Nanotechnology, climate change and pollution – Daily Pioneer

Nano-material is the future technology for countries around the world that is equipped to tackle the toughest of environmental challenges that the mankind face today, but it needs to be harnessed quickly and made mainstream

The world today faces environmental problems and challenges of staggering proportions. With every passing year, threats to ecological biodiversity of the planet are multiplying. As countries scramble to find effective solutions, it is quickly emerging that traditional practices for conserving the environment and the time-tested methods of preventing pollution may not prove to be successful in getting the desired results.

Nanotechnology and nanomaterial-driven pollution control strategies are rapidly emerging as a small, but ultra powerful source of solutions for todays vexing environmental problems. First explored for applications in microscopy and computing, nanomaterial made up of units that are each thousands of times smaller than the thickness of a human hair, are emerging as useful tools for tackling threats to our planets well-being.

Nano-material is increasingly forming the foundation of eco-friendly technology that can capture carbon dioxide from air and toxic pollutants from water and degrade solid waste into useful products. Scientists, researchers and innovators are relying on this technology to slowly but steadily mitigate climate change process. Thanks to the amount of research and development in this sector, nano-material are now not only dependable and recyclable but also efficient catalysts. These features have spurred a bevy of technical innovations in which nano-material plays an integral and pivotal part.

For instance, in order to slow down the concerning increases in carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere and also mitigate climate change, researchers have developed Nano CO2 harvesters that can absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide and deploy it for industrial purposes. For instance, alcohol is a useful by product of CO2 extraction from the atmosphere using Nano CO2 harvesters.

Nano-material is simple chemical catalysts which is photochemical in nature that works in the presence of sunlight. But this technology still has a long way to go before it becomes a widely accepted mainstream solution. Nano-particles offer a promising approach to this because they have a large surface-area-to-volume ratio for interacting with CO2 and properties that allow them to facilitate the conversion of CO2 into other useful substances.

The challenge is to make them economically viable, and in pursuit of the same, researchers have tried everything from metallic to carbon-based nano-particles to reduce the cost, but so far they havent become efficient enough for industrial-scale volume application. But research in this area is slowly but surely yielding results.

One of the recent progresses made in this area is by research conducted by scientists of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research-Indian Institute of Petroleum and The Lille University of Science & Technology, France. In this project, researchers developed a Nano CO2 harvester that used water and sunlight to convert atmospheric CO2 into methanol, which can be employed as an engine fuel, a solvent, an anti-freeze agent and a diluent of ethanol. Made by wrapping a layer of modified graphene oxide around spheres of copper zinc oxide and magnetite, the material looks like a miniature golf ball and is capable of capturing CO2 more efficiently than conventional catalysts and can be readily reused.

Similarly, nano-particles can also be used to cleanse water from pollution created due to toxic dyes used in textile and leather industries. The dyes from tanneries tend to leach into natural sources of water like deep tube wells or groundwater and, if wastewater from these industries is left untreated, it creates a problem that is rather difficult to solve.

An international group of researchers at the University of Warsaw in Poland have established that nano-material can be widely used for removing heavy metals and dyes from wastewater. The absorption processes, using materials containing magnetic nano-particles, are effective and can be easily performed because such nano-particles have a large number of sites on their surface that can capture pollutants and dont readily degrade in water.

Using the same concept, appropriately designed magnetic nano-material can be used to separate pollutants such as arsenic, lead, chromium and mercury from water. In addition to removing dyes and metals, nano-material can also be used to clean up oil spills. Researchers at the Rice University in Houston, Texas, have developed a reusable nanosponge that can remove oil from contaminated seawater. Apart from this, nanomaterial can also be effectively used to manage organic waste, which can pollute land and water if not handled properly. Farms and food industry generate humongous amounts of biodegradable waste. One of the oldest methods to treat biodegradable waste is to dump it into tanks called digesters.

These are full of anaerobic microbes that consume the material, converting it into bio-gas fuel and solids that can be used as fertilisers. But anaerobic digestion is slow. Nano-particles can accelerate the anaerobic digestion of the sludge, thus making it more efficient in terms of duration and enhanced production of the biogas.

Nano-material is the future technology that is equipped to tackle the toughest of environmental challenges that the mankind face today, but it needs to be harnessed quickly and made mainstream.

(The writer is an environmental journalist)

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Nanotechnology, climate change and pollution - Daily Pioneer

NSF Funding to Aid Penn State CNEU in Developing Nanotechnology Workforce – Newswise (press release)

Newswise UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. With two grants awarded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Penn State Center for Nanotechnology Education and Utilization (CNEU) will develop a Nanotechnology Professional Development Partnership (NPDP) to continue providing leading-edge nanotechnology education to post-secondary educators and students to address the growing national need for a skilled nanotechnology workforce.

Totaling more than $2.5 million, the awards, administered through the NSFs Advanced Technological Education (ATE) program, will provide funding through Aug. 2020. This financial support will allow CNEU to offer new and more affordable and accessible training to a much larger and diverse nanotechnology audience through its Nanotechnology Applications and Career Knowledge (NACK) Network, which recently became an ATE support center.

The support center is establishing a larger national infrastructure for more advanced nanotechnology workforce education, said Osama Awadelkarim, CNEU director and professor of engineering science and mechanics. Several support center initiatives include the creation of national skill standards and certificates via ASTM International, continuing the growth of the RAIN (Remotely Accessible Instruments for Nanotechnology) national network and ongoing distribution of classroom resources for emerging nanotechnology programs.

Since 2008 NACK has functioned as an ATE national center, establishing itself as a national leader in nanotechnology workforce development, primarily for students and educators at four-year universities and two-year community colleges and technical colleges. NACK offered hands-on professional development workshops on the University Park campus several times per year. These intensive, three-to-four-day workshops included classroom instruction, as well as laboratory training.

Although highly successful, the workshops, due to their length and singular location, could be difficult for individuals from across the country to attend. Also, the majority of NSF funding was used to conduct these workshops and provide travel support for participants, thereby limiting financial resources required to offer new and improved methods of educating a larger future nanotechnology workforce.

With NACK functioning as a support center, CNEU will redirect its funding towards developing free, live-streaming, fully-interactive workshops for any educator at any levelat any locationthus, increasing its reach and effectiveness to a much broader audience.

