted in our wrists. Instead we got the mundane convenience of cell phones, drone warfare, search engines, and Uber Eats. The 21st century is not turning out to be nearly as exciting as the movies had led us to believe.

What is exhilarating, though, is to relive what life was like before our fandangled present. A new crop of technothrillers are doing just that: mining old technologies for adrenaline rushes, rather than imagining future ones. The World War II battleship drama Greyhound, out today on Apple TV+, is just the latest example of a script that finds the sort of thrills in a near-past that were previously found in the near-future, confirming that it is the absence of technology that now scares us the most not what it might evolve into.

Set during 1942, in the early days of America's entry into World War II, Greyhound tells the story of an Allied convoy being set upon by German U-boats during the Battle of the Atlantic. Almost the entirety of the film is spent in the bridge of one destroyer, the USS Keeling, where United States Navy Commander Ernest Krause (played by Tom Hanks, who also wrote the script) seeks to outwit and outmaneuver his counterpart aboard the Graue Wlfe. The film is based on the 1955 novel The Good Shepherd by C. S. Forester, which, though fictional, is "deeply researched and noted for its accurate depiction of naval warfare," Smithsonian Magazine writes.

This obsession with period details effectively carries over to the film. As part of a 37-ship convoy, the Keeling (which uses the call sign "Greyhound") frequently communicates with its counterparts using signal lamps, which are basically bright lights used to flash messages in Morse code across open water (today, we call them text messages). While radio calls are possible, the U-boats are able to intercept communications or commandeer them, as the smack-talking captain of the Graue Wlfe often does. These might have been quaint period details, except that director Aaron Schneider turns them into points of tension, like when it takes agonizing moments to convey messages from the Keeling's combat information center, where officers are interpreting sonar, to the bridge time that, when fighting an invisible enemy, is quite literally a question of life and death. You won't watch a more poorly-timed sneeze in a movie this year.

Additionally, ample attention is given to the janky technology used for locating the U-boats, stressing the overwhelming threat that the convoys faced. While being stalked, the Allies were forced to rely on hydrophones to literally listen for the sound generated by U-boat propellors a sound that could be masked by the noise of nearby friendly ships, or faked by decoys. Rapid battle maneuvers for targeting the subs had to be drawn out on plotting boards, and confirmation of a kill meant scanning rough waves for a telltale oil slick. The torturously basic technology all of it analog is as much an enemy, in the eyes of a 21st century audience, as the Axis attackers. While we know, to a degree, how the story will end since it's inspired by historical fact, the difficult machinery is what gets our pulse up more than some grander threat to the Americans. When the heroes find success, it is as much for overcoming the limits of their technology as anything else.

Greyhound, though, is far from the first film to exploit the inherent tension of prone-to-fail early mechanics. Last year's Ford v Ferrari also took a story with a fairly knowable outcome (based as it is on the true story of the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans race in France) and used the technology of mid-century auto racing to heighten tension: the suspense of a potentially deadly brake failure looms throughout the film. (As if emphasizing the absurdity of the threat the groundbreaking engineering involved, a faulty door is fixed at one point by a good bang of a mallet). And while brake failure isn't unique to 1960s auto racing by any means, the "nerve-wracking technical glitches," as Slate called them, are why its race scenes are nailbiters, even more than the actual stakes of the competition.

First Man, the 2018 film recounting the effort to send Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to the moon, likewise uses a known story and cranks up the tension by emphasizing how truly monumental a feat it was using the technology, or lack thereof, available to NASA in the 1960s. The film only works at all because it is "grounded in the tension between technology that's almost laughably fragile (the astronauts really do seem as if they're going up in tin cans)," wrote Vulture in its review at the time. Like Greyhound and Ford v Ferrari, there is an almost pedantic obsession with getting the period details exactly right: the sound designers, for example, tried to authentically replicate what going to space would have sounded like. In fact, all these films stress the limits of their technology largely through sound, the way the rev of a car engine, the rattle of a rocket, or the pips of sonar are exaggerated to the audience, stressing the mechanistic and thereby prone to failure nature of the vehicles in question.

Notably, none of these movies would work if they took place today. While there are still wars being fought, cars being built, and advances to space travel being made, the computer era, with all its certainties and simulations and precautions, feels somehow safer and simpler than the Wild West days of cruder technologies. Just as the cell phone has ruined the horror movie (why go in the spooky attic when you can just call for help?), the computer, counterintuitively, has ruined the technothriller. It was so much more exciting before we were actually good at this stuff.

Then again, it's all relative, right? From the smug perch of 2020, it can look like we have it all figured out compared to the horrors of the Dark Ages before computers and GPS and autonomous cars. But today's mundanity is tomorrow's technothriller; by 2080, who knows how horrifyingly backwards we'll look now.

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The techno-thriller goes old-school - The Week Magazine

Yes, Stephen Hawking Lied To Us All About How Black Holes Decay – Forbes

Physicist and best-selling author Stephen Hawking presents a program in Seattle in 2012. Although he... [+] made some tremendous contributions to science, his analogy about black holes decaying has contributed to a generation of misinformed physicists, physics students, and physics enthusiasts.

The greatest idea of Stephen Hawking's scientific career truly revolutionized how we think about black holes. They're not completely black, after all, and it was indeed Hawking who first understood and predicted the radiation that they should emit: Hawking radiation. He derived the result in 1974, and it's one of the most profound links ever between the worlds of the quantum and our theory of gravitation, Einstein's General Relativity.

And yet, in his landmark 1988 book, A Brief History Of Time, Hawking paints a picture of this radiation of spontaneously created particle-antiparticle pairs where one member falls in and the other escapes that's egregiously incorrect. For 32 years, it's misinformed physics students, laypersons, and even professionals alike. Black holes really do decay. Let's make today the day we find out how they actually do it.

