Bees Can Teach Engineers a Thing or Two about Robotics – The National Interest Online

Gathered inside a small shed in the midst of a peaceful meadow, my colleagues and I are about to flip the switch to start a seemingly mundane procedure: using a motor to shake a wooden board. But underneath this board, we have a swarm of roughly 10,000 honeybees, clinging to each other in a single magnificent pulsing cone.

As we share one last look of excited concern, the swarm, literally a chunk of living material, starts to move right and left, jiggling like jelly.

Who in their right minds would shake a honeybee swarm? My colleagues and I are studying swarms to deepen our understanding of these essential pollinators, and also to see how we can leverage that understanding in the world of robotics materials.

Many bees create one swarm

The swarms in our study occur as part of the reproductive cycle of European honeybee colonies. When the number of bees exceeds available resources, usually in the spring or summer, a colony divides into two groups. One group, and a queen, fly away in search of a new permanent location while the rest of the bees remain behind.

During that effort, the relocating bees temporarily form a highly adaptable swarm that can hang from tree branches, roofs, fences or cars. While suspended, they have no nest to protect them from the elements. Huddling together allows them to minimize heat loss to the colder outside environment. They also need to adapt in real time to temperature variations, rain and wind all of which could shatter the fragile protection they share as one unit.

The swarm is orders of magnitude larger than the size of an individual bee. A bee could potentially coordinate its activity with neighboring bees right next to it, but it certainly couldnt coordinate directly with any bees at the far edge of the swarm.

So how do they manage to maintain mechanical stability in the face of something like strong wind a test that requires near simultaneous coordination throughout the entire swarm?

My colleagues Jacob Peters, Mary Salcedo, L. Mahadevan and I devised a series of experiments to address that question which brings us back to intentionally shaking the swarm.

Individual actions, whole swarm response

When we shook the swarm along its horizontal axis, the bees adjusted the shape of their swarm and within minutes became a wider, more stable cone. However, when the motion was vertical, the shape remained constant until a critical force was reached that caused the swarm to break apart.

Why did the bees respond to horizontal shaking, but not to vertical shaking? Its all about how the bonds bees create by holding hands get stretched.

It turns out vertical shaking doesnt disrupt these pair bonds as much as horizontal shaking does. Using a computational model, we showed that bonds between bees located closer to where the swarm attaches to the board stretch more than bonds between bees at the far tip of the swarm. Bees could sense these different amounts of stretching, and use them as a directional signal to move upwards and make the swarm spread.

In other words, bees move from locations where bonds stretch less, to locations where they stretch more. This behavioral response improves the collective stability of the swarm as a whole at the expense of increasing the average burden experienced by the individual bee. The result is a kind of mechanical altruism, as the one bee endures strain for the benefit of the swarms greater good.

Engineering lessons, taught by bees

As a broadly trained physicist studying animal behavior, I am fascinated by this kind of evolved solution in nature. Its amazing that honeybees can create multi-functional materials made of their many individual bodies that can shape shift without a global conductor telling them all what to do. No one is in charge, but together they keep the swarm intact.

What if engineers could take those solutions and lessons from nature and apply them to buildings? Instead of a bundle of buzzing bees, could you imagine a bundle of buzzing robots that cling on each other to create adaptive structures in real time? I can envision shelters that deploy rapidly in the face of natural disasters like hurricanes, or construction materials that can sense an earthquakes vibrations and respond in the same way that these swarms react to a branch in wind.

Essentially, these bees create an autonomous material that embedded within itself has multiple abilities. The swarm can sense information from the nearby environment, based on how much the pair bonds are stretching. It can compute, in the sense that it figures out which regions have more bond stretching. And it can actuate, meaning move in the direction toward more stretching.

These properties are some of the longstanding aspirations in the fields of multi-functional materials and robotics materials. The idea is to combine affordable robots that each have a minimal amount of mechanical components and sensors, like the M-blocks. Together they can sense their local environment, interact with neighboring robots and make their own decisions on where to move next. As Hiro, the young roboticist in the Disney movie Big Hero 6 says, The applications to this tech are limitless.

For the moment, this is still science fiction. But the more researchers know about the honeybees natural solutions, the closer we get to making that dream come true.

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Orit Peleg, Assistant Professor of Computer Science, University of Colorado Boulder

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Image: Reuters

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Bees Can Teach Engineers a Thing or Two about Robotics - The National Interest Online

Robots bring students together in Orange for a day of competition, collaboration – The Daily Progress

Last Saturday, the gym at Prospect Heights Middle School pulsed with music as hundreds of students in lab jackets, Harry Potter-themed wizard costumes and a variety of unusual hats pitted their robots against those of other teams.

Sponsored by a nonprofit called FIRST Chesapeake, the event was completely different from an old-fashioned science fair. The rules of the robotics tournament allowed participants to continue working on their entries between rounds and confer with their coaches. The result was an energy level equal to that of an exciting basketball game. Perched on the bleachers, a sizable audience of family members watched the kids strut their STEM stuff.

According to Jessica Sarver, coordinator of the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) program for Orange County Public Schools, there were 50 teams, mostly from Virginia but with one team from Maryland and another from Pennsylvania, competing in the day-long, qualifying tournament. She explained that the goal was to qualify for the state tournament in Februaryand, by the end of the day, the Orange County High School (OCHS) robotics team made it to the semifinal round and thus earned an appearance in the state event.

With judges hovering and announcers enthusiastically narrating the face-offs between teams, shiny, energetic robots moved cubes from one place to another. The race required the machines to duck under a bar as they zipped back and forth across their competition area. The students operating them by remote control were the drivers, but all the team members took part in programming and building the contraptions. Throughout the day, team members consulted with each other and their coaches as they tweaked their entries.

Qualifying for the state tournament may have been the goal, but having fun and cheerfully learning from their missteps were happy byproducts of the occasion for all of the approximately 500 students involved.

Members of the OCHS Hornets robotics team wore blue and orange antennae attached to their safety goggles, and the wondrously named Mustachio Peanuts of Prospect Heights Middle School sported neon-yellow shirts emblazoned with their school mascot, the yellow jacket. Meanwhile, the Neon Drones of Locust Grove Middle School milled about in their bright orange shirts and caps.

For OCHS seniors Daniel Lauber and Joanie Zummo, the beauty of robotics lies in the collaborative nature of the design and building processand even in the competition itself.

Everyone is going to help you, said Lauber of all the students and teachers who share his enthusiasm for building hard-working, efficient robots.

If not for his involvement in team robotics, he said, I would probably still be playing computer games at home.

A three-year member of the OCHS robotics team, Zummo said she enjoys watching the performance of robots made by other teams as much as those she has helped create.

Being on the team has advanced my knowledge of engineering and programming, she said, and piqued her interest in a career in digital forensics.

Both Zummo and Lauber commended teacher Laurie Jamerson, who leads the OCHS robotics team.

She gives us free rein for our ideas, but shell also let us fail, Zummo said, noting that she and her teammates inevitably learn from their mistakes.

Shes super-encouraging, Lauber added. Shes pushing you to constantly get better.

Leighann Scott Boland, executive director and director of development for FIRST Chesapeake, said the nonprofit uses the robotic competitions as a means of promoting STEM education across Virginia, Maryland and Washington and teaching life skills such as creativity, teamwork, leadership and communication.

She pointed out that participants include children who are homeschooled and some who are on community-based teams, as well as those representing their schools.

Faces in the crowd included Orange County Superintendent of Schools Dr. Cecil Snead. Wearing a tie emblazoned with multiple images of Albert Einsteins face, Snead expressed his satisfaction with the event, which he said provided a safe place for students to think creatively and critically.

Snead, who taught math early in his career, said he considers Einstein a STEM hero and a key innovator of our time.

Looking around the room full of happy, revved-up young coders and robot-builders, he added, Were going to have the next generation of innovators coming from this crowd.

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Robots bring students together in Orange for a day of competition, collaboration - The Daily Progress

Diligents Vivian Chu and Labradors Mike Dooley will discuss assistive robotics at TC Sessions: Robotics+AI – TechCrunch

Too often the world of robotics seems to be a solution in search of a problem. Assistive robotics, on the other hand, are among one of the primary real-world tasks existing technology can seemingly address almost immediately.