For many years, CNEU has worked with multiple entities across the country that are dedicated to preparing the nanotechnology workforce, said Bob Ehrmann, CNEU managing director. This exciting new project will enable a subset of these educators to assist us in providing real-time, diverse, effective and affordable professional development to a much larger audience. We are eager to take on the challenge of creating and evaluating a cutting-edge multimodal professional development model.

The live-streaming workshops will include new content and adapted versions of the lectures, demonstrations and courses offered from the in-person workshops: Introduction to Nanotechnology and Nanotechnology Course Resource I/II. The new workshops will also include virtual labs and cleanroom experiences with remote access to nanoscale measurement equipment at different NACK partner sites that will allow attendees to access state-of-the-art characterization tools and lab software to conduct simulated experiments and data analysis exercises.

Remote access to the equipment will also provide opportunities for individuals at rural colleges or K-12 schools, who arent necessarily able to attend the in-person workshops, to gain valuable nanotechnology knowledge and experience.

CNEU will utilize its university and college partners located across the country to help conduct the workshops and provide hands-on experiences within their respective labs for those individuals who are able to travel to a physical location.

As part of the NPDP and via strategic partnerships, CNEU will increase its outreach to underrepresented student groups to increase participation in science, technology, engineering and mathematics education, in general, and participation in nanotechnology, in particular. Special efforts will be made to bring the professional development workshops to the attention of educators and administrators at historically black colleges and universities and Hispanic-serving institutions.

Along with its new program offerings, CNEU will continue to provide hands-on, in-person workshops for educators who are able to secure funding from their respective institutions or companies. CNEU will also continue to provide online nanotechnology courses, webinars and mini-workshops as part of its program offerings to secondary and post-secondary students, educators and industry personnel.

CNEU is dedicated to research, development and education across all aspects of micro- and nanotechnology, and its resources are focused on the incorporation of nanotechnology into secondary education, post-secondary education and industry applications. The Center is the home of the Pennsylvania Nanofabrication Manufacturing Technology (NMT) Partnershipa higher education collaborative dedicated to creating and updating a workforce in Pennsylvania, trained in the rapidly advancing and exciting field of nanotechnology. NMT academic programs are offered by partner institutions and include associate degree, baccalaureate degree and certificate pathways to an education in nanotechnology.

CNEU partners in the NPDP project include Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana, South Bend, Indiana; Forsyth Technical Community College, Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Erie Community College, Buffalo, New York; North Seattle College, Seattle, Washington; Atlanta Technical College, Atlanta, Georgia; and Northwest Vista College, San Antonio, Texas. Additional collaborators include Coppin State University, ATE Central and nanoHUB.

With an emphasis on two-year colleges, the ATE program focuses on the education of technicians for the high-technology fields that drive our nation's economy. The program involves partnerships between academic institutions and industry to promote improvement in the education of science and engineering technicians at the undergraduate and secondary school levels. The ATE program supports curriculum development, professional development of college faculty and secondary school teachers, career pathways and other activities.

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NSF Funding to Aid Penn State CNEU in Developing Nanotechnology Workforce - Newswise (press release)

Engineering Professor Selected as Associate Editor of Nanotechnology Journal – University of Arkansas Newswire

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Donald Keith Roper

Donald Keith Roper, associate professor of chemical engineering, has been named associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Nanotechnology. IEEE is the world's largest technical professional organization for the advancement of technology.

According to IEEE's website, Transactions on Nanotechnology "is devoted to the publication of manuscripts of archival value in the general area of nanotechnology, which is rapidly emerging as one of the fastest growing and most promising new technological developments for the next generation and beyond."

As associate editor, Roper will be jointly responsible for a recently announced Letters section of the journal. Letters are short, one or two page peer reviewed articles that highlight discoveries and scientific breakthroughs using a rapid peer-review mechanism. They often precede more traditional full-length papers. The publishers hope that this format will attract emerging research by authors from a broader spectrum of nanotechnology, as well as facilitate the quick dissemination of important developments.

"The letters section will feature nanoscience breakthroughs using a rapid review cycle," Roper explained. "Letters are intended to be brief but impactful announcements of a marked advance relative to state of the art in a particular field."

Roper will also be responsible for soliciting material in the field of biotechnology, initiating special and thematic issues and managing the peer review process in this area.

Editor-selected comments will be published below. No abusive material, personal attacks, profanity, spam or material of a similar nature will be considered for publication.

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Engineering Professor Selected as Associate Editor of Nanotechnology Journal - University of Arkansas Newswire

Nanotechnology Helps Rewarm Fast-Frozen Donor Tissue … – Newswise (press release)

Newswise A team funded in part by the National Institute ofBiomedical ImagingandBioengineering(NIBIB) and led by University of Minnesota (UMN) researchers has developed a new method for thawing frozen tissue that may enable long-term storage and subsequent viability of tissues and organs for transplantation. The method, called nanowarming, prevents tissue damage during the rapid thawing process that would precede a transplant. The teams study in the March 1, 2017, issue of Science Translational Medicine, demonstrated how a bath of solution with evenly distributed and magnetized iron-oxidenanoparticles can be heated with electromagnetic waves to quickly and non-destructively thaw larger volumes of solution and tissue than had previously been rewarmed. With additional development, the researchers hope the method can be applied to revolutionize and dramatically improve organ storage for transplants. To make preserved-then-nanowarmed tissues usable, the iron-oxide first must be washed out of the sample. This key element in assuring tissue viability required a novel imaging technique to confirm elimination ofnanoparticles. The research team included NIBIB-funded experts inbiomedical imagingfrom the UMNs Center for Magnetic Resonance Research, who adapted a non-invasive imaging technique, called SWIFT, to study samples following the rewarming process. SWIFT is based onmagnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

The underlying goal of the technology is saving lives through transplants. In the United States, more than 100,000 patients are waiting for life-saving organ transplants, and many more could potentially benefit from transplanted organs or tissue. The short preservation time during which donors and recipients must be matched limits optimal screening and some transplantation. Long-term preservation methods would enable screening that could help transplant clinicians find optimal matches for donated organs that would reduce transplantation risks, such as organ rejection.

This cryopreservation study, particularly the contribution of SWIFT technology to the work, was funded in part by NIBIB (EB 015894)

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Nanotechnology May Be Used to Heal Wounds, Repair Organs – Healthline

Researchers in Ohio are using skin cells and small chips to develop treatments that can repair damage from wounds, stroke, and organ failure.