The features of the event horizon itself, silhouetted against the backdrop of the radio emissions... [+] from behind it, are revealed by the Event Horizon Telescope in a galaxy some 60 million light-years away. The dotted line represents the edge of the photon sphere, while the event horizon itself is interior even to that. Outside of the event horizon, a small amount of radiation is constantly emitted: Hawking radiation, which will eventually be responsible for this black hole's decay.

What Hawking would have had us imagine is a relatively simple picture. Start with a black hole: a region of space where so much mass has been concentrated into such a small volume that, within it, not even light can escape. Everything that ventures too close to it will inevitably be drawn into the central singularity, with the border between the escapable and inescapable regions known as the event horizon.

Now, let's add in quantum physics. Space, at a fundamental level, can never be completely empty. Instead, there are entities inherent to the fabric of the Universe itself quantum fields thatare always omnipresent. And, just like all quantum entities, there are uncertainties inherent to them: the energy of each field at any location will fluctuate with time. These field fluctuations are very real, and occur even in the absence of any particles.

A visualization of QCD illustrates how particle/antiparticle pairs pop out of the quantum vacuum for... [+] very small amounts of time as a consequence of Heisenberg uncertainty. The quantum vacuum is interesting because it demands that empty space itself isn't so empty, but is filled with all the particles, antiparticles and fields in various states that are demanded by the quantum field theory that describes our Universe. Put this all together, and you find that empty space has a zero-point energy that's actually greater than zero.

In the context of quantum field theory, the lowest-energy state of a quantum field corresponds to no particles existing. But excited states, or states that correspond to higher-energies, correspond to either particles or antiparticles. One visualization that's commonly used is to think about empty space as being truly empty, but populated by particle-antiparticle pairs (because of conservation laws) that briefly pop into existence, only to annihilate away back into the vacuum of nothingness after a short while.

It's here that Hawking's famous picture his grossly incorrect picture comes into play. All throughout space, he asserts, these particle-antiparticle pairs are popping in and out of existence. Inside the black hole, both members stay there, annihilate, and nothing happens. Far outside of the black hole, it's the same deal. But right near the event horizon, one member can fall in while the other escapes, carrying real energy away. And that, he proclaims, is why black holes lose mass, decay, and where Hawking radiation comes from.

In Hawking's most famous book, A Brief History of Time, he makes the analogy that space is filled... [+] with particle-antiparticle pairs and that one member can escape (carrying positive energy) while the other falls in (with negative energy), leading to black hole decay. This flawed analogy continues to confuse generations of physicists and laypersons alike.

That was the first explanation that I, myself a theoretical astrophysicist, ever heard for how black holes decay. If that explanation were true, then that would mean:

Of course, all three of those points are not true. Hawking radiation is made almost exclusively of photons, not a mix of particles and antiparticles. It gets emitted from a large region outside the event horizon, not right at the surface. And the individual quanta emitted have tiny energies over quite a large range.

Both inside and outside the event horizon of a Schwarzschild black hole, space flows like either a... [+] moving walkway or a waterfall, depending on how you want to visualize it. But outside the event horizon, owing to the curvature of space, radiation is generated, carrying energy away and causing the mass of the black hole to slowly shrink over time.

What's odd about this explanation is that it's not the one he used in the scientific papers he wrote concerning this topic. He knew that this analogy was flawed and would lead to physicists thinking incorrectly about it, but he chose to present it to the general public as though people weren't capable of understanding the real mechanism actually at play. And that's too bad, because the actual scientific story is no more complex, but far more illuminating.

Empty space really does have quantum fields all throughout it, and those fields really do have fluctuations in their energy values. There's a germ of truth in the "particle-antiparticle pair production" analogy, and it's this: in quantum field theory, you can model the energy of empty space by adding up diagrams that include the production of these particles. But it's a calculational technique only; the particles and antiparticles are not realbut are virtual instead. They are not actually produced, they do not interact with real particles, and they are not detectable by any means.

A few terms contributing to the zero-point energy in quantum electrodynamics. The development of... [+] this theory, due to Feynman, Schwinger, and Tomonaga, led to them being awarded the Nobel Prize in 1965. These diagrams may show particles and antiparticles popping in and out of existence, but that is only a calculational tool; these particles are not real.

To any observer located anywhere in the Universe, that "energy of empty space," which we call the zero-point energy, will appear to have the same value no matter where they are. However, one of the rules of relativity is that different observers will perceive different realities: observers in relative motion or in regions where the spacetime curvature is different, in particular, will disagree with one another.

So if you're infinitely far away from every source of mass in the Universe and your spacetime curvature is negligible, you'll have a certain zero-point energy. If someone else located at a black hole's event horizon, they'll have a certain zero-point energy that's the same measured value forthem as it was for you infinitely far away. But if you try to map your zero-point energy to their zero-point energy (or vice versa), the values won't agree. From one another's perspectives, the zero-point energy changes relative to how severely the two spaces are curved.

An illustration of heavily curved spacetime for a point mass, which corresponds to the physical... [+] scenario of being located outside the event horizon of a black hole. As you get closer and closer to the mass's location in spacetime, space becomes more severely curved, eventually leading to a location from within which even light cannot escape: the event horizon. Observers at different locations will disagree as to what the zero-point energy of the quantum vacuum is.

That's the key point behind Hawking radiation, and Stephen Hawking himself knew it. In 1974, when he famously derived Hawking radiation for the first time, this was the calculation he performed: calculating the difference in the zero-point energy in quantum fields from the curved space around a black hole to the flat space infinitely far away.

The results of that calculation are what determine the properties of the radiation that emanates from a black hole: not from the event horizon exclusively, but from the entirety of the curved space around it. It tells us the temperature of the radiation, which is dependent on the mass of the black hole. It tells us the spectrum of the radiation: a perfect blackbody, indicating the energy distribution of photons and if there's enough energy available viaE = mc massive particles and antiparticles, too.