The concept for the technology has been around for some time now and has caught on particularly well in places like Japan, where human help simply cant keep up with the needs of an aging population. At TC Sessions: Robotics+AI at U.C. Berkeley on March 3, well be speaking with a pair of founders developing offerings for precisely these needs.

Vivian Chu is the cofounder and CEO of Diligent Robotics. The company has developed the Moxi robot to help assist with chores and other non-patient tasks, in order to allow caregivers more time to interact with patients. Prior to Diligent, Chu worked at both Google[X] and Honda Research Institute.

Mike Dooley is the cofounder and CEO of Labrador Systems. The Los Angeles-based company recently closed a $2 million seed round to develop assistive robots for the home. Dooley has worked at a number of robotics companies including, most recently a stint as the VP of Product and Business Development at iRobot.

Early Bird tickets are now on sale for $275, but you better hurry, prices go up in less than a month by $100. Students can book a super discounted ticket for just $50 right here.

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Diligents Vivian Chu and Labradors Mike Dooley will discuss assistive robotics at TC Sessions: Robotics+AI - TechCrunch

Boles’ ‘The Hive’ buzzing in robotics competition – Herald-Banner

Five VEX IQ Robotics teams from Boles Middle School, collectively known as The Hive, competed in a tournament on Jan. 11 at Cain Middle School in Rockwall.

Out of those five teams, two qualified to continue onto the VEX IQ Region 2 Middle School state championship, which will be on Feb. 29 at the Ann Richards STEAM Academy in Dallas.

One of the teams going onto the state championship next month, Team 23172C, partnered with a team from Ann Richards Middle School at the Jan. 11 competition, and together they earned the title of Teamwork Challenge Champions. The members of Team 23172C of The Hive are Jonathan Cruthird, Caroline Lewis, Jensen Simmons and Garrett Young-Frey.

The other team to continue to state is Team 23172A, who partnered with a team from Royse City Middle School and got second place in the Teamwork Challenge. Team 23172As members are Jacob Bickerstaff, Loralai Clark, Bianca Diera and Ethan Selden.

Both teams, 23172C and 23172A, also placed in the events skills challenge, with 23172A coming in second place and 23172C making it to fifth place.

As for Boles other VEX IQ teams, Team 23172B joined forces with a team from Pine Tree Junior high School to finish eighth place in the teamwork challenge and was ranked 16th in the skills challenge, while Team 23172E worked with another team from Cain Middle School to end the teamwork challenge in 10th place.

Team 23172B consists of Bryce Calkins, Ryan Malphurs and David Springer, and Team 23172E is made up of Ryder Morrison, Grayson Salisbury and Phoenix Siebenhausen.

This Saturday, all of the Boles Middle School VEX IQ Robotics teams are participating in and hosting their tournament at the Boles campus.

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Boles' 'The Hive' buzzing in robotics competition - Herald-Banner

Local Kids Robotics Team Invited To Competition In Japan – Oswego, IL Patch

This story was edited at 9:45 a.m., Jan. 24 to address several typos and 11:54 a.m. to remove a quote that subjects affected by the story said was misstated.

KENDALL COUNTY, IL Konnichiwa, hajimemashite. In Japanese, this phrase means 'hello, nice to meet you,' and it's one the members of the 'Pheonix Cubitects' local youth robotics team may want to remember. They have all been invited to participate in an international youth robotics competition, the 2020 FIRST Lego League International Invite in Nagoya, Japan, this May. The invite is spread over three days from May 7 - 10 and involves both competitive and friendly events.

"It's a really great way for the kids to see the diversity, to see the different ways that other children are coming up with solutions in the robotics world," Laurel Coonradt, the mother of one of the older team members, 8th-grader Jensen Coonradt, said.

The team's invitation came as a result of their winning second place at the FIRST Illinois Robotics Lego League Illinois State Championship, and a Global Innovation Award to boot. That competition too place on Saturday, Jan. 18 at Elgin Community College and involved 54 teams from around the state. Their high score in all contest areas qualified them to participate in an international competition of the same type, Coonradt said.

"[They received the invite] yesterday," Coonradt said. "The second place finisher for students was offered an international invite, and Japan was what our team was offered."

Nagoya is one of Japan's primary industrial cities and a global center for robotics innovations, so it's fitting that a global youth robotics event would be held there. Coonradt said 50 countries would send representatives.

"There will be more than 120 teams from a total of 50 countries," she said. "Japan, China, Korea, Australia, Brazil, Spain, Netherlands... there's a two page list."

Some larger countries, like the U.S., were sending more than one team to the competition. The Pheonix Cubitects would be the only team there from Illinois.

Coonradt said these grade-school inventors were eager to represent their communities on the world stage.

But there's a catch.

Even though the team was invited to Japan, FIRST officials made it clear that the team would have to pay their own way to Japan. Coonradt said they'd need at least $6,000 to pay for the airfare, hotels, food sundries involved in with the three-day trip, never mind the actual contest registration fees. The team has a 401c non-profit set up for these kinds of situations, but are also asking team members' friends, families and community members to pitch in. To save costs, Coonradt said some parents could stay home from the trip if necessary.

"Right now, we have three parents who have signed on... and hopefully we'll be able to do more, but if not, one or two parents could feasibly take everybody," Coonradt said.

On previous occasions where members of the team have traveled internationally for robotics events in China and Qatar, Coonradt said they have received financial help from public officials in those team members' communities. She said she hoped more public officials would be willing to help out this time as well.

Coonradt also said that she and other parents are considering setting up a GoFundMe page to help pay for the trip. Until then, anyone wishing to donate to the team's travel fund can contact the team's adult leaders at Phoenixcubitects@gmail.com or by phone at 630-715-3011.

"It's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity... when I look at the kids today and how much they've grown through taking robotics, " Coonradt said, "all of this started as an after-school program at [Oswego School] District 308."

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Local Kids Robotics Team Invited To Competition In Japan - Oswego, IL Patch

Poway High community robotics team brings home wins in Arizona – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Poway High Schools community robotics team, Mechanical Advantage Team 16884 earned several awards at two competitions in December.

The team competed at the Tucson, Arizona FIRST Tech Challenge on Dec. 7 and the Central Phoenix Qualifying Tournament on Dec. 21. The win in Tucson has qualified the team to compete in the Arizona State Championship in Flagstaff in February. This is the teams first year competing in the FIRST Tech Challenge.

Mechanical Advantage is a community-based robotics team, supported by Poway High School with members from five different area schools. It is coached by Thomas Bosworth.

The team earned a first-place win with alliance partner The ROBO Warriors 15652 at the Tucson event, as well as earning the Control Award for programming. In Phoenix, the team took home the first-place Design Award and the second-place Connect Award, despite facing and overcoming a major electrical failure, according to a press release.

While the team has worked hard to produce a competitive robot, the members also spend substantial time mentoring other younger FIRST robotics teams and volunteering within their community, according to officials.

The team collaborates with Poway High Schools FIRST Robotics competition team, Team Spyder 1622, on various community outreaches. These include hosting FIRST Lego League tournaments, VEX competitions, participating in local food drives to support food relief efforts for hurricane victims and helping to host the inaugural FIRST Tech Challenge robotics scrimmage in South America, which was held in Asuncion, Paraguay.

For this team, FIRST robotics is more than just robots, said Bosworth. The program gives the team a chance to work with others who share a passion for STEM and improving their community. Mechanical Advantage looks forward to competing in the San Diego league for the remainder of the season and will continue to look for opportunities to help their community both at home and abroad.

The team is captained by Poway High freshman Rohan Bosworth, Poway High sophomore Madalyn Nguyen and Westview High sophomore PJ Wetherell. Other team members include Reily Hopkins (sophomore, Westview High School); Manjusri Gobiraj, Kaila Rosing and Christina Schierbeck (freshmen, Scripps Ranch High School); Rohin Sood (seventh grade, Oak Valley Middle School); and Arya Bosworth (sixth grade, Black Mountain Middle School Academy).

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Poway High community robotics team brings home wins in Arizona - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Butte-Anaconda robotics team beats Montana, takes on the world – Montana Standard

Imagine being able to program a robot to perform complex tasks by itself, running simply on code.