Your skin cells are programmable, allowing them to be converted into other types of cells.

And now researchers have discovered how to reprogram them, making your body a potential gold mine of cells that can be used to heal wounds, treat stroke damage, and even restore function to aging organs.

A recent study published in Nature Nanotechnology describes the development of Tissue Nanotransfection (TNT), a technology that can convert an adult cell from one type to another.

The study was led by Chandan Sen, PhD, and L. James Lee, PhD, researchers at The Ohio State University. Sen and his colleagues applied the chip to the injured legs of mice, reprogramming the mices skin cells into vascular cells.

Within weeks, active blood vessels formed, saving the legs of the mice.

The technology is expected to be approved for human trials within a year.

This breakthrough in gene therapy is made possible by nanotechnology, the manipulation of matter at a size at which unique properties of material emerge.

That means the physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of materials are different at the atomic scale than at the larger scale were seeing on an everyday basis.

A nanometer is a billionth of a meter. A DNA molecule is 2 nanometers in diameter. Nanotechnologys scale is roughly 1 to 100 nanometers.

At the nanoscale, gold reflects colors other than what it does at the scale visible to the unaided eye. This physical property can be used in medical tests to indicate infection or disease.

Gold is yellow in color at the bulk level, but at the nanoscale level gold appears red, said Dr. Lisa Friedersdorf, director of the National Nanotechnology Coordination Office (NNCO) of the National Nanotechnology Initiative.

The NNCO coordinates the nanotechnology efforts of 20 federal government agencies.

We now have tools to enable us to fabricate and control materials at the nanoscale, Friedersdorf told Healthline. Researchers can create a nanoparticle with a payload inside to deliver a concentrated drug release directly to targeted cells, for instance. Soon well be able to identify and treat disease with precision. We could have personalized medicine and be able to target disease very carefully.

TNT works by delivering a specific biological cargo (DNA, RNA, and plasma molecules) for cell conversion to a live cell using a nanotechnology-based chip.

This cargo is delivered by briefly zapping a chip with a small electrical charge.

Nanofabrication enabled Sen and his colleagues to create a chip that can deliver a cargo of genetic code into a cell.

Think of the chip as a syringe but miniaturized, Sen told Healthline. Were shooting genetic code into cells.

The brief (one-tenth of a second) electrical charge of the postage stamp-sized device creates a pathway on the surface of the target cell that allows for the insertion of the genetic load.

Imagine the cell as a tennis ball, Sen said. If the entire surface is electrocuted, the cell is damaged and its abilities are suppressed. Our technology opens up just 2 percent of the surface of the tennis ball. We insert the active cargo into the cell through that window, and then the window closes, so there is no damage.

Cell reprogramming isnt new, but scientists have previously focused on converting primarily stem cells into other types of cells. The process took place in labs.

We disagreed with this approach, Sen said. When switching a cell in the lab, its in an artificial, sterile, and simple environment such as a petri dish. When its introduced into the body, it doesnt perform as intended.

We went upside-down. We bypassed the lab process and moved the reprogramming process to the live body, he explained.

This point-of-action capability will allow hospitals to adopt TNT sooner than if the process was limited to research facilities.

Sens teams approach was to act first, figure it out second.

There are a number of procedures and processes at play, Sen said. We dont understand all of them, but we achieved our goal. Now that weve achieved our goal, we can get into the details of how it works.

The healing of injuries by converting skin cells into vascular cells to regenerate blood vessels is one proven application of TNT.

Sens team also created nerve cells by the conversion process, injecting the newly formed neurotissue from the skin of a mouse with brain damage from stroke into its skull. The replacement rescued brain function that would otherwise have been lost.

Sen envisions additional uses for TNT, including organ recovery.

We could go into a failing organ via an endoscopic catheter with a chip to reprogram cells and restore organ function, Sen said. It doesnt have to be a skin cell. It could be excessive fat tissue.

TNT could improve our quality of life as we age, too.

Im a runner, so I have joint issues, Friedersdorf said. Nanotechnology could enable the regeneration of cartilage. Im hoping these technologies will be available when Im in need of them.

Sen and his team are currently searching for an industrial partner to manufacture chips designed to work for humans.

Then comes testing.

Ultimately, Sen hopes to drive rapid advancement in nanoscience and health.

Im a scientist, but this was inspired by the need to make an impact on health, Sen said. Our main goal is impact.

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Nanotechnology May Be Used to Heal Wounds, Repair Organs - Healthline

Bitcoin Cash Price Rises While Bitcoin and Ethereum Drop – Futurism

In Brief The top three cryptocurrencies have gone through some changes in the last day, with Bitcoin and Ethereum dropping in price and Bitcoin Cash sharply falling, only to see another meteoric rise.

Bitcoin, Bitcoin Cash, and Ethereum experienced a few changes since Monday, with some rising to new heights and others dipping down.

As reported by Business Insider, both Bitcoin and Ethereum, the two biggest cryptocurrencies, have seen a single-digit percentage drop, while Bitcoin Cash has seen a double-digit rise.

Bitcoin dropped 2.2 percent against the US dollar as of Tuesday morning, and is now valued at $4,004.67. Ethereum, which recently announced its Metropolis update, saw a slightly larger drop than Bitcoin, dropping 3 percent to $310.32. This drop continued the currencys struggles to hit $350, and its unclear how the Metropolis update will further affect Ether token prices.

Although Bitcoin Cash only split from Bitcoin very recently,at the beginning of August, it quickly became the third-biggest cryptocurrencyin the world. Compared to the top two, Bitcoin Cash rose by 15.6 percent, to $696.39. As impressive as this may be, Business Insider notes the young currency managed to top $1,000 last weekend, but skepticism about its staying power caused it to fall sharply.

Expect prices to fluctuate, as they often tend to do, especially when regarding Bitcoin. Trusted trader masterluc predicts the top digital currency will hit $15,000 by the end of 2017.

Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in a number of cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

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Bitcoin Cash Price Rises While Bitcoin and Ethereum Drop - Futurism

Researchers Capture the Best Image of Any Star Ever Taken – Futurism

In Brief A team of astronomers created the first ever two-dimensional velocity map of a star and the movement of its atmospheric gasses, a feat never before done in a star other than the Sun. Their technique could be used to study other stars in the future. Look at the Stars

Red supergiant (RSG) stars are considered the most voluminous starsin the universe. The two most famous examples of RSGs are Betelgeuse and Antares, and to the naked eye the latter appears to shine with a strong red tint as it sits at the heart of the constellation Scorpius. However, RSGs are known to exhibit a certain kind of behavior thats baffled astronomers for a long while.Click to View Full Infographic

A team of astronomers decided to figure out this strange phenomenon by taking a closer look at Antares, a star already at near the end of its life. How stars like Antares lose mass so quickly in the final phase of their evolution has been a problem for over half a century, Keiichi Ohnaka from the Universidad Catlica del Norte in Chile and lead author of the study said in a press release.

His team used the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) of the European Southern Observatory (ESO) at the Paranal Observatory in Chile, with which they mapped the surface and movement of the surface material of Antares. The result: they managed to take the best image of an extra-solar stars surface ever. Their research has been published by the ESO.

This was made possible by the VLTIs ability to combine light from four of its telescopes to create a virtual telescope that works like a single mirror thats 200 meters across. It, in turn, allowed the team to recreate a two-dimensional velocity map of a star, the first such beyond our solar system.

The VLTI is the only facility that can directly measure the gas motions in the extended atmosphere of Antares a crucial step towards clarifying this problem, Ohnaka explained in the release. By calculating the difference between the speed of the atmospheric gas in Antares at different positions and the average speed of the entire star relative to the VLTIs imaging array, he made it possible to map the relative speed of atmospheric gas across the surface area of Antares, on the ground, as it were. While this revealed the motions of gas clumps, it merely hinted at a process behind suchmovement thats still to be identified.The next challenge is to identify whats driving the turbulent motions, he added.

Ohnakas team has made it possible to study a stars surface from a far more effective viewpoint. They hope to duplicate this successin the study ofother stars. In the future, this observing technique can be applied to different types of stars to study their surfaces and atmospheres in unprecedented detail. This has been limited to just the Sun up to now, Ohnaka said. Our work brings stellar astrophysics to a new dimension and opens an entirely new window to observe stars.

The method Ohnaka and his team used could also provide better imaging of exoplanets that could help us glimpse atmospheric movements in these planets. Learning about what goes on in the atmospheres of exoplanets is crucial to knowingwhich of these could sustain life.

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Researchers Capture the Best Image of Any Star Ever Taken - Futurism

NASA Has a $3.46 Billion Plan to Ensure the Yellowstone Supervolcano Doesn’t Erupt – Futurism

In BriefNASA has detailed a plan to prevent the Yellowstonesupervolcano from ever erupting. By drilling into the volcano andpumping water into and out of it at high speeds, they believe theycould cool the volcano and use the emerging hot water to generateelectricity. FromThreat to Ally

When people think of Yellowstone, its usually in relation to the national park, a massive 8,983 square kilometer (3,468.4 square mile) area comprising mountains, rivers, and forests. Less commonly considered is the Yellowstone Caldera, a supervolcano whose eruption could be devastating for our planet.

Thankfully, such an explosion is highly unlikely, and now,NASA has come up with a way to not only ensure that the volcano remains inactive, but also use it to provide the surrounding area with electricity.

Following their release of a story on supervolcanoes, the BBC was contacted by a few NASA members who wanted to share details on a previously unreleased plan to deal with Yellowstone. Even NASA admits their incredibly ambitious plan is risky, but the potential benefits resulting from its success cant be completely ignored.

First, they would drill into the volcano from the lower sides, outside the boundaries of Yellowstone National Park. Coming from this direction would prevent the intense heat from making its way to the top of the chamber, where it would cause further problems.

Once drilling is complete, water would be pumped into and back out of the supervolcano at high pressures, with the exiting water heated to a temperature of around 350 degrees Celsius (662 degrees Fahrenheit). The water going in would slowly cool the volcano, while the hot water coming out of it could be used to generate electricity.

Yellowstone currently leaks around 6GW in heat, Brian Wilcox, a researcher at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), explained to the BBC. Through drilling in this way, it could be used to create a geothermal plant, which generates electric power at extremely competitive prices of around $0.10/kWh.

Aside from the dangers inherent in any plan to drill into a volcano, the NASA proposal is also largely theoretical no one knows for sure that it would work, and the cost of finding out would bean estimated$3.46 billion. Wilcox doesnt think this cost is insurmountable, however.

You would have to give the geothermal companies incentives to drill somewhat deeper and use hotter water than they usually would, but you would pay back your initial investment and get electricity which can power the surrounding area for a period of potentially tens of thousands of years, he noted. And the long-term benefit is that you prevent a future supervolcano eruption which would devastate humanity.

Even if the system can effectively cool Yellowstone at NASAs estimated rate of 1 meter (3.2 feet) per year,it would take thousands of years before only cool rock was left and longer than that to actually confirm that the process had permanently eliminated the threat of an eruption.

Despite all of these variables, the plan is worth consideration, especially given that Yellowstone is just one of about 20 supervolcanoes on the planet. NASA hopes that their proposal will encourage more practical discussions and debates on what to do about these massive structures prior to an eruption, at which point the Earth could be thrust into a volcanic winter.

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NASA Has a $3.46 Billion Plan to Ensure the Yellowstone Supervolcano Doesn't Erupt - Futurism

A New Blockchain Platform is Taking on Ethereum – Futurism

In BriefNEO is going head-to-head with Ethereum, claiming that itsplatform provides more options for scripting smart contracts andenhanced reliability. New Kid on the Blockchain

Cryptocurrency is on the riseand, as a result, theres no shortage of companies looking to establish themselves as an essential part of the trading process. In addition to organizations fielding new coins, there are firms that handle other pieces of infrastructure, like Blockchain specialist NEO (formerly known as AntShares).

NEOs biggest competition is currently Ethereum, the blockchain platform behind the prosperous Ether token. Both offer support for programming languages Vitalik Buterin, who originally conceived Ethereum, has felt that the absence of such support has been a major detriment to cryptocurrency but the group behind NEO maintains that its implementation has several advantages.

Smart contracts are automated agreements between traders that can call upon all kinds of different checks and triggers, ranging from a particular date to the balance of a particular account. NEO allows developers to write smart contracts and other projects using familiar programming languages like .NET and Java, with plans to support Python, Go, and JS in the future.