The event horizon of a black hole is a spherical or spheroidal region from which nothing, not even... [+] light, can escape. But outside the event horizon, the black hole is predicted to emit radiation. Hawking's 1974 work was the first to demonstrate this, and it was arguably his greatest scientific achievement.

It alsoenables us to compute an important detail that is not generally appreciated: where the radiation that black holes emit originates from. While most pictures and visualizations show 100% of a black hole's Hawking radiation being emitted from the event horizon itself, it's more accurate to depict it as being emitted over a volume that spans some 10-20 Schwarzschild radii (the radius to the event horizon), where the radiation gradually tapers off the farther away you get.

This leads us to a phenomenal conclusion: that all collapsed objects that curve spacetime should emit Hawking radiation. It may be a tiny, imperceptible amount of Hawking radiation, swamped by thermal radiation foras far as we can calculate for even long-dead white dwarfs and neutron stars. But it still exists: it's a positive, non-zero value that is calculable, dependent only on the object's mass, spin, and physical size.

As black holes lose mass due to Hawking radiation, the rate of evaporation increases. After enough... [+] time goes by, a brilliant flash of 'last light' gets released in a stream of high-energy blackbody radiation that favors neither matter nor antimatter.

The major problem with Hawking's explanation of his own theory is that he takes a calculational tool the idea of virtual particles and treats that tool as though it's equivalent to physical reality. In reality, what's happening is that the curved space around the black hole is constantly emitting radiation due to the curvature gradient around it, and that the energy is coming from the black hole itself, causing its event horizon to slowly shrink over time.

Black holes are not decaying because there's an infalling virtual particle carrying negative energy; that's another fantasy devised by Hawking to "save" his insufficient analogy. Instead, black holes are decaying, and losing mass over time, because the energy emitted by this Hawking radiation is slowly reducing the curvature of space in that region. Once enough time passes, and that duration is enormous for realistic black holes, they will have evaporated entirely.

The simulated decay of a black hole not only results in the emission of radiation, but the decay of... [+] the central orbiting mass that keeps most objects stable. Black holes will only begin decaying in earnest, however, once the decay rate exceeds the growth rate. For the black holes in our Universe, that won't occur until the Universe is some 10 billion times its present age.

None of this should serve to take away from Hawking's tremendous accomplishments on this front. It was he who realized the deep connections between black hole thermodynamics, entropy, and temperature. It was he who put together the science of quantum field theory and the background of curved space near a black hole. And it was he who quite correctly, mind you figured out the properties and energy spectrum of the radiation that black holes would produce. It is absolutely fitting that the way black holes decay, via Hawking radiation, bears his name.

But the flawed analogy he put forth in his most famous book, A Brief History of Time, is not correct. Hawking radiation is not the emission of particles and antiparticles from the event horizon. It does not involve an inward-falling pair member carrying negative energy. And it shouldn't even be exclusive to black holes. Stephen Hawking knew how black holes truly decay, but he told the world a very different, even incorrect, story. It's time we all knew the truth instead.

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Yes, Stephen Hawking Lied To Us All About How Black Holes Decay - Forbes

Elon Musk: Is he our interplanetary visionary or just another mogul? – The National

IF, like me, youre half propeller-head, half social-justice warrior, it can be hard to get a handle on the various works of Elon Musk.

The Tesla and SpaceX founder can display equally as idiot plutocrat, and civilisation visionary, across any given weeks news cycle.

The last seven days have seen Musks name taken in vain at the Johnny Depp/Amber Rudd trial (aaargh). His endorsement of Kanye West for president has been retracted (Kanye doesnt like vaccines, or even abortion). And we have reports that Musks $2.7 billion performance bonus is about to be triggered.

So far, so 0.0000271846% (the percentage of the worlds population that are billionaires). Why should we care a jot about Elon Musk?

Yet theres another news strand. We are apparently very close to a level-5 self-driving electric Tesla car (meaning no human input). Next month, there will be a major announcement on Musks Neurolink, a brain-implant tech that offers to blend humans with artificial intelligence.

Elsewhere on the wires, Musk is launching thousands of small satellites to provide internet access to every point on the Earth. As well as refining his plans for a rocket to Mars the first stage in his plan to spread human civilisation into the cosmos.

The last report is usually the first blanket rejection of this awkward, blinking mogul. Rather than colonial dreams of Martian cities (Id like to die on Mars just not on impact, Musk has quipped), how about attending to beautiful blue Planet A first, not desiccated and dangerous Planet B?

And how typical of blinkered Silicon Valley elitists to look for their interplanetary escape clause rather than deal with the inequalities and externalities their technology and business models often produce, on this old rock? Musks defenders roll their eyes here: were really not seeing his full picture.

The Scots-born techno-visionary and blockchain entrepreneur Vinay Gupta is trenchant on this subject. Musks passion, Gupta says, is to do something practical indeed, commercial to help minimise what is called existential risk (or x-risk). Basically, these are threats to the very existence of humanity.

Tick them off, suggests Vinay in his tweets. Musks electric cars, but also his investment in both battery manufacturing and cheap solar panels, is raising the sustainable standard of living inside capitalism. (Like Greta Thunberg, Musk is oriented to action, not warm words from establishments).

We should even regard Musks off-planet ambitions as laying the ground for a new wave of what the leftist commentator Aaron Bastani calls extreme supply. By this, Bastani means the abundance of vital minerals and metals available in asteroidal form in our solar system.

This could easily overturn Earth-based economics systems, usually founded on managing scarce resources. (Theres another x-risk here. Given were due another devastating asteroid strike this century, it might be wise to get a grasp of this realm).

So Musks pursuit of sustainable abundance answers the x-risk of a collapsing biosphere. He also seems to genuinely believe that humanity may need a back-up on another planet, if we dont make it through the great filter down here. (The great filter is Enrico Fermis thesis that few civilisations in the universe make it past the stage of terminating themselves which is why we dont know of any other than ourselves, as we teeter on our own brink ).