Thats exactly what a team of students from Anaconda and Butte high schools imagined, leading to their winning performance at the state robotics competition.

Last week, some of Montanas best and brightest students converged on Montana State University grounds to put their brains and robots to the test.

After months of intense planning, programming and construction, Robolution, made up of students from Butte High School and Anaconda High School, walked away with the top trophy.

The For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology Organization (FIRST) Tech Challenge is a global robotics competition.

Students in seventh through 12th grade are challenged to design, build, program and operate a robot to compete in head-to-head challenges with competitor's robots doing specific tasks.

The competition is designed to help students realize the value of hard work, innovation and sharing ideas.

Robolutions win last Friday means earned it the sole Montana spot at the global FIRST Tech Challenge in Houston this April.

I have to give all the credit to the kids who put in the hard work. Im just really proud of them, said team coach Carlton Nelson, who was sporting a green Mohawk during Wednesdays robotics practice at Anaconda High, where he teaches science. They've spent many, many hours of researching and looking, designing, rebuilding and testing. And they really got that whole engineering process down.

Nelson established Robolution two years ago. He said last Friday was the teams second appearance at the FIRST Tech Challenge state competition and that he did not expect the team to win.

It was very shocking. Just a surreal experience, Nelson said. We just didnt know what we were doing last year. The students built a robot that could do the task but it wasnt fast enough. It looked like a kit robot rather than something ... they constructed themselves.

Nelson said Robolution finished in 36th place at last years state competition. But with the help of a grant, the team still traveled to Houston to watch the competition.

We went and watched and I think that really inspired the kids," Nelson said.

Each season, the robots are challenged with a different task. This year, the teams had to build robots to play a sophisticated field game. The game is played on a 12-foot square field with approximately one-foot high walls. The challenge includes a 30-second autonomous period, a two-minute driver-controlled period and end game scoring. During the autonomous period, robots operate using only pre-programmed instructions developed by team coders.

Nelson said that last year, other coaches told him, "Don't worry, you're going to grow fast. The first year is your year to figure out what this is all about.

In Montana, teams can advance from a qualifying tournament to the state competition not only by earning points on the robot playing field, but also by competing in judged awards for their robot design, engineering notebooks, programming and outreach efforts off the field programming.

Nelson said Robolution went to the two qualifying tournaments offered in Montana. The first one was held in Butte, and we qualified for state then and got the design award for best design. Then we went to the second qualifier in Helena to practice, and we were actually on the winning alliance at that time and we got the design award there, too, he explained.

When Robolution traveled to the state contest, Nelson said he privately expected it would only win a design award, or a control award.

There are two really, really competitive and good teams. One is the Redneck Robotics from Sun River and the other one called Fusion from Helena. Both teams have gone on to worlds. Fusion, for example, goes to worlds almost every year, Nelson explained. So to be competitive as a second-year team was gonna be a hard challenge.

At the end of the state competition, organizers handed out awards to teams that excelled in design, teamwork, innovation and other accomplishments, as demonstrated in a teams engineering notebook and interview with judges.

I thought for sure we were going to win one of those and go home and be happy because we did good, Nelson said.

When all but the highest award the Inspire Award had been announced, Robolution members started to worry.

I thought we were going to go home without any kind of trophy or any kind of medal. I was really bummed, Nelson said.

He said the team assumed the highest award would either go to Redneck Robotics or Fusion. That team would then get to go on to the world event.

But then the announcer leaned into the microphone and said Robolution had captured the Inspire award.

The team was ecstatic; some members began crying, while others were shocked.

Nelson recalled, It was nuts! The kids were jumping and crying. Oh, it was a pretty neat experience. I've never been part of anything like that. It was really surreal. That whole weekend I would wake up thinking that this cant be real. Did we really do this? The kids told me they thought that, too.

He said even though it was the teams goal to win the Inspire Award and go to the world championship, that dream just seemed so far out of reach.

I just didn't really didn't think we had the potential to win the top team, said Nelson. But I was wrong, and thats why Im wearing this green hair.

Two months ago, Nelson told his team members they should start preparing for a new robotics competition hosted at Montana Tech, which overlapped with the FIRST Tech Challenge World Championship.

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I told them that the schedule conflict shouldn't be a problem because we're not going to go to worlds, Nelson said.

So Robolution members made a bet with their coach.

They said, OK, if we go to worlds, youve got to get a Mohawk and turn it green, Nelson said. I didnt think we would be sitting in this position two months ago.

Nelson said he credits the team members' attitude and willingness to support each other for their success.

I think the biggest thing is that theyre all operating together as a team. They really came together cohesively as a team this year, and they really honed in on their strengths. So we've got kids that are really strong at building, and we've got kids that are really strong at programming, said Nelson. For them to find out their own niches and strengths in the team was just amazing to watch.

On Wednesday evening, Robolutions eight members two from Butte High School and the rest from Anaconda gathered in a classroom in Anaconda to prepare for the world competition.

In one corner of the room, Aaliyah Andersch was making design improvements to the teams remote controls and robot controlling info.

So for the past competitions, Ive just been carrying around the robots in a foam. So having this design will help us look more professional at worlds, said the Butte High School junior. Andersch joined Robolution last year and initially helped with the programming until she realized she was a much better designer.

I think having the skills to imagine things in your head and how they would work are some of the most important things to have as a designer, said Andersch.

Sitting next to Andersch, Kaden Dean stared at his laptop intently with his headphones on. He was concentrating on coding with Android Studio.

Dean is also a Butte High junior and a Robolution veteran. He started learning how to code at a summer program held at Montana Tech through Upward Bound, where hes learned Java, Scratch, Eclipse and Block in Java among other programming.

Dean joined Robolution when he found out that Upward Bound would support and fund a robotics team for Butte and Anaconda students.

I just stuck with it and its something extracurricular, which is better than doing nothing, Dean explained. My favorite part of working in this team is the fact that we can all work through our differences. Well have our arguments but we can still come back together and work things out, still have fun and not be super serious and hardcore all the time. Were just a group of friends who are just doing what we like.

At the other end of the room was the table of builders. Dean said hes dependent on them because he finds it difficult to program without seeing a visual build of the project.

Sitting with the builders was Caleb Thompson, a senior at Anaconda High School, who is the team captain and a programmer.

At state, it was unfortunate that we didnt get to complete all the matches because of a static problem, Thompson explained as he drew a blueprint on a sheet of graphing paper. The wheels can create static electricity when the robot is rolling on the ground, and that could overload the system. Its like an energy shock, and when that happens you cant control the robot.

Across the table from Thompson, William Barrington explained how theyre tinkering with the robots chassis and re-positioning the motors.

Caleb, last year, was coding the robot the night before the competition. So for him to take on the coding a little more in depth this year and with more background was really good for the team because he knows what hes doing, said Barrington, also a senior at Anaconda. For me, between programming or building, it was a no-brainer. Im pretty good at thinking in 3-D so I can look at something and say that thing is going to run into that.

Another builder at the table is Jaiden Connors, a sophomore at Anaconda High. He said his favorite part of being a builder is problem-solving and figuring out how to make things work.

This year, weve had a lot more teamwork and worked better together. And I think we knew more about how everything works, Connors said. He explained that while the teams are judged on their robots performance and completion of tasks, other qualities like sportsmanship, ability to follow rules, and team outreach all get factored into which team becomes the overall winner.

Team outreach is typically done by the scouts. Andrew Werner, a sophomore at Anaconda High and the newest member of Robolution, is one of them.

I help scout, so I go around and see what other teams are capable of and I try to see if we can maybe form an alliance with them later on, explained Werner.

Connors said scouts like Werner play an essential role in the team. A scout has to go talk with other teams and see how they can work well with our team. And if you choose your alliances right, you have a better chance of making it to the finals round, he said.

It brings all of the teams together and forces individual teams to think outside the box, he concluded.

As the team prepares for the world championship in April, some members are having mixed feelings, especially the seniors.

It feels really good to end my high school career like this, but Im also dreading the moment when its done, said Thompson. Like, I was really sad going into state because I thought we wouldnt get to come here any more and work on the robot. But winning state gives us a couple more months.

Barrington, the only other senior on the team, said winning a spot at the world championship means a lot for Anaconda. Its like our first state championship for literally anything in a while I think its our first state championship since three years ago, which was in wrestling, I think.