NEO also diverts from the likes of Bitcoin and Ethereum in eschewing the need for anonymity. The platform uses a digital identity system thats intended to help it integrate with the real-world economy. Digital identity is expected to give NEO a major advantage as it attempts to spur adoption in its origin country China.

Bitcoin and Ethereum use proof-of-work (POW) to validate transactions, but NEO instead uses a delegated Byzantine Fault Tolerance (dBFT) consensus method.

POW has strong availability, but it also has a big disadvantage, because it cannot ensure finality. Forks and lone blocks will occur easily, explained company co-founder and CEO Da Hongfei. dBFT ensures finality, which means that once a transaction is confirmed by a block, it is confirmed permanently without being rolled back or revoked. In our point of view, finality is far more important than availability in an important financial system.

Bitcoin was the first cryptocurrency to really make a splash, and it still leads the pack. However, it is still too early to determine the ramifications of itsrecent fork, which could turn out to be either ablessing or a curse.

NEO has been designed with a focus on avoiding the security issues that might prompt a fork. Reliability and stability are a big priority for its creators, having seen projects like Bitcoin Unlimited come undone as a result of such issues.

It certainly seems like NEO is being set up to fulfill the needs of tomorrows cryptocurrency market. That being said, competition from the likes of Bitcoin and Ethereum wont be easy to overcome.

Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in a number of cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

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A New Blockchain Platform is Taking on Ethereum - Futurism

The World’s First Album Composed and Produced by an AI Has … – Futurism

A New Kind of Composer

Break Free is the first sone released in a new album by Taryn Southern. The song, indeed, the entire album, features an artist known asAmperbut what looks like a typical collaboration between artists is actually much more than that.

Taryn is no stranger to the music and entertainment industry. She is a singer and digital storyteller who has amassed more than 500 million views on YouTube, and she has over 450 thousand subscribers. On the other hand, Amper is making his debutexcept hes (its?) not a person.

Amper is an artificially intelligent music composer, producer, and performer. The AI was developed by a team of professional musicians and technology experts, and its the the very first AI to compose and produced an entire music album. The album is called I AM AI, and the featured single is set to release on August 21, 2017.

Check out the song Break Free in the video below:

Asfilm composer Drew Silverstein, one of Ampers founders, explained to TechCrunch, Amper isnt meant to act totally on its own, but was designed specifically to work in collaboration with human musicians: One of our core beliefs as a company is that the future of music is going to be created in the collaboration between humans and AI. Wewant that collaborative experience to propel the creative process forward.

That said, the team notes that, contrary to the other songs that have beenreleased by AI composers, the chord structures and instrumentation of Break Free are entirely the work of Ampers AI.

Ultimately, Amper breaks the model followed by todays music-making AIs. Usually, the original work done by the AI is largely reinterpreted by humans. This means that humans are really doing most of the legwork. As the team notes in their press release, the process of releasing AI music has involved humans making signicant manual changesincluding alteration to chords and melodiesto the AI notation.

Thats not the case with Amper. As previously noted, the chord structures and instrumentationis purely Ampers; it just works with manual inputs from the human artist when it comes to style and overall rhythm.

And most notably, Amper can make music through machine learning in just seconds.Heres an example of a song made by Amper,andre-arranged by Taryn.

Yet, while IAMAI may be the first album thats entirely composed and produced by an AI, its not the first time an AI has displayed creativity in music or in other arts.

For example, an AI called Aiva has been taught to compose classical music, like how DeepBach was designed to create music inspired by Baroque artist Johann Sebastian Bach. With this in mind, the album is likely just the first step into a new eraan era in which humans will share artistry (and perhaps even compete creatively) with AI.

Editors Note: This article has been updated to clarify what songs were made by Amper and rearranged by Taryn.

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The World's First Album Composed and Produced by an AI Has ... - Futurism

Estonia Could Be the First Country in the World to Introduce Its Own Cryptocurrency – Futurism

In BriefEstonia is considering plans to expand upon its e-Residencyprogram with a new form of cyrptocurrency dubbed estcoin. Birth of the Estcoin

Estonia is mulling over the idea of issuing its own cryptocurrency, known as estcoins, which would make the country the first in the world to complete an Initial Coin Offering (ICO). Previously, China hastested its own coin, and Russia demonstrates an interest in Ethereum.

The proposal is an extension of Estonias e-Residency program, which allows non-residents and people who want to establish a business in the country virtually to take advantage of elements of the governments online infrastructure.

A blog post from the project manager of the e-Residency program, Kaspar Korjus, states that the program currently receives more applications in a week than there are births across the whole of Estonia in the same timeframe.

One of the biggest concerns for any government looking to accept crypto tokens is the threat of illicit usage. One of the requirements expected to be included in the cryptocurrency bill, which is set to be submitted to the US Congress, is a demonstration that the currency cant be used for money laundering.

Estcoin could dodge this thorny issue by being tied to the digital profiles associated with e-Residency. This idea is backed by Vitalik Buterin a co-founder of Ethereum who has been advising the Estonian government on the project.

An ICO within the e-Residency ecosystem would create a strong incentive alignment between e-residents and this fund, and beyond the economic aspect makes the e-residents feel like more of a community since there are more things they can do together, said Buterin.

While Estonia is using the term estcoin at the moment, there are hopes that the project could stretch far beyond the Baltic state.

Its use could grow far bigger than Estonia, writes Korjus. The same thing is happening to e-Residency as a whole, which was initially thought of as a way to be part of the Estonian nation but is now creating a new global digital nation, powered by the Republic of Estonia.

This kind of project has the potential to further blur the boundaries between nation states. A business owner could be a virtual resident of Estonia, and use the country as the home base for their company without ever stepping foot there.

The world is changing, and Estonia clearly wants to remain on the cutting edge. Keeping abreast of dcryptocurrency developments could have huge benefits for the country as a whole, as the proposal states that profits from estcoin could be poured into a community-run VC fund.

The authors of the proposal are currently gauging interest, but plan to demonstrate how the project would benefit Estonia. Its expected that estcoin would start as a pilot project before being scaled up as demand rises.

Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team are personal investors in cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

Original post:

Estonia Could Be the First Country in the World to Introduce Its Own Cryptocurrency - Futurism

India: Modern Slavery in Granite Quarries – Sri Lanka Guardian

( August 24, 2017, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) New research, commissioned by the India Committee of the Netherlands and Stop Child Labour, reveals that modern slavery, low wages, unsafe and unhealthy working conditions are rampant in granite quarries in South India. In some quarries, especially in waste stone processing, child labour is found.