But Musks brain-machine interface tries to answer what could be regarded as another x-risk: the surpassing of human intelligence by machine intelligence.

While trailing his Neurolink announcement, Musk tweeted: If you cant beat em, join em. Musk is also notoriously a great fan of the Scottish author Iain M Bankss science-fiction Culture novels (If you must know, I am a utopian anarchist, he tweeted, of the kind best described by Iain Banks).

And in Iains Culture novels, its never quite clear: do the vast and powerful AI Minds (encased in cosmos-traversing spaceships) regard humans as their equals, or as charming and trivial diversions? In talking about his own cyborg product, Musk has regularly used Bankss terminology for the humans link with these AIs the beautiful phrase neural lace. We dont just join them, we intertwine with them.

However, is AI supremacy really such an existential risk? Googles DeepMind programs might be able to teach themselves to beat any human (including grandmasters) on a board game like Chess or Go. But install that software in a clanky robot body, then ask it to display the same self-possession of a five-year-old human child the sheer, stumbling failure is embarrassing to see.

One suspects the singularity Ray Kurzweils prediction that computers would simulate human intelligence by 2029, and vastly surpass it thereafter is a kind of stretch-goal for Musk and the Valleyists.

Something that pulls their more mundane R&D and engineering efforts forward into the future (ensuring, for example, that grannies arent flattened by an ill-natured Tesla robo-car).

My head-propeller spins with genuine curiosity on this one: lets see what transpires. Musk suggests that, eventually, the filaments that link neurons with transmitters four times thinner than hair will be installed by boring laser holes into the skull. The discomfort will be comparable to Lasik surgery on the eyes.

Thats great. But eh, you go first, Elon.

So yes, hes quite a blend the ability to scale of Henry Ford, the imagineering verve of Walt Disney, the integrated vision of Steve Jobs. But hes still an American

capitalist mogul with some pretty familiar traits.

For example, Musks programming has hit a glitch point when it comes to responding to Covid-19. This anarchist utopian really didnt like the oncoming dystopia of coronavirus. He doubted its infectiousness, and its status beyond a standard flu, in the early months.

THE coronavirus panic is dumb, he tweeted. But Musk also reacted extremely poorly online when the states of California and New York asked him to close down his Tesla manufactories, for pandemic reasons (this is fascism FREE AMERICA NOW). Reports of poor enforcement of mask wearing at his factories are rife. And for all the futurism on display, Musks attitudes to labour relations are predictably 19th-century.

Vox magazine reports a legal judgment from California authorities in 2019 that Tesla had broken US labour laws in 12 ways. This included threatening employees with the loss of various conditions if unions were set up, as well as harassing employees on distributing leaflets and wearing union badges.

(All other major US motor manufacturers are fully unionised).

Its a bug on the windscreen of their gleaming vehicles (though that mess might actually improve Teslas ghastly Cybertruck). But tech supermoguls must accept or be forced to that they live in societies, among fellow citizens, to whom they are accountable.

We the people can enjoy, and benefit, from the pioneering ambitions of entrepreneurs.

The ideal rhythm should be that private innovation and market-making eventually settles, to become infrastructural and public service.

Yet I will concede to Musk in particular, and his defenders, their urgent point. To rely on standard political and democratic progress after decades of knowledge about global warming and climate crisis as an existential threat is a tough square to put all your chips on.

Leaving it to the engineers and investors could go mightily wrong. There are quite a few freelance geo-engineering schemes for anti-warming going around. Some involve pumping substances into the atmosphere that might rob us of blue skies for ever.

But boundary-crossing, pro-human innovators and designers are definitely required. Can their products and services make it easy for us to do the planet-saving thing? We seem to find it difficult to take any harder road.

I give 1.5 cheers for Musk but more for the sapient, planetary and cosmic ambitions he represents.

We need thousands more like him, with many different conceptions of the big problems (and not too many hims either). Because the big clock is loudly ticking.

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Elon Musk: Is he our interplanetary visionary or just another mogul? - The National

Research Associate job with Who What Wear | 142294 – The Business of Fashion

Do you want to get to know the Who What Wear audience and its competitors? Are you passionate about storytelling with data?

Named to Fast Company's Most Innovative Companies list in 2017, Digiday's Most Innovative Publisher in 2018, and one of Comparablys Best Companies for Company Culture in 2019 Who What Wear is hiring a Research Associate for its Audience Development & Data team.

As the Research Associate, you will get to know our readers and consumers and use this knowledge to tell a story to our advertisers. Data is at the center of everything we do, and in this role, you will support multiple departments by providing insights that fuel our business. Our ideal candidate is a go-getter whose creativity supports the element and singularity of our research, is organized, detail-oriented, and eager to have a big impact on the business. This position is located in New York* and reports to the Director of Research.

*COVID-19 Hiring: We understand how difficult it is to start a new position with a new company in the age of the coronavirus. Our People team and hiring managers are here to guide you through this journey. During the pandemic, all of our offices closed and all employees are working remotely until further notice. That said, all of our recruiting, interviews, and onboarding activities are online. Thank you for your flexibility.

Responsibilities:

Requirements:

Benefits & Perks:

Our Commitment:

Who What Wear provides an environment of mutual respect where equal employment opportunities are available to all applicants and teammates without regard to race, color, religion, sex, pregnancy (including childbirth, lactation, and related medical conditions), national origin, age, physical and mental disability, marital status, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, genetic information (including characteristics and testing), military and veteran status, and any other characteristic protected by applicable law. Who What Wear believes that diversity and inclusion among our teammates is critical to our success as an international company, and we seek to recruit, develop, and retain the most talented people from a diverse candidate pool.