Next up is fundraising. Robolution will have to come up with funds to pay for their trip to the world contest in Houston.

Were going to have to rely a lot on local businesses and the community, said Thompson.

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Butte-Anaconda robotics team beats Montana, takes on the world - Montana Standard

Unearth the future of agriculture at TC Sessions: Robotics+AI with the CEOs of Traptic, FarmWise and Pyka – TechCrunch

Farming is one of the oldest professions, but today those amber waves of grain (and soy) are a test bed for sophisticated robotic solutions to problems farmers have had for millennia. Learn about the cutting edge (sometimes literally) of agricultural robots at TC Sessions: Robotics+AI on March 3 with the founders of Traptic, Pyka and FarmWise.

Traptic, and its co-founder and CEO Lewis Anderson, you may remember from Disrupt SF 2019, where it was a finalist in the Startup Battlefield. The company has developed a robotic berry picker that identifies ripe strawberries and plucks them off the plants with a gentle grip. It could be the beginning of a new automated era for the fruit industry, which is decades behind grains and other crops when it comes to machine-based harvesting.

FarmWise has a job thats equally delicate yet involves rough treatment of the plants weeding. Its towering machine trundles along rows of crops, using computer vision to locate and remove invasive plants, working 24/7, 365 days a year. CEO Sebastian Boyer will speak to the difficulty of this task and how he plans to evolve the machines to become doctors for crops, monitoring health and spontaneously removing pests like aphids.

Pykas robot is considerably less earthbound than those: an autonomous, all-electric crop-spraying aircraft with wings! This is a much different challenge from the more stable farming and spraying drones like those of DroneSeed and SkyX, but the choice gives the craft more power and range, hugely important for todays vast fields. Co-founder Michael Norcia can speak to that scale and his companys methods of meeting it.

These three companies and founders are at the very frontier of whats possible at the intersection of agriculture and technology, so expect a fruitful conversation.

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Unearth the future of agriculture at TC Sessions: Robotics+AI with the CEOs of Traptic, FarmWise and Pyka - TechCrunch

Soft robotic hands may soon have a firm grip on the industry – ZDNet

Soft Robotics, a company that develops enterprise level soft robotic grippers for a variety of materials handling and pick and place applications, is on a roll. After securing a high level strategic partnership in 2019, the company has announced an oversubscribed Series B worth $23M.

Back in December, Soft Robotics rolled out an innovative adaptable gripper system designed especially to work with FANUC robots via a new controller. The combined product debuted at IREX in Tokyo in December. Unlike robotic end effectors made of rigid materials that only flex via built-in joints, soft end effectors conform to the objects they pick up, allowing for a wider variety of applications with a single unit.

"Variability is the kryptonite of the robotics industry," says Carl Vause, CEO of Soft Robotics. "By offering a system that is able to grasp and manipulate items that vary in size, shape, and weight, we are able to solve the problem of high variability in both products and processes."

When I ran into Vause at a robotics conference a couple years back, he impressed me with a story of his end effectors picking up Peeps, the soft candy birds, directly off the line without deforming them, something unthinkable with rigid end effectors.

Read also:Robot builds an Ikea chair. Everyone goes nuts.

As I wrote in 2018 following Soft Robotics' Series A, building a better gripper is now akin to the age-old quest to build a better mousetrap. As use cases for robots proliferate and the demand for automation explodes thanks to fast fulfillment and grocery delivery, one of the big challenges is confronting variability in packaging. Soft Robotics' proprietary grasping technology, machine vision, and software solutions address these issues for large and meaningful industries such as food and beverage, consumer goods and cosmetics manufacturing, e-commerce supply chains, and more.

Additional use cases include handling item returns. According to Soft Robotics, UPS alone recently processed nearly two million returns on a single day. According to some sources, holiday returns could add up to as much as $90 to $95 billion worth of merchandise this year.

"Creating or accelerating a direct-to-customer channel is a strong cross-sector trend that has moved beyond markets such as food packaging and consumer goods manufacturing and more," says Remy Glaisner, Research Director WW Robotics at IDC. "At the order management level, it also means establishing highly dynamic 'reverse supply chains.' However, the general labor scarcity for use-cases related to order management is a critical roadblock. In that context, the role of nimble gripper solutions adaptable to both the inbound and outbound workflows become of strategic importance."

The gripper problem is being solved by companies like Soft Robotics and labs specializing in soft systems at research institutions likeCarnegie Mellon UniversityandUC Berkeley.

The venture arms of robotics giants ABB and Yamaha Motor Co., invested in Soft Robotics' last round. Calibrate Ventures and Material Impact participated in the latest round, along with additional existing investors Honeywell, Hyperplane, Scale, Tekfen Ventures, and Yamaha.

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Soft robotic hands may soon have a firm grip on the industry - ZDNet

Amazon wins patent for robots that drop off bunches of items on delivery routes – GeekWire

A diagram from Amazons patent application shows a customer issuing a command to open up one of the doors on a storage compartment vehicle. (Amazon Illustration via USPTO)

Amazon is already testing robots that deliver packages, but a newly issued patent covers a far more ambitious scheme, involving storage compartment vehicles that can roam the sidewalks to make multiple deliveries along their routes.

As described in the patent application published today, Amazons proposed SCVs could pick up items for return as well.

If the plan is fully implemented, it could address the last mile or final 50 feet challenge for delivery systems by having customers come out to the sidewalk, tap the required security code on their smartphones, and open up the right doors to grab the items theyve ordered.

Theres no guarantee that well see treaded SCVs roaming the street anytime soon. Amazon says its patent applications explore the full possibilities of new technologies but those inventions dont always get turned into new products and services as described in the applications. Sometimes the inventions never see the light of day. (Just ask Jeff Bezos about the airbag-cushioned smartphone he invented.)

That being said, the storage compartment vehicle isnt all that much of a stretch beyond the Amazon Scout delivery robots which are being tested north of Seattle in Snohomish County, and in other climes as well.

The device itself, as shown in the patent applications drawings, is reminiscent of the Dalek cyborgs from the Doctor Who TV series. But instead of bristling with weapons, these robots bristle with boxes.

Delivery agents could fill up the SCVs with items and set them loose from a loading area to make their dropoffs. The robots could position themselves at predetermined locations for pickups, or head out to the neighborhoods where the customers live. Whether the customers go to the robot, or the robot goes to the customer, doors would be opened and closed using a security code that registers with the SCVs cloud-based control system.

Much is made in the patent application which was filed two and a half years ago by Seattle-area inventors Wicksell Metellus, Kristopher William Bell, Julius Chen, Wesley Scott Lauka and Ryan Scott Russell about the tanklike tracks that enable the SCV to move along a wide range of slopes and rough terrain.

Each compartment could contain a protective air bladder that can be inflated to cushion the package within. Cameras, microphones, GPS devices, biometric scanners and other gizmos could be installed onto the robots to monitor their surroundings, provide navigational data, make sure the deliveries get to the right customers and make sure the robots dont get messed with.

Theres even a model thats outfitted with floats for marine delivery applications, or with propellers for aerial deliveries.

Amazon Robotics is growing by leaps and strides but filling the sidewalks, waterways and flight paths with robots on regular routes would represent a whole new level of automation. Lets just hope theres an off switch to flip in case those delivery Daleks start shouting Exterminate! Exterminate!

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Amazon wins patent for robots that drop off bunches of items on delivery routes - GeekWire

Stanley Robotics, Lyon Airport to expand robotic parking service – Robotics Business Review

Robot valet service helps regional French airport reduce carbon footprint, reduce hassle of airport parking.

By RBR Staff | January 22, 2020

LYON, France Following a successful one-year trial involving 500 parking spaces at the Lyon Airport, Stanley Robotics and VINCI Airports announced this week they agreed to expand the program to more than 2,000 spaces by summer 2020.

The innovative outdoor car park is entirely managed by robots, in which seven autonomous robots work simultaneously to deliver cars to the parking lot from 28 cabins that are available for customers to drop off or pick up their vehicles. The companies said that the project, initially started in 2017, ultimately aims to offer more than 6,000 parking spaces.