There is an enormous gap in working conditions between permanent workers (mainly supervisors) and casual workers (70% of the workforce). The first group receives safety equipment, insurance and an employment contract, while the casual labourers doing the dangerous manual work, lack those fundamental labour rights.

The research shows that granite sourced from the investigated quarries is imported by 33 natural stone companies and 3 banks from Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Italy, Liechtenstein, Spain, The Netherlands, United Kingdom and the USA*. China is also a major importer, processor and re-exporter of Indian granite for the international market. Only a few companies are member of a sustainability initiative aiming to improve working conditions in the natural stone sector, but these initiatives still hardly tackle the deplorable working conditions in granite quarries. The draft report was sent to all 36 companies and banks, but only 5 reacted.

Focus on links between quarries and importers

India is a top exporter of granite, widely used for wall and floor tiles, tomb stones and kitchen tops in western countries. Western governments are an important end-buyer of granite for buildings, pavements, public squares etc. Half of the total world exports of raw granite comes from India.

The research was conducted in 22 quarries and 6 waste stone processing sites in the states of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Karnataka in South India. These three states account for 75% of the granite production in India. Almost half of the sampled quarries have direct linkages with foreign importers. Other quarries also produce granite for export markets, but this is traded through intermediaries.

Modern slavery

More than 70% of the workforce in granite quarries are casual labourers employed on a daily wage or piece rate basis. With wage advances of one to three months wages and high interest loans, the quarry owners are tying workers to the job. Nearly 25% of the workers are recruited by providing loans, with annual interest rates of 24% to 36%. More than half of the migrant workers owe large amounts to quarry owners or contractors. This creates debt bondage, as workers must clear the amount before they can change employer. In nine quarries this form of modern slavery is prevalent.

Middlemen are recruiting worker, mostly migrants, but offer them no contract and do not respect legal requirements. Migrants constitute around two third of the total workforce in granite quarries. Workers are mostly from so-called lowest caste of Dalits or Adivasi (tribal people). They are extra vulnerable due to their low social status in Indian society.

Health and safety in great danger

None of the workers hired through middlemen have access to a mandatory retirement scheme nor are they covered under health insurance, while these workers are most exposed to health risks.

Quarry workers face many occupational hazards and often get injured. Deadly accidents often remain unreported. Workers are also exposed to noise and dust causing work-related illnesses, like the incurable lung disease silicosis. Around 62% of the workers report that they are not receiving safety equipment such as a helmet, goggles, boots, respirator/mask and gloves, except during labour inspections.

Less child labour but still present

Child labour (below 18 years) used to be rampant in granite quarries in the early 2000s, but declined because of interventions by the government, industry and civil society organisations. However, the research revealed instances of child labour in main quarry operations in seven of the sample quarries. None of the investigated sites have a prevention and rehabilitation system for child labour in place.

Child labour is still rather prominent in waste stone processing. Nearly 80% of waste stone processing is done by women and children. Children below 14 years account for nearly 3% of the waste stone processing workforce and 5% of this workforce is between 15 and 18 years old.

Low wages, grossly inadequate housing and no active workers organisations Considering the long working hours, wages in half of the researched quarries do not meet the legal requirements. Overtime is sometimes paid by providing snacks and alcoholic drinks. Daily wages are fixed, depending on work classification, between 3.55 and 6.19 a day. Housing provided for the workers is grossly inadequate. They share small rooms, with little ventilation, water or sanitation facilities and no privacy. Half of the quarries lack clean drinking water while toilet facilities were only observed in four big quarries. In none of the researched quarries an active labour union is present.

Recommendations

The report is offering recommendations to companies, sustainability initiatives, the Indian government and the European Union and its member states. Human rights due diligence by granite companies is needed to systematically eradicate rights violations, increase transparency, conduct risk assessments and implement improvement plans. The Indian government has to enforce existing labour laws and European member states should strengthen their public procurement policy (e.g. for granite).

Download the reportThe Dark Sites of Granite: Modern slavery, child labour and unsafe work in Indian granite quarries What should companies do?here:www.indianet.nl/TheDarkSitesOfGranite.html.

Download the 8 pagesummaryof the report:www.indianet.nl/pdf/TheDarkSitesOfGranite-abstract.pdf.

Originally posted here:

India: Modern Slavery in Granite Quarries - Sri Lanka Guardian

Jurassic World Evolution Everything we know so far – TrustedReviews

Frontier Developments has just announced Jurassic World Evolution, a park-builder set within the films universe. Following in the distant footsteps of 2003s Operation Genesis, we cant wait to let dinosaurs loose to con our customers with overpriced food and drink. In a nutshell, its Jurassic Park meets Rollercoaster Tycoon.

Trusted Reviews has compiled everything we know so far about Jurassic World Evolution including all the latest news, trailers, gameplay and more.

Created by Frontier Developments, the studio behind Elite Dangerous, Jurassic World Evolution is an upcoming park management title. Youre the authority figure in charge of breeding dinosaurs, building attractions and making sure everything runs in an orderly fashion. Of course, things are bound to go wrong.

Related: F1 2017 review

Evolution is set to launch for PS4, Xbox One and PC in summer 2018.

While we havent seen much of Jurassic World Evolution in action, we can make some safe assumptions about what it will entail. Players will have the opportunity to create and manage their own Jurassic World, complete with prehistoric dinosaurs and state-of-the-art attractions.

Dinosaurs can be bio-engineered to your liking, so its up to you whether the park is filled with ferocious carnivores or cuddly herbivores. The same goes for attractions, with research dictating what can be built upon Isla Nublar.

Revealed during Gamescom 2017, you can find the debut trailer below:

Related: Xbox One X

Make your own dinosaurs!

Evolution must try its best to include all of our favourite dinosaurs, including the Velociraptor, Brachiosaurus and, of course, the Tyrannosaurus Rex. But wed also love to make our own prehistoric monstrosities.

Being able to directly engineer our own creations before unleashing them into the park could be fun. Depending on research they might possess different stats, resulting in varied public reaction once their out and about in their habitat. Perhaps we could even share creations online?

They could also escape, so youd best be careful when crafting a deadly killing machine.