More about Who What Wear:

Who What Wear is an international fashion company known for its content siteswhowhatwear.com and whowhatwear.co.ukand its affordable, size-inclusive, and trend-forward line of clothing and accessories. The brand was founded in 2006 by Hillary Kerr and Katherine Power and includes the chart-topping career podcast, Second Life, which is hosted by Kerr. Most recently, Who What Wear launched a sister company, Versed, which is a clean skincare line with products at affordable prices. Headquartered in Los Angeles, Who What Wear also has offices in New York City and London, with Amazon, Greycroft Partners, BDMI, WndrCo, and others as key investors.

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Research Associate job with Who What Wear | 142294 - The Business of Fashion

7 Reasons Grocers Should Invest in Robotics Right Now – Progressive Grocer

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The so-called six-foot economy named for the practice that keeps shoppers socially distant to prevent infection is here for the foreseeable future, and food retailers are working double-time to maintain business as usual during these highly unusual times.

The COVID-19 pandemic has added a significant layer of operational complexity to already existing industry-wide challenges. Expectations of cleanliness are at an all-time high among shoppers. With significant inventory turnover, its a struggle to keep shelves consistently stocked. Added to retails long-standing labor shortage, its no wonder this new reality is causing a growing number of grocers and other retailers to evaluate how automation and robots can bring greater efficiency, flexibility, and sanitation to their in-store operations.

Enter the latest wave of autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) intelligent machines that can safely navigate crowded public spaces while taking care of mission-critical tasks. From robotic floor scrubbers and vacuum sweepers to self-driving shelf scanners and in-store delivery tugs, AMRs can be deployed quickly and easily, require no costly or complicated infrastructure, and show too much value for grocers to ignore. Many top U.S. retailers, including Walmart, Kroger, and Giant Eagle, have already made the leap and are seeing huge dividends.

Every food retail business today should be assessing the value of robotics as a part of its retail operations. Why? Here are seven reasons:

As the world adjusts to the new normal, food retailers must prepare for the next normal. Investing in a long-term robotics strategy to bring greater efficiency, safety, accountability, and cost management to in-store operations is one of the first steps. While AMRs are not a panacea for all of the challenges grocers face, they do address the most critical ones: labor shortages, employee safety, consumer experience, and sanitation.

Chris Wright is vice president of sales at Brain Corp,a San Diego-based technology company specializing in the development of intelligent, autonomous navigation systems for everyday machines. Read More

Future of food retailing requires increased vigilance around food safety andsanitation to deliver a next-generation store experience

Recruitment, retention, training and diversity at the forefront

Shelf-scanning robots coming to 650 more U.S. stores by the end of the summer

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7 Reasons Grocers Should Invest in Robotics Right Now - Progressive Grocer

Restaurant Robots Used to Be About Labor, Now They’re About Hygiene – The Spoon

During our Articulate food robotics summit last year, the common refrain from the restaurant operators in attendance was about the labor crunch. Restaurants couldn't find and retain enough workers, especially when potential hires would prefer to drive Ubers on their own schedule.

But that was then, and this is now. More specifically, this is now during a global pandemic and the conversation has shifted. With so many restaurants closed, and record amounts of unemployment, restaurants are less worried about hiring people, and more interested in how robots can create a more hygienic experience for diners (and workers).

This was one of the takeaways from our virtual fireside chat on The State of Restaurant Robotics yesterday. Linda Poulliot, CEO of Dischcraft Robotics, and Clatyon Wood, CEO of Picnic, were our guests, and they shared their insights about what their customers are looking for with automation right now.

At the moment, restaurants, cafeterias and other food service establishments are looking for safety and hygiene, something that robots can definitely help with in a few ways.

For example, Picnics pizza assembling robot can top 200 pizzas in an hour without human hands ever touching them. The stretched dough runs on a conveyor belt where robotic nodes dispense the proper amount of toppings consistently. Not only does this reduce the number of people touching food, it also helps in small kitchens where there isnt enough room for workers to socially distance.

For its part, Dishcraft offers dishes as a service to cafeterias, restaurants and more. Dirty dishes are picked up from a restaurant and brought to a Discrafts facility where the robot cleans and inspects them better and more environmentally friendly than a human can. The company recently branched out into offering reuseable containers so restaurants can cut down on all the packaging waste that comes with takeout and delivery.

These were just a couple of topics we touched on during our exclusive Spoon Plus event. Spoon Plus subscribers can check out the full video from the event below.

If youd like to see the full event video, future events and premium reports, interviews and exclusive research, become a member today!

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Restaurant Robots Used to Be About Labor, Now They're About Hygiene - The Spoon

Artist Pindar Van Arman develops ST Robotics’ collaborative robot into the world’s most evocative painting robot – Robotics Tomorrow

Pindar van Arman has developed a unique application for an ST robot for painting portraits using AI the system works the same way a human artist would- painting a part of the portrait - stepping back, comparing the painting with the subject then going back to add more or change something.

ST Robotics proudly announces that one of its robots has been integrated by artist and roboticist Pindar Van Arman to autonomously create expressive art.

Pindar is delving deep into artonomous' ability to create emotionally evocative portraits. Toward this goal, he and the robot have teamed up with portrait photographer Kitty Simpson in an interspecific collaboration. They plan to paint hundreds of faces using a creative feedback loop, while continually refining artonomous' creative process.

The ST R17 HS robot, mounted with a camera on its arm and a paint brush in its gripper, uses its array of more than two dozen artificial intelligence algorithms to paint sets of curated portraits. The finished paintings are then critiqued by the robot, Kitty, and Pindar. Based on the critique, Kitty adjusts how she takes the next set of portraits. artonomous then retrains its own neural networks to better understand faces, and Pindar modifies the robot's A.I. and hardware. This process is repeated as the body of work is formed.