The Stanley Robotics robotic car valet. Image: ESoudan via Stanley Robotics

The robot valet service frees up time for passengers looking for free spaces or trying to locate their vehicle in a traditional parking lot or garage. After booking a space through the Lyon Airport website, passengers can drop off their vehicle in one of the dedicated cabins, and travel to the airport using a shuttle bus. The robot then takes care of the car, parking it within the secure car park area. When a passenger returns, they can pick up their vehicle in one of the cabins.

Clement Boussard, Stanley Robotics

This agreement represents a major development stage for our benchmark project on the Lyon Airport site, and for our service, said Clement Boussard, CEO of Stanley Robotics. The opening of 2,000 spaces illustrates how far we have come in terms of maturity, with a product that is increasingly professional. It represents a significant leap forward in the history of our young company, and boosts are confidence in our plan to conquer the airport market and get other projects up and running right now.

The robotic valet service allows cars to be parked more closely than a traditional parking. Image: ESoudan, courtesy of Stanley Robotics

The project aligns with the airport companys sustainable development approach, the company said. The robot valet service provided by Stanley Robotics and developed in Lyon meets the strategic objectives of Lyon Airport, namely, to enhance customer experience and reduce the environmental impact of the airports activities, said Tanguy Bertolus, CEO of Lyon Airport. The companies said the project:

The companies released the following statistics regarding usage of the 500 spaces during the trial period:

The Lyon Airport served 11.7 million passengers in 2019, offering 130 direct destinations and 52 new routes in the last three years. It is managed by VINCI Airports, the leading private airport operator in the world, managing 46 airports in France, Portugal, the U.K., Sweden, the U.S., and other countries. Stanley Robotics is a venture-backed company that offers a smart and high-density car storage solution for airports and other car logistics industries. The full-stack solution comprises of fully autonomous robots and intelligent storage management software.

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Stanley Robotics, Lyon Airport to expand robotic parking service - Robotics Business Review

Lynn Camp First Robotics Club gears up for season The News Journal – The News Journal

The First Robotics Club at Lynn Camp High School is ready to make a run. The group recently received the goals their new bot needs to achieve in competition. They will have six weeks to design and build a robot capable of climbing, accurately turning a table, and picking up and shooting a ball.

Natalie Hosman-Collopy, a senior in the club since freshman year, described the competition simply as working together to solve a goal. The production begins with deigning 3-D models and digital sketches before beginning construction. Parts for the robot are sourced from different places and 3-D printed in the engineering department. Although she plans to major in education, Natalie hopes to mentor future club members.

Lynn Camp is set to compete in March in Memphis. The competition will feature about 60 schools and a strong enough finish could send them to the world competition. Junior Rodney Alcorn is one club member whos already experienced the worlds stage. He described robotics as the best thing about high school to me, although he also has a fondness for football.

First Robotics is poised to carry on a strong team in the future with students like freshman Adrianna Hamilton. She acts as an understudy to one of the seniors and enjoys learning the ins and outs of programing. Like many she discovered the club through engineering class. Fellow freshman Bryson Riffe brings experience from the Lynn Camp Elementary Lego Robotics Team with him. Riffe wishes to enter into the engineering field in college and is helping develop a ball loading system for the robot.

Coach Hank Gevedon described the club as a sports team given the long hours they put in after school. Gevedon is in his first year as coach after being an assistant last year. Hes very proud of his club and of Lynn Camp itself. Gevedon gives his students plenty of credit and encouragement along the way. He placed Natalie in charge of conducting the interview for this article with a grade attached. She certainly received an A+.

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Lynn Camp First Robotics Club gears up for season The News Journal - The News Journal

Google claims to have invented a quantum computer, but IBM begs to differ – The Conversation CA

On Oct. 23, 2019, Google published a paper in the journal Nature entitled Quantum supremacy using a programmable superconducting processor. The tech giant announced its achievement of a much vaunted goal: quantum supremacy.

This perhaps ill-chosen term (coined by physicist John Preskill) is meant to convey the huge speedup that processors based on quantum-mechanical systems are predicted to exhibit, relative to even the fastest classical computers.

Googles benchmark was achieved on a new type of quantum processor, code-named Sycamore, consisting of 54 independently addressable superconducting junction devices (of which only 53 were working for the demonstration).

Each of these devices allows the storage of one bit of quantum information. In contrast to the bits in a classical computer, which can only store one of two states (0 or 1 in the digital language of binary code), a quantum bit qbit can store information in a coherent superposition state which can be considered to contain fractional amounts of both 0 and 1.

Sycamore uses technology developed by the superconductivity research group of physicist John Martinis at the University of California, Santa Barbara. The entire Sycamore system must be kept cold at cryogenic temperatures using special helium dilution refrigeration technology. Because of the immense challenge involved in keeping such a large system near the absolute zero of temperature, it is a technological tour de force.

The Google researchers demonstrated that the performance of their quantum processor in sampling the output of a pseudo-random quantum circuit was vastly better than a classical computer chip like the kind in our laptops could achieve. Just how vastly became a point of contention, and the story was not without intrigue.

An inadvertent leak of the Google groups paper on the NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) occurred a month prior to publication, during the blackout period when Nature prohibits discussion by the authors regarding as-yet-unpublished papers. The lapse was momentary, but long enough that The Financial Times, The Verge and other outlets picked up the story.

A well-known quantum computing blog by computer scientist Scott Aaronson contained some oblique references to the leak. The reason for this obliqueness became clear when the paper was finally published online and Aaronson could at last reveal himself to be one of the reviewers.

The story had a further controversial twist when the Google groups claims were immediately countered by IBMs quantum computing group. IBM shared a preprint posted on the ArXiv (an online repository for academic papers that have yet to go through peer review) and a blog post dated Oct. 21, 2019 (note the date!).

While the Google group had claimed that a classical (super)computer would require 10,000 years to simulate the same 53-qbit random quantum circuit sampling task that their Sycamore processor could do in 200 seconds, the IBM researchers showed a method that could reduce the classical computation time to a mere matter of days.

However, the IBM classical computation would have to be carried out on the worlds fastest supercomputer the IBM-developed Summit OLCF-4 at Oak Ridge National Labs in Tennessee with clever use of secondary storage to achieve this benchmark.

While of great interest to researchers like myself working on hardware technologies related to quantum information, and important in terms of establishing academic bragging rights, the IBM-versus-Google aspect of the story is probably less relevant to the general public interested in all things quantum.

For the average citizen, the mere fact that a 53-qbit device could beat the worlds fastest supercomputer (containing more than 10,000 multi-core processors) is undoubtedly impressive. Now we must try to imagine what may come next.

The reality of quantum computing today is that very impressive strides have been made on the hardware front. A wide array of credible quantum computing hardware platforms now exist, including ion traps, superconducting device arrays similar to those in Googles Sycamore system and isolated electrons trapped in NV-centres in diamond.

These and other systems are all now in play, each with benefits and drawbacks. So far researchers and engineers have been making steady technological progress in developing these different hardware platforms for quantum computing.

What has lagged quite a bit behind are custom-designed algorithms (computer programs) designed to run on quantum computers and able to take full advantage of possible quantum speed-ups. While several notable quantum algorithms exist Shors algorithm for factorization, for example, which has applications in cryptography, and Grovers algorithm, which might prove useful in database search applications the total set of quantum algorithms remains rather small.

Much of the early interest (and funding) in quantum computing was spurred by the possibility of quantum-enabled advances in cryptography and code-breaking. A huge number of online interactions ranging from confidential communications to financial transactions require secure and encrypted messages, and modern cryptography relies on the difficulty of factoring large numbers to achieve this encryption.

Quantum computing could be very disruptive in this space, as Shors algorithm could make code-breaking much faster, while quantum-based encryption methods would allow detection of any eavesdroppers.

The interest various agencies have in unbreakable codes for secure military and financial communications has been a major driver of research in quantum computing. It is worth noting that all these code-making and code-breaking applications of quantum computing ignore to some extent the fact that no system is perfectly secure; there will always be a backdoor, because there will always be a non-quantum human element that can be compromised.

More appealing for the non-espionage and non-hacker communities in other words, the rest of us are the possible applications of quantum computation to solve very difficult problems that are effectively unsolvable using classical computers.