A story mode

Games such asPlanet Coaster and Total Warhammer 2 continue to make great strides in bringing meaningful narrative missions to the base-building/RTS genre. By providing the player with frequent objectives, youre able to paint a picture in your head of the consequences each action. This would also give us a reason for building up the park beyond the usual internal satisfaction.

Despite launching way back in 2003 for PS2, Xbox and PC, Jurassic Park: Operation Genesis was a park builder with a healthy number of story missions. While not taking place in your park, you were given a task to solve to your greatest ability. One such mission had you saving the president from a dinosaurs jaws.

Related: Best PS4 Games

A real sense of danger

Keeping a park full of dinosaurs for entertainment purposes probably creates its fair share of paranoia. Knowing these creatures could escape at any time and go to town on the general public is a tiny bit terrifying.

The reveal trailer showcases how dinos are capable of escaping and even eating employees, something wed hope to see envisioned in the finished product. Reinforcing electric fences and deploying armed security should be a regular occurrence, mimicking the tension we love about the films.

Cameos from the films

What better way to emulate the spirit of Jurassic World than provide Evolution with a handful of star-studded cameos. Chris Pratts character could reprise his role as a dinosaur trainer, offering the player advice as they begin assembling their park and breeding animals.

Also, wed absolutely adore a cheeky cameo from Jeff Goldblum. Its very unlikely, especially since the actor is busy with the Jurassic World sequel at the time of writing. But, as Ian Malcolm once said, life finds a way.

Related: Assassins Creed Origins Preview

Are you excited for Jurassic World Evolution? Let us know in the comments.

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Jurassic World Evolution Everything we know so far - TrustedReviews

How the Tiger Snake’s Venom Beat Evolution – Newser


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How the Tiger Snake's Venom Beat Evolution
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(Newser) With its exceedingly deadly venomunchanged over the past 10 million yearsthe Australian tiger snake has essentially defeated evolution. Researcher Bryan Fry says in a press release it's "really unusual" for venom to remain unchanged over ...

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How the Tiger Snake's Venom Beat Evolution - Newser

In Turkey, Schools Will Stop Teaching Evolution This Fall – NPR

Zeynep Terzi, left, 23, a medical student in Istanbul, and Betul Vargi, 22, a college student studying English literature, are part of what Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoan calls a new "pious generation" of Turks. They wear headscarves and attend mosque, but they also believe in a separation of religion and state. Gokce Saracoglu/NPR hide caption

Zeynep Terzi, left, 23, a medical student in Istanbul, and Betul Vargi, 22, a college student studying English literature, are part of what Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoan calls a new "pious generation" of Turks. They wear headscarves and attend mosque, but they also believe in a separation of religion and state.

When children in Turkey head back to school this fall, something will be missing from their textbooks: any mention of evolution.

The Turkish government is phasing in what it calls a values-based curriculum. Critics accuse Turkey's president of pushing a more conservative, religious ideology at the expense of young people's education.

At a playground in an upscale, secular area of Istanbul, parents and grandparents express concern over the new policy.

"I'm worried, but I hope it changes by the time my grandchildren are in high school," says Emel Ishakoglu, a retired chemical engineer playing with her grandchildren, ages 5 and 2. "Otherwise our kids will be left behind compared to other countries when it comes to science education."

With a curriculum that omits evolution, Ishakoglu worries her grandchildren won't get the training they'll need if they want to grow up to be scientists like her.

Nearby, an American expat who's married to a Turk pushes her toddler on the swings and describes a book they've been reading at home.

"It's for 3- to 5-year-olds, and it teaches evolution," says Heather Demir. "It starts off, 'I used to be fish, but then I grew some legs.'"

The Demir family plans to leave Turkey before their son reaches grade school, in part because of this new curriculum.

Suat Keceli, left, a retired stockroom worker, and his barber Yasar Ayhan pose in Ayhan's barber shop in Kasimpasa, the Istanbul neighborhood where President Recep Tayyip Erdoan grew up. Keceli is a conservative Muslim who kept his daughter out of school when headscarves were banned in the classroom. Gokce Saracoglu/NPR hide caption

Suat Keceli, left, a retired stockroom worker, and his barber Yasar Ayhan pose in Ayhan's barber shop in Kasimpasa, the Istanbul neighborhood where President Recep Tayyip Erdoan grew up. Keceli is a conservative Muslim who kept his daughter out of school when headscarves were banned in the classroom.

"I just think it'd be too confusing for him, to teach him two opposing viewpoints," Demir says.

At a news conference last month, Turkey's education minister announced that new textbooks will be introduced in all primary and secondary schools, starting with grades 1, 5 and 9 this fall, and the rest next year. They will stop teaching evolution in grade 9, when it's usually taught.

"Evolutionary biology is best left to be taught at the university level," Education Minister Ismet Yilmaz told reporters. "It's a theory that requires a higher philosophical understanding than schoolchildren have."

That means students who don't go on to university may never learn who Charles Darwin was.

"Among scientists, of course, we feel very sorry and very, very worried for the country," says Ali Alpar, an astrophysicist and president of Turkey's Science Academy, an independent group that opposes the new curriculum. A Turkish association of biologists and teachers' unions have also expressed concern about the new textbooks.

"It is not only evolution. Evolution is a test case. It is about rationality about whether the curriculum should be built on whatever the government chooses to be the proper values," Alpar says. He also objects to how the government has converted many secular public schools into religious ones Turkey's publicly funded Imam Hatip schools in recent years.

Some Muslims, like some Christians, believe in creation, not natural selection. Turkey is majority Muslim, with a constitution that emphasizes its secular character.

But a battle has been underway between secular and religious Turks ever since President Recep Tayyip Erdogan came to power. He was elected prime minister in 2003, and president in 2014.

Erdogan does not support implementing sharia law. But he has repeatedly been elected by religious voters who felt their beliefs were neglected during decades of enforced secularism.

In a barber shop in the Istanbul neighborhood where Erdogan grew up, a bearded man in a traditional Muslim cap chats with the barber as he gets a shave. He explains how he kept his daughter out of school when Turkey didn't allow girls to wear headscarves in classrooms. The ban was lifted in middle schools and high schools in 2014.

"In school, they taught us humans evolved from monkeys. But that's not true," says Suat Keceli. "I support our government taking it out of biology textbooks. I think it's Satan's work."

In revising these textbooks, the government sought input from a small cadre of religious academics, including the president of Turkey's Uskudar University, a private institution that will host an academic conference on creationism this fall.