Of his progress, Pindar Van Arman says, "I developed the ST robots into much more than simple assistants. My robots are now effectively augmenting my creativity, and even achieving their own form of creativity."

The trio's evolving work can be seen at https://artonomo.us where they have already completed the first 32 portraits. Kitty and Pindar project that hundreds and possibly thousands of portraits will be needed for artonomous to improve its creative process to learn the subtleties of fine portraiture.

About ST RoboticsST Robotics, widely known for robotics within reach', has offices in Princeton, New Jersey and Cambridge, England, as well as in Asia. One of the first manufacturers of bench-top robotic arms, ST Robotics has been providing the lowest-priced, easy-to-program boxed robots across industries for the past 30 years. ST's robots are utilized the world over by companies and institutions such as Lockheed-Martin, Motorola, Honeywell, MIT, NASA, HP, Sony, IBM and NXP. The numerous applications for ST's robots benefit the manufacturing, nuclear, pharmaceutical, laboratory and semiconductor industries.

For additional information on ST Robotics, contact:sales1@strobotics.com(609) 584 7522www.strobotics.com

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Artist Pindar Van Arman develops ST Robotics' collaborative robot into the world's most evocative painting robot - Robotics Tomorrow

Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market Next Big Thing | Major Giants Akzo Nobel, Axalta Coating Systems, Bernardo Ecenarro – Cole…

HTF MIpublished a new industry research that focuses on Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market and delivers in-depth market analysis andfuture outlook of Global Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market. The study covers significant data which makes the research document a handy resource for managers, analysts, industry experts and other key people get ready-to-access and self-analyzed study along with graphs and tables to help understand market trends, drivers and market challenges. The study is segmented by Application/ end users [Healthcare, Agriculture, Mining, Manufacturing & Construction], products type [, Solvent Borne, Water Borne, UV Cure & Powder] and profiled players such as Akzo Nobel N.V., Axalta Coating Systems, PPG Industries, The Sherwin Williams Company, HMG Paints Limited, The Lubrizol Corporation, Yashm Paint & Resin Industries, U.S. Paint Corporation, Kansai Paint Co. Ltd., Bernardo Ecenarro SA, Nippon Paint Holdings Co., Ltd., Sheboygan Paint Company, Beckers Group, NOROO Paint & Coatings Co., Ltd., Reichhold LLC & Tikkurila].

Get Access to sample pages @https://www.htfmarketreport.com/sample-report/1496123-global-coatings-and-application-technologies-for-robotics-market-2

This report researches the worldwide Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market size (value, capacity, production and consumption) in key regions like United States, Europe, Asia Pacific (China, Japan) and other regions.This study categorizes the global Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics breakdown data by manufacturers, region, type and application, also analyzes the market status, market share, growth rate, future trends, market drivers, opportunities and challenges, risks and entry barriers, sales channels, distributors and Porters Five Forces Analysis.

The research covers the currentmarket size of the Global Coatings and Application Technologies for Roboticsmarket and its growth rates based on 5 year history data along with company profile of key players/manufacturers. The in-depth information by segments of Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market helps monitor future profitability & to make critical decisions for growth. The information on trends and developments, focuses on markets and materials, capacities, technologies, CAPEX cycle and the changing structure of theGlobal Coatings and Application Technologies for RoboticsMarket.

For more information or any query mail at [emailprotected]

The study provides company profiling, product picture and specifications, sales, market share and contact information of key manufacturers of Global Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market, some of them listed here areAkzo Nobel N.V., Axalta Coating Systems, PPG Industries, The Sherwin Williams Company, HMG Paints Limited, The Lubrizol Corporation, Yashm Paint & Resin Industries, U.S. Paint Corporation, Kansai Paint Co. Ltd., Bernardo Ecenarro SA, Nippon Paint Holdings Co., Ltd., Sheboygan Paint Company, Beckers Group, NOROO Paint & Coatings Co., Ltd., Reichhold LLC & Tikkurila. The market is growing at a very rapid pace and with rise in technological innovation, competition and M&A activities in the industry many local and regional vendors are offering specific application products for varied end-users. The new manufacturer entrants in the market are finding it hard to compete with the international vendors based on quality, reliability, and innovations in technology.

Global Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics (Thousands Units) and Revenue (Million USD) Market Split by Product Type such as , Solvent Borne, Water Borne, UV Cure & Powder. Further the research study is segmented by Application such as Healthcare, Agriculture, Mining, Manufacturing & Construction with historical and projected market share and compounded annual growth rate.Geographically, this report is segmented into several key Regions, with production, consumption, revenue (million USD), and market share and growth rate of Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics in these regions, from 2014 to 2025 (forecast), covering United States, Europe, China, Japan & Other Regions and its Share (%) and CAGR for the forecasted period 2019 to 2025.

Read Detailed Index of full Research Study at @https://www.htfmarketreport.com/reports/1496123-global-coatings-and-application-technologies-for-robotics-market-2

Following would be the Chapters to display the Global Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics market.

Chapter 1, to describe Definition, Specifications and Classification of Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics, Applications of Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics, Market Segment by Regions;Chapter 2, to analyze the Manufacturing Cost Structure, Raw Material and Suppliers, Manufacturing Process, Industry Chain Structure;Chapter 3, to display the Technical Data and Manufacturing Plants Analysis of Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics, Capacity and Commercial Production Date, Manufacturing Plants Distribution, R&D Status and Technology Source, Raw Materials Sources Analysis;Chapter 4, to show the Overall Market Analysis, Capacity Analysis (Company Segment), Sales Analysis (Company Segment), Sales Price Analysis (Company Segment);Chapter 5 and 6, to show the Regional Market Analysis that includes United States, Europe, China, Japan & Other Regions, Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Segment Market Analysis (by Type);Chapter 7 and 8, to analyze the Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Segment Market Analysis (by Application) Major Manufacturers Analysis of Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics;Chapter 9, Market Trend Analysis, Regional Market Trend, Market Trend by Product Type [, Solvent Borne, Water Borne, UV Cure & Powder], Market Trend by Application [Healthcare, Agriculture, Mining, Manufacturing & Construction];Chapter 10, Regional Marketing Type Analysis, International Trade Type Analysis, Supply Chain Analysis;Chapter 11, to analyze the Consumers Analysis of Global Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics;Chapter 12,13, 14 and 15, to describe Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics sales channel, distributors, traders, dealers, Research Findings and Conclusion, appendix and data source.