Ironically, many of these problems emerge when we try to use classical computers to solve quantum-mechanical problems, such as quantum chemistry problems that could be relevant for drug design and various challenges in condensed matter physics including a number related to high-temperature superconductivity.

So where are we in the wonderful and wild world of quantum computation?

In recent years, we have had many convincing demonstrations that qbits can be created, stored, manipulated and read using a number of futuristic-sounding quantum hardware platforms. But the algorithms lag. So while the prospect of quantum computing is fascinating, it will likely be a long time before we have quantum equivalents of the silicon chips that power our versatile modern computing devices.

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Hands-on review: Alienware m15 r2: supercomputer or superweapon? – FutureFive New Zealand

Alienwares latest creation, the m15 r2 gaming laptop, is a testament to how much punch the evil scientists at Alienware could pack into a fifteen-inch laptop, without skimping on portability.

The m15 is a seriously cool laptop. From unboxing it from its glossy black box to the final chime of the Windows setup, everything feels refined, simplistic and highly polished.

Somehow, the m15 manages to combine the chic of a Tesla with the power of a superweapon.

But with a $2800 price tag, your own Death Star is probably a cheaper option.

With laptops tending to lean towards the bezel-less, paperthin frame popularised by the Macbook and Surface Pro, its refreshing to see a computer manufacturer trying something different. The ice-white colour is pretty synonymous with Alienware by this point, and the m15 is no different. It definitely has its curves, and it flaunts them where it can.

Dell seems to have noticed the little things, too. From the glowing ring around the end of the power cord, to the grinning alien logo that doubles as a power button, the attention to detail helps to complete the package.

Visually, it just looks good.

But you cant ignore its flaws.

Mainly, the gigantic horizontal cooling fan Frankenstein-ed to the laptop behind the screen. The mega-fan might have something to do with the weight, too, which is frankly an issue. Coming in at a little over 2kg, it isnt something to hold while you walk around the room in a conference call. Thankfully, with the weight brings sturdiness, with everything from the hinges to the screen feeling sturdy enough to handle even the most careless laptop user.

Dimension-wise, the m15 is somehow sleek and bulky at the same time. What matters most is that its sleek enough to shimmy into a backpack, which realistically is the greatest test of a laptop a test it passes with flying colours.

Where the m15 really begins to shine is its performance.

The m15 is powered by the latest and greatest ninth-generation Intel i9 core, and together with an obscenely powerful RTX 2080 graphics card and 16GB of DDR4 RAM, the computer has no difficulty running the hottest games on the market. From Halo Reach to the latest Call of Duty, everything eventually falls to the m15. The RTX graphics card also allows for ray tracing in compatible games, offering a level of futureproofing not typically found in laptops.

The 15-inch OLED display is crisp to a fault and makes gaming and entertainment a pleasure. Colours are vibrant, and the thin bezel surrounding the screen is inoffensive. The laptops speakers are surprisingly good too, with the snazzy honeycomb-style speakers sitting pretty above the keyboard.

Speaking of the keyboard, I found it had a surprising level of functionality when using it, although I wouldnt go writing any novels on the m15 anytime soon.

When I slammed the oversized cooling fan earlier, I may have been a bit harsh. For what it is, the laptop creates some heat, and mounting the fan behind the screen is innovative and pretty smart by Alienware. Keeping it out of sight and out of mind, the fan is surprisingly quiet.

While this is realistically a gaming PC hidden within a laptop, the Alienware m15 definitely doesnt forget its roots. Its brilliant display and crisp sound are definite winners, while the performance is enough to rival most high-end gaming computers. Despite its unforgiving weight, the m15s surprising portability and sturdiness is definitely something to be commended.

The m15 isnt for the faint of heart: its a commitment a commitment to the bulky lifestyle the m15 brings. You can expect to groan as you lift it out of your bag but can also expect a gaming experience that can compete with the best of them.

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Hands-on review: Alienware m15 r2: supercomputer or superweapon? - FutureFive New Zealand

Giant Planets Could Form Around Tiny Stars in Just a Few Thousand Years – Universe Today

M-type (red dwarf) stars are cooler, low-mass, low-luminosity objects that make up the vast majority of stars in our Universe accounting for 85% of stars in the Milky Way galaxy alone. In recent years, these stars have proven to be a treasure trove for exoplanet hunters, with multiple terrestrial (aka. Earth-like) planets confirmed around the Solar Systems nearest red dwarfs.

But what is even more surprising is the fact that some red dwarfs have been found to have planets that are comparable in size and mass to Jupiter orbiting them. A new study conducted by a team of researchers from the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) has addressed the mystery of how this could be happening. In essence, their work shows that gas giants only take a few thousand years to form.

The study, which recently appeared in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, was the work of Dr. Anthony Mercer and Dr. Dimitris Stamatellos of the UCLan Jeremiah Horrocks the Institute for Mathematics, Physics & Astronomy (JHI MPA). Dr. Mercer, an Astrophysics Reader with the JHI MPA, led the research under the supervision of Dr. Stamatellos, who leads the institutes Theoretical Star formation & Exoplanets group.

Together, they studied how planets could form around red dwarf stars to determine what mechanism would allow for the formation of super-massive gas giants. According to conventional models of planet formation, where the gradual build-up of dust particles leads to progressively bigger bodies, red dwarf systems should not have enough mass to form super-Jupiter-type planets.

To investigate this discrepancy, Mercer and Dr. Stamatellos used the UK Distributed Research using Advanced Computing (DiRAC) supercomputer which connects facilities at Cambridge, Durham, Edinburgh, and Leicester University to simulate the evolution of protoplanetary discs around red dwarf stars. These rotating discs of gas and dust are common around all newly borns stars and are what eventually lead to planet formation.

What they found was that if these young discs are large enough, they can fragment into different pieces, which would coalesce due to mutual gravitational attraction to form gas giant planets. However, this would require that the planets form within a few thousand years, a timescale that is extremely fast in astrophysical terms. As Dr. Mercer explained:

The fact that planets may be able to form on such short timescale around tiny stars is incredibly exciting. Our work shows that planet formation is particularly robust: other worlds can form even around small stars in a variety of ways, and therefore planets may be more diverse than we previously thought.

Their research also indicated that these planets would be extremely hot after they form, with temperatures reaching thousands of degrees in their cores. Because they dont have an internal energy source, they would become fainter over time. This means that these planets would be easy to observe in the infrared wavelength when they are still young, but the window for direct observation would be small.

Still, such planets could still be observed indirectly based on their effect on their host star, which is how planets orbiting red dwarf stars have typically been found. This is known as the Radial Velocity Method (aka. Doppler Spectroscopy), where changes in the stars spectra indicate that it is moving, which is an indication of planets exerting their gravitational influence on it. As Dr. Stamatellos added:

This was the first time that we were able not only to see planets forming in computer simulations but also to determine their initial properties with great detail. It was fascinating to find that these planets are of the fast and furious kind they form quickly and they are unexpectedly hot.

These results are nothing if not timely. Recently, astronomers detected a second extrasolar planet around Proxima Centauri, the closest star to our own. Unlike Proxima b, which is Earth-sized, rocky, and orbits within the stars habitable zone; Proxima c is believed to be 1.5 times the size of Earth, half as massive as Neptune (making it a mini-Neptune), and orbits well-outside Proxima Centauris habitable zone.

Knowing that there is a possible mechanism that allows gas giants to form around red dwarfs stars puts us a step closer to understanding these entirely-common, but still-mysterious stars.

Further Reading: UCLan, Astronomy & Astrophysics

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Giant Planets Could Form Around Tiny Stars in Just a Few Thousand Years - Universe Today

What will happen when robots have taken all the jobs? – Telegraph.co.uk

To some this will sound like a nanny-state hellscape, and Susskind does not shy from calling his proposed solution The Big State. He does not, however, go into detail about how exactly the community will decide which activities are worthy of payment. Perhaps we will be subject to the tyranny of a slim majority that decides dog-breeding, classical music or literary criticism are valueless activities, in which case no one will ever do them again.

But the moral objection to UBI that it will encourage laziness and anomie is always at bottom a puritan condescension. If one asked Susskind whether, if he never had to worry about money, he would just spend all day watching reruns of Bake Off and slumping into potato-ish ennui, he would probably deny it. So why assume it of everyone else?

As it turns out, Bertrand Russell anticipated this objection 90 years ago: It will be said that while a little leisure is pleasant, men would not know how to fill their days if they had only four hours work out of the 24. Insofar as this is true in the modern world it is a condemnation of our civilisation; it would not have been true at any earlier period. There was formerly a capacity for light-heartedness and play which has been to some extent inhibited by the cult ofefficiency.

Modern sceptics might still dismiss Russells argument as a Fabian pipe-dream, but the cult of efficiency is still very much abroad, and it is indeed what is driving the race to automation. Susskinds careful analysis shows that it will be an increasingly unignorable problem, even if his proposed solution will not convince everyone. At the last gasp, he even drops in the alarming recommendation that our future politicians should guide us on what it means to live a flourishing life, in the face of which prospect one might after all be happier to resign oneself to a robot apocalypse.

A World Without Work is published by Allen Lane at 20. To order your copy for 16.99, call 0844 871 1514 or visit the Telegraph Bookshop

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What will happen when robots have taken all the jobs? - Telegraph.co.uk

We know the earth is warming. We know that will stress water in the West. But we don’t know how. – The Colorado Sun

Flavio Lehner was a graduate student working with computer models simulating Earths climate at the University of Berne in Switzerland when he had a chance to join a research vessel collecting sea temperatures and measuring ocean currents between Greenland and Svalbard, Norway.

As a lifestyle, field work is very agreeable, Lehner said. But for me, it was a watershed moment. I had to decide which way to go.

Was it to be a life in the real world of ocean voyages or mathematical abstractions?

Climate is changing, Colorado researchers agree. But how will it change snow and water in the West?

They had been measuring ocean currents for 10 years, Lehner said. In real-world data collection, you look at one fraction of the Earth for a long time. With models, you can look at the big-picture questions.

Two of those big-picture questions are how much snow will fall on the mountains of the West and how much water will be available for the regions forests, farms and cities in a world growing warmer as greenhouse gases build up in the atmosphere.

Today, Lehner, 35, and his colleagues at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, are trying to divine answers through a welter of mathematical calculations designed to reflect how the world works.

Those equations are linked together in NCARs Community Earth System Model, a sort of algorithmic Rube Goldberg machine, which connects a set of algorithms representing the laws of physics that govern the planet thermodynamics, transfer of radiation and global conservation of momentum and water and uses them to generate a picture of the future.

It takes years to construct such a model, and it is hoped it accurately reflects the world. The models do have deficiencies, and we work on those, Lehner said.

For example, there is a tongue of cold water in the tropical Pacific Ocean near the equator. The position and shape of it dont look realistic in a lot of models, Lehner said, and that in turn, could affect predicted rain patterns.

If you think of a map of the world overlaid by a checkerboard, you get a vision of the cells into which the data is distributed Greenland ocean temperatures into the Greenland cell and Rocky Mountain snowfall into the Colorado cell. The cells are big 60 miles by 60 miles to as much as 150 miles on a side.

The smaller the cells the better the resolution in the model and the clearer the picture, but more computer power and detailed data are required.

The model is run on various scenarios to see what will happen to the world. Seeing what happens to rain and snow in the West is trickier.

Temperature on a regional scale is clear, Lehner said. If it is particularly warm in Boulder, it is going to be warm in Denver, but it can rain in Boulder and not in Denver.

The mountains make the Western cells even more difficult to model. As a result, predicting what is going to happen to rain and snow in the West is challenging.

The big models dont even agree on whether there will be more or less precipitation in the West as the world warms.

As the air gets hotter, it can hold more moisture 7% more for each 1-degree Celsius increase in temperature but whether that translates to more rain or just a few heavier storms is unclear.

Hot air that rises at the equator moves hundreds of miles north and south, descending to create a band of deserts around the world, including the Sahara, Gobi and the American Southwests Sonoran.

The models show the Southwest deserts advancing north as the world heats up, but by just 10 miles in some, and by 100 miles in others. It is easier to see the movement over the oceans, which are flat, Lehner said, but more complicated once mountains and valleys are added. So, over land it is not always clear what will happen to the rainfall and deserts.

To better calibrate the Earth system models, 30 of the big model groups around the world from Japan to China to Russia to Canada to Boulder are participating in an exercise called the Climate Model Intercomparison Project, or CMIP, in which they all run the same data set to see where their models differ.

It isnt straightforward when you see these models dont agree, Lehner said. Then its a lot of detective work to figure out why.

NCARs model is housed in Eagle, the centers supercomputer in Cheyenne, and Lehner can tap into it from his laptop (a bit like checking your bank balance online) and run simulations.

While Eagle is the fastest supercomputer in the world dedicated to energy research performing 8 million-billion calculations per second to run the data through the models mass of algorithms takes at least 24 hours for a 20-year projection; a century will take weeks.

While modelers try to sort out the glitches and differences, all the models do agree on quite a lot, including the basic fact that as the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere rises, the world will be warmer and in many places drier.

In the political realm, if we dont have the answer for sure, we dont know anything, Lehner said. We dont yet know with any certainty what will happen to precipitation over the Southwest, but we can anticipate that in a warmer world and a warmer world is certain we will see more stresses on water resources.

To get a better sense of what will happen at a regional level, researchers take the data from Earth system models and downscale it to smaller models.

United States Geological Survey researcher Gregory McCabe, for example, constructed a hydrological water balance model taking into account variables such as precipitation, temperature, soil moisture and snow accumulation and melt. The cells in this model were approximately 2 miles by 2 miles.

The model showed that since 1980 there have been lower-than-average snow conditions in the western U.S. that are unprecedented within the context of 20th century climate.

When the model was applied to the Upper Colorado River Basin with a future average temperature increase of 0.86 degrees Celsius, stream flow declined by 8%. When the average temperature was increased to 2 degrees Celsius, stream flow dropped 17%.

Weve seen a shift in peak runoff to earlier in the year, McCabe said. So, the water is coming off sooner in several places in the West that has implications of how much water there will be in the river in July.

Models can be run backward into the past as well into the future. Using paleoclimate data from tree rings going back to 1490, McCabe and his colleagues reconstructed snowfall and stream flow in the Upper Colorado River basin which includes parts of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming.

Using the historical record, they concluded that under the warmer temperatures used in the hydrology model, the basin is likely to experience periods of water shortage more severe than anything in the past 500 years.

Lehner was part of a team that did a similar paleo study of the Upper Rio Grande Basin looking at how much of the snow made it into the river and concluded that the current, steep declining trend is unprecedented in the context of the last 445 years.

Katrina Bennett, a hydrologist at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, downscaled Earth system model output into a hydrological model (with cells about 3.7 miles a side) to look at what would happen to stream flows as forests were lost to fire and pests in the San Juan Basin and found that that their disappearance alone could reduce stream flows in basin 6 to 11%.

Over the next 50 to 100 years as forests are replaced with shrubs and the water balance shifts, Bennett said, the question is how far?

MORE: Climate change is transforming Western forests. And that could have big consequences far beyond wildfires.

Between 2000 and 2014, the Colorado River suffered the worst 15-year drought on record. Bradley Udall, a research scientist at Colorado State University, and Jonathan Overpeck, at the University of Arizona, sought to parse what was happening to the river.

Using the temperature-water flow sensitives of a hydrological model, they concluded that while droughts in the past were driven by a lack of rain and snow, this drought was in large part caused by high temperatures.

About a third of the lost flow was the result of record-setting temperatures that caused evaporation from streams and soils, as well as evapotranspiration as plants suck up water. By 2050, they projected heat could reduce the Colorado River flows 20%.

You can already see the effects of heat, Udall said. I spent a week hiking in the Red River Valley in Utah at 10,000 feet. Wed had a wet winter, but by September, it was extremely dry. Streams were dry, marshy wetlands crunched underfoot.

McCabes work on stream flows, Lehners centuries look back on the Rio Grande, Bennetts examination of the interplay of San Juan forests and streams and Udalls assessment of the impact of heat on the Colorado River are each smaller pictures of what is happening and what may happen in the future.

Science is reliant on models from big global climate to smaller hydrology models, Udall said. What weve learned out of these global climate models are the extremes, the best and worst case. It gives you the sense of the range, but not what is most probable.