Enquire for customization in Report @https://www.htfmarketreport.com/enquiry-before-buy/1496123-global-coatings-and-application-technologies-for-robotics-market-2

What this Research Study Offers:

Global Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market share assessments for the regional and country level segments Focus of the study is to analyse characteristics that affect the nature of competition and pricing. Identifying Influencing factors keeping Global Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market Intense, factored with periodic analysis of CR4 & CR8 concentration ratio. In-depth Competitive analysis at product and Strategic business level. Predictive analysis on upcoming trends and changes in consumer behavior. To analyse the competitive developments, such as new product launch and merger & acquisition, in the Global Coatings and Application Technologies for RoboticsMarket

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Reasons for Buying this ReportThis report provides pin-point analysis for changing competitive dynamicsIt provides a forward looking perspective on different factors driving or restraining market growthIt provides a six-year forecast assessed on the basis of how the market is predicted to growIt helps in understanding the key product segments and their futureIt provides pin point analysis of changing competition dynamics and keeps you ahead of competitorsIt helps in making informed business decisions by having complete insights of market and by making in-depth analysis of market segments

Thanks for reading this article; you can also get individual chapter wise section or region wise report version like North America, Europe or Asia.

About Author:HTF Market Report is a wholly owned brand of HTF market Intelligence Consulting Private Limited. HTF Market Report global research and market intelligence consulting organization is uniquely positioned to not only identify growth opportunities but to also empower and inspire you to create visionary growth strategies for futures, enabled by our extraordinary depth and breadth of thought leadership, research, tools, events and experience that assist you for making goals into a reality. Our understanding of the interplay between industry convergence, Mega Trends, technologies and market trends provides our clients with new business models and expansion opportunities. We are focused on identifying the Accurate Forecast in every industry we cover so our clients can reap the benefits of being early market entrants and can accomplish their Goals & Objectives.

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Coatings and Application Technologies for Robotics Market Next Big Thing | Major Giants Akzo Nobel, Axalta Coating Systems, Bernardo Ecenarro - Cole...

Advancing the Future of Robotics and IoT Systems: Eclipse Cyclone DDS now a Tier 1 ROS Middleware – Robotics Tomorrow

With the latest ROS 2 Foxy Fitzroy release, ADLINK, Rover Robotics, Box Robotics and an entire community of contributors helped move industrial robotics development forward.

*Eclipse Cyclone DDS, an Eclipse Foundation IoT community project that ADLINK, Rover Robotics, Box Robotics, OpenADx and others have poured heavy engineering hours into is now a Tier 1 ROS 2 middleware

*Foxy Fitzroy is a major milestone toward a wider adoption of Cyclone DDS in robotics, autonomous vehicles and mobility markets, as well other mission-critical IoT systems making development faster, safer and more interoperable

ADLINK Technology Inc., a global leader in edge computing with a mission to affect positive change in society and industry by connecting people, places and things with AI, has lead Eclipse Cyclone DDS to become a tier one ROS 2 middleware with the Eclipse Foundation IoT community, OpenADx Working Group and ROS 2 Technical Steering Committee. With the latest ROS 2 release, Foxy Fitzroy (foxy), robotics and autonomous vehicle development is now easier, faster, more secure and reliable.

Eclipse Cyclone DDS is the next generation implementation of the Object Management Group's (OMG) Data Distribution Service (DDS) standard that leverages ADLINK's experience working and innovating DDS from its early days. ADLINK is working with the community to establish the DDS of reference in terms of features, usability, performance and reliability within robotics, autonomous vehicles, healthcare, aerospace and defense, and Industrial IoT.

"Box Robotics is rebuilding the AGV perception stack with human-like spatial awareness for higher speed driving, uncompromising safety and lifelong autonomy," said Tom Panzarella, co-founder and CEO, Box Robotics. "We are building our software on top of the latest advances in long-range 3D digital LiDAR. Processing this data in real-time on high-speed vehicles requires a robust foundation to build upon. This is why we have chosen ROS 2 Foxy Fitzroy and Eclipse Cyclone DDS as our middleware platform. The LTS of ROS 2 foxy and the highly tunable DDS implementation allows us to write the lowest latency point cloud processing pipelines in support of our application requirements."

Foxy is the first ever three-year long term support (LTS) version of ROS and includes significant performance and stability enhancements with Eclipse Cyclone DDS as a tier 1 underlying data sharing backbone of its RMW (ROS Middleware) layer. Eclipse Cyclone DDS offers a platform for sharing data consistently and coherently with a keen focus on system success metrics including performance, robustness, security, safety and interoperability.

"ROS 2 foxy is a major milestone toward establishing the reference platform for a large class of robotics and autonomous vehicles applications," said Angelo Corsaro PhD, CTO, ADLINK Technology. "We are strongly committed to supporting the ROS 2 community and ecosystem with an outstanding open source DDS implementation."

Hosted and supported by the Eclipse Foundation, Eclipse Cyclone DDS is now the fastest growing open source implementation of the OMG DDS standard. ADLINK offers professional services, industrial-grade versions to support DDS development and deployment. To get started with Eclipse Cyclone DDS visit GitHub.