The struggle of what we know and what we dont know should not paralyze us, he said. We know a lot, and it should tell us to be cautious. Since 2000, weve learned a lot, and it is mostly bad.

CORRECTION: This story was updated at 1:42 p.m. on Jan. 22, 2020, to correctly describe the states in the Upper Colorado River basin included in Gregory McCabes research.

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We know the earth is warming. We know that will stress water in the West. But we don't know how. - The Colorado Sun

Super Computer model rates Newcastle United chances of beating Everton and relegation probability – The Mag

Interesting overview of Newcastle United for the season and todays match against Everton at Goodison Park.

The super computer model predictions are based on the FiveThirtyEight revision to the Soccer Power Index, which is a rating mechanism for football teams which takes account of over half a million matches, and is based on Optas play-by-play data.

They have analysed all Premier League matches this midweek, including this game against Carlo Ancelottis team.

Their computer model gives Everton a 62% chance of a win, it is 23% for a draw and a 15% possibility of a Newcastle win (percentage probabilities rounded up/down to nearest whole number).

When it comes to winning the title, they have the probability at 99% Liverpool and the rest (including Man City now) nowhere, a quite remarkable situation with still four months of the season remaining.

Also interesting to see how the computer model now rates the percentage probability chances of relegation:

91% Norwich

67% Bournemouth

50% Villa

31% West Ham

19% Watford

12% Brighton

11% Burnley

10% Newcastle United

4% Southampton

3% Palace

1% Arsenal

So they now rate Newcastle a one in ten chance of going down, Steve Bruces team seven points clear of the relegation zone.

The bookies have Newcastle at 8/1 to be relegated after the win over Chelsea, pretty much matching the Soccer Power Index model chances of 9/1 (10%).

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Super Computer model rates Newcastle United chances of beating Everton and relegation probability - The Mag

Hong Kong rings in Chinese New Year with protest-themed gifts – Quartz

From Molotov-cocktail-embroidered tote bags to Be Water chapstick, Lunar New Year shopping in Hong Kong has a distinctly rebellious agenda this year.

All over the city, pop-up shops and not entirely legal street markets have cropped up in the days ahead of the new year, which begins on Jan. 25 and will be the year of the rat in the traditional Chinese zodiac. The sellers and shoppers are defying the Hong Kong government, which has banned stalls selling political-themed goods and satirical giftstraditionally a mainstay of these marketsfrom its official new year bazaars. Theyre also promoting what the protest movement calls the yellow economic circle, or spending in ways that support ones political values.The tactic seems to be workingphotos from the past weekend showed very sparse attendance at one of the main official markets.

Many of the defiantly unofficial markets, on the other hand, were hugely popular. One such market in Hong Kongs Sai Ying Pun area was packed over the weekend, as shoppers came to spend at street stalls that in some cases will donate proceeds to the protest movement, and to buy locally made goods. Its another reshaping of the economic landscape, with consumption shifting away from Hong Kongs ubiquitous shopping malls which are now themselves frequently the site of protests.

Many shoppers took photos at a stall in front of a massive print of a painting by an artist couple who go by Lumli and Lumlong. In the painting, the left side of the figure was a nod to the protests frontline fighters, and had been done by Lumlong, while the right side depicted the peaceful protester and was painted by Lumli. Among the weapons the figure is wielding are a traffic cone, water, and a pet food dishall to put out tear gas, Lumli said.

This year is very special, said Lumli. The government did not want to give the pass to us, so we have to make this market by ourselves we want to develop our yellow market, our yellow economic circle.

On the opposite side of the street, another stall was offering tote bags and a planner emblazoned with a petrol bomb patch. A young woman at the stall said the bags have been quite popular, and that they had sold about 100 of them. Since stalls at the market werent accepting payment directly, this involved sellers handing out chits and buyers going elsewhere to make a payment, in a line that at times included over 100 people waiting patiently to pay.

Next to them, high school students manned a stall with gift envelopes for giving out money during the new year. Each envelope depicted a kind of protester, or a first-aid volunteer. One envelope depicted an imaginary creaturea winged lionthat has become a common way to refer to vigilante justice, used at times by both protesters and their opponents. Nearby, Be Water lip balm was also on offer, a reference to the guiding philosophy of the protests.

One woman was selling patches which could be fixed to a purse, or sown onto a tee shirt. They depicted protest icons like Pepe the Frog, and a pig from popular local forum LIHKG known commonly as LinPig.

One of the most popular services at the fair was entirely free. As many as 50 people lined up at a time to get their bag or tee shirts hand-stamped with a logo that depicted a helmet and goggles, and a slogan.

A few train stops away, in the busy shopping district of Causeway Bay, another Lunar New Year market had set up shop in a pop-up space formerly occupied by a large cosmetics store. Hong Kongs retail sales, driven by luxury brands, had a tough year in 2019.

In the pop-up store, people weaved their way through narrow aisles lined with various stalls, where different sellers plied their wares on tabletops. The atmosphere was so festive and relaxeda far cry from the tense protests also going on that daythat when the lights temporarily cut out, no one seemed particularly annoyed. A miniature Lady Libertythe statue depicting a protester in a gas mask, goggles, and a helmeteven appeared to glow in the dark. When the lights flicked back on minutes later, shoppers clapped and cheered.

One stall sold surgical masks explicitly marked Made in Taiwana nod to some protesters efforts to boycott China-related businesses. Another sold protest-branded wrist watches, with the hand mannequin holding up a miniature yellow umbrella. Close by, a stall selling flowers had decorated chrysanthemums into LinPigs.

With snacks often being a main attraction at these fairs, there was a wide selection of protest-themed foods. There were cookies decorated with LinPig and protest slogans, while one local brewery sold bottles of black IPA wrapped in the iconic blue-and-white checkered pattern of Life Bread, popular local brand of sliced bread. The humble pantry item became a protest symbol after video emerged in November of a police officer taunting protesters holed up inside Polytechnic University during the siege of the school, saying he would go enjoy sumptuous hotpot at the end of his shift while the protesters would have to subsist on sliced bread.

Yan, 23, a social work student who checked out one of the pop-ups on Sunday, said that she liked that most of the products were handmade and that she could support people with the same political stance as her. By buying something from these sellersin her case a tote and a set of strawsshe said she hoped she could also give a message to the government that we are standing together to fight.

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Hong Kong rings in Chinese New Year with protest-themed gifts - Quartz

Sorry Racist Friend, That MLK Quote You Posted Yesterday Meant Nothing Coming From You – Moms

Dear racist friend: that Martin Luther King Jr. quote you posted yesterday wasnt enough to convince me that youre not terribly racist.

Yesterday was MLK Day, the annual event where we celebrate the life of Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. which was cut short by a gunshot wound on January 20th, 1968. The day marks an annual reminder that all is still not well within the United States when it comes to race and equality.

Its also my annual reminder of how even the most racist people on Earth will take one day out of the year to sheepishly acknowledge a man who was killed by an avowed racist.

I found a really good tweet about the whole thing the other day. It was from the FBI, of all places, which did exactly as you did and tweeted out a solemn and inspirational quote from the late Doctor. "The time is always right to do what is right," read the quote, which is exactly the sort of thing youd see on an inspirational poster with a black-and-white photo of Martin Lither King Jr. in the background.

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But heres the thing: the FBI HATED Martin Luther King. They were actively trying to sabotage him at every opportunity. After Dr. King's "I Have a Dream" speech at the National Mall in August of 1963, the FBI approved a huge surveillance operation against Dr. King, with Domestic Intelligence Chief William Sullivan calling him "the most dangerous Negro of the future in this Nation."

The surveillance didn't reveal any illegal actions on MLK's part, but they did reveal a history of extramarital affairs. Later, the FBI packaged up all their "King sex tapes" and then mailed them to his home address. His wife opened the package. She wasn't pleased.

Worse, the letter inside the package made it seem like it was written by a disillusioned black former supporter and demanded the King halt his activism. To date, the FBI has never apologized.

That one nice MLK quote really doesnt cut it from them, and it certainly doesnt cut it from you. Now, stop sharing all those Pepe the Frog memes and be a civilized human being for once.

Source: Twitter, Vox

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Sorry Racist Friend, That MLK Quote You Posted Yesterday Meant Nothing Coming From You - Moms