About ADLINK TechnologyADLINK Technology Inc. is a global leader in edge computing. Our mission is to affect positive change in society and industry by connecting people, places and things with AI. The company offerings include robust boards, real-time data acquisition solutions and application enablement for AIoT. ADLINK serves vertical markets including manufacturing, communications, healthcare, aerospace, defense, energy, infotainment and transportation. ADLINK is a Premier Member of the Intel Internet of Things Solutions Alliance, a partner of NVIDIA, and a contributor to standards initiatives such as Eclipse, OCP, OMG and ROS2 TSC. ADLINK is ISO-9001, ISO-14001, ISO-13485 and TL9000 certified and is publicly traded on TAIEX (Stock Code: 6166). Learn more at http://www.adlinktech.com.

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Advancing the Future of Robotics and IoT Systems: Eclipse Cyclone DDS now a Tier 1 ROS Middleware - Robotics Tomorrow

Global Surgical Robotics Market Report 2020 Pandemic Situation to Boost Growth Top companies Intuitive Surgical, Stryker, Mazor Robotics, Medtech S.A,…

Global Surgical Robotics Market analysis 2015-2027, is a research report that has been compiled by studying and understanding all the factors that impact the market in a positive as well as negative manner. Some of the prime factors taken into consideration are: various rudiments driving the market, future opportunities, restraints, regional analysis, various types & applications, Covid-19 impact analysis and key market players of the Surgical Robotics market. nicolas.shaw@cognitivemarketresearch.com or call us on +1-312-376-8303.

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Global Surgical Robotics Market: Product analysis: Laparoscopy, Orthopedics, Others

Global Surgical Robotics Market: Application analysis: Open Surgery, Minimal Invasive

Major Market Players with an in-depth analysis: Intuitive Surgical, Stryker, Mazor Robotics, Medtech S.A, THINK Surgical, Restoration Robotics, Medrobotics, TransEnterix

The research is presented in such a way that it consists of all the graphical representations, pie charts and various other diagrammatic representations of all the factors that are used for the research. Surgical Robotics market research report also provides information on how the industry is anticipated to provide a highly competitive analysis globally, revenues generated by the industry and increased competitiveness and expansions among various market players/companies.

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The Surgical Robotics industry is projected in assembling information regarding dynamic approximations and also listings of a profitable progression rate annually in the expected duration according to a recent & latest study. The latest Coronavirus pandemic impact along with graphical presentations and recovery analysis is included in the Surgical Robotics research report. The research report also consists of all the latest innovations, technologies and systems implemented in the Surgical Robotics industries.

Various factors with all the necessary limitations, expenditure/cost figures, consumer behaviour, supply chain, government policies and all the information related to the market have been included in the Surgical Robotics Market report. The research report also provides light on various companies & their competitors, market size & share, revenue, forecast analysis and all the information regarding the Surgical Robotics Market.

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Surgical Robotics Market research report provides an in-depth analysis of the entire market scenario starting from the basics which is the market introduction till the industry functioning and its position in the market as well as all the projects and latest introductions & implementations of various products. The research study has been assembled by understanding and combining various analysis of regions globally & companies and all necessary graphs and tables that bring the theory into an exact representation through numerical values and standard tables.

The global estimations of the market value, market information/definition, classifications of all the types & applications, overall threats & dips that can be assumed and many other factors which consist the overall market scenario and its happening globally along with the forthcoming years are compiled in the Surgical Robotics market research report. Hence this report can serve as a handbook/model for the enterprises/players interested in the Surgical Robotics Market as it consists all the information regarding the Surgical Robotics market.

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Global Surgical Robotics Market Report 2020 Pandemic Situation to Boost Growth Top companies Intuitive Surgical, Stryker, Mazor Robotics, Medtech S.A,...

Robotic scientists will ‘speed up discovery’ – BBC News

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Scientists at the University of Liverpool have unveiled a robotic colleague that has been working non-stop in their lab throughout lockdown.

The 100,000 programmable researcher learns from its results to refine its experiments.

"It can work autonomously, so I can run experiments from home," explained Benjamin Burger, one of the developers.

Such technology could make scientific discovery "a thousand times faster", scientists say.

A new report by the Royal Society of Chemistry lays out a "post-Covid national research strategy", using robotics, artificial intelligence and advanced computing as part of a suite of technologies that "must be urgently embraced" to help socially distancing scientists continue their search for solutions to global challenges.

As its developers describe in a paper in the journal Nature, the robotic scientist is currently embarking on a series of tests to find a catalyst that could speed up the reaction that takes place inside solar cells.

But it could, according to Prof Andy Cooper, the materials scientist who has put the robot to work in his lab, be used in the fight against Covid-19.

"We've had a lot of interest [in the robot] from labs that are doing Covid research," he told BBC News.

"Covid, climate change - there are lots of problems that really need international co-operation. So our vision is we might have robots like this all across the world connected by a centralised brain which can be anywhere. We haven't done that yet - this is the first example - but that's absolutely what we'd like to do."

Today, in a world where scientists also need to limit their time in the lab and maintain social distance from each other, the robo-scientist has come into its own.

"It doesn't get bored, doesn't get tired, works around the clock and doesn't need holidays," Dr Burger joked.

On a more serious note, he said that the robot had transformed the speed at which he could carry out research. "It can easily go through thousands of samples," he said, "so it frees up my time to focus on innovation and new solutions."

Like robotics designed for research in Space, machines like this could also take on riskier experiments - in harsher laboratory environments or using more toxic substances.

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That, according to Deirdre Black, head of research and innovation at the Royal Society of Chemistry, is why UK science needs to build new technologies into its infrastructure.

"This is about human beings harnessing all of these digital technologies, so that they can go faster - discover and innovate faster and explore bigger and more complex problems, like decarbonisation, preventing and treating disease, and making our air cleaner," she told BBC News.

So does this mean that while many scientists have been in lockdown, the machines have come to take their jobs?

"Absolutely not," said Dr Black. "Science will always need people".

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Robotic scientists will 'speed up discovery' - BBC News