"Most Turks don't believe in evolution because it implies that God doesn't exist, and we're all here on earth just by chance! That's confusing," says the university's president, Nevzat Tarhan. "Turkey is a modern democracy, but we should not be afraid to embrace our Islamic culture as well."

Outside an Istanbul flower shop, two college students, Zeynep Terzi and Betul Vargi, are part of what Erdogan calls the new "pious generation." They wear headscarves. But they also support the separation of religion and state and accuse the president of chipping away at it.

"You can't learn religion in school, I think. It's about you and God. You should learn maybe in your home," Terzi says.

"They can send their kids to mosques. Schools are for science, I think," says Vargi.

Terzi is in medical school. Her scientific training in Turkey makes her competitive for jobs here and abroad. But she fears that might not be the case for the next generation of pious Turks.

See more here:

In Turkey, Schools Will Stop Teaching Evolution This Fall - NPR

Toothless Dwarf Dolphin Showcases Diverse Evolution of Feeding Behavior – Laboratory Equipment

A fossilized skull recovered from a river near Charleston, South Carolina belonged to a newly identified species of ancient, toothless dwarf dolphin, researchers report.

The extinct dolphin, named Inermorostrum xenops, likely used its mouth like a vacuum to suck up small fish, squid, sea cucumbers and other soft prey.

Inermorostrum xenops translates to weaponless-snouted strange face in Latin.

The skull fossil was discovered by divers who were on the hunt for shark teeth in the Wando River.

A team of researchers from the College of Charleston, led by Robert Boessenecker, analyzed the fossil and the layers of sandy limestone in the same location where the skull was found, and determined the animal lived 28 to 30 million years ago.

They also revealed that the species was just about 4 feet long, and weighed 100 pounds making it an easy target for predators like sharks, whales and other giant creatures it shared the ocean with.

As a point of reference, the modern bottlenose dolphin ranges in length from 7 to 12 feet.

Inermorostrum xenops belonged to an early group of echolocating dolphins the xenorophidae which, ironically, represent the earliest diversification of toothed whales. This group evolved just 4 million years before Inermorostrum xenops appeared, indicating it only took that timespan to evolve a toothless, suction-feeding dolphin from ancestral whales, according to the research team. It also evolved within 5 million years of modern cetaceans (a group of aquatic mammals including whales, dolphins and porpoises).

Boessenecker explained that both short and long snouts evolved numerous times on different parts of the evolutionary tree, demonstrating that the aquatic mammals can rapidly adapt their feeding behaviors and specializations.

The bottlenose dolphin has the optimal snout length, according to Boessenecker. Its snout is twice as long as it is wide, allowing it to suction feed and catch prey as it chooses.

Inermorostrum xenops had the shortest jawbone of any known cetacean, living or extinct, and enlarged holes in its snout suggest the dwarf dolphin may have had whiskers or fleshy lips.

The discovery of a suction-feeding whale this early in their evolution is forcing us to revise what we know about how quickly new forms appeared, and what may have been driving early whale evolution said Danielle Fraser, a paleontologist at the Canadian Museum of Nature. Increased ocean productivity may have been one important factor.

The paper was published in the journal, Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

The skull fossil is now on display at the Mace Brown Museum of Natural History at the College of Charleston.

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Toothless Dwarf Dolphin Showcases Diverse Evolution of Feeding Behavior - Laboratory Equipment

Toothless, dwarf dolphin, a case study in evolution – Phys.Org

August 23, 2017 by Marlowe Hood A life restoration of Inermorostrum xenops dolphins

Scientists on Wednesday unveiled an extinct species of toothless, whiskered and objectively cute mini-dolphin that plied Earth's oceans some 30 million years ago.

With only a fossilised craniumfound in a river near Charleston, South Carolinato work with, the researchers were able to reconstruct the snub-nosed mammal's evolutionary saga, describe its facial features and figure out what it snacked on.

Just over a metre (three feet) from snout to tail, Inermorostrum xenops was half the size of the common bottlenose dolphin.

Ironically, the pint-size Flipper was an early offshoot from one of the two main groupings of cetaceans called Odontoceti, or "toothed whale", that includes sperm whales and orca.

This group also developed a radar-like capacity to navigate and detect objects by emitting sounds, called echolocation.

The other branch, baleen whales, are filter feeders that strain huge volumes of ocean water to net tiny, shrimp-like krill or planktonthink humpback or the gargantuan blue.

"Inermorostrum took only four million years to evolve from ancestral whales with precisely occluding teeth"matching top and bottom"into a toothless, suction feeding specialist," explained Robert Boessenecker, a professor at the College of Charleston and lead author of a study in the British Royal Society journal Proceedings B.

During those four million yearsa brief interlude on the evolutionary clockI. xenops lost its pearly whites, saw its snout and mouth shrink and developed super muscular lips.

"This last feature is perhaps the most critical," said Boessenecker, who deduced the dolphin's powerful smackers from a series of deep artery channels clearly designed to nourish extensive soft tissue.

"Short snouts typically occur in Odontoceti that are adept at suction feedingthe smaller the oral opening, the greater the suction," he said in a statement.

Absent dentition, I. xenops' diet would have consisted exclusively of small fish, squid and other soft-bodied creatures. Because its nose was bent downward, the researchers suspect it prowled the ocean floor in search of prey.

The dwarf dolphins were not the only "toothed whales" undergoing rapid evolution at that time.

During the Oligocene age, 25 to 35 million years ago, other echolocating cetaceans developed long, toothy snouts specialised in catching fish.

The researchers also found that both short and long snouts evolved independently numerous times, suggesting that natural selection is not an arbitrary process.

Some dolphins, such as the modern bottlenose, settled on a happy medium between the extremes, "the optimum length as it permits both fish catching and suction feeding," Boessenecker added.

Explore further: Ancient South Carolina whale yields secrets to filter feeding's origins

More information: Proceedings of the Royal Society B(2017). Doi: 10.1098/rspb.2017.0531

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How your phone secretly records your conversations – SmoothFM (registration)


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How your phone secretly records your conversations
SmoothFM (registration)
Thought those sponsored ads were reading your mind? They're just ... That means it can grab parts of your conversation all day long - uploading the sound grabs to its computer servers, which are accessible to anyone who has your Gmail or Google login.

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Nest home security review – CHOICE

Last updated: 24 August 2017

There's no shortage of retail DIY home security equipment out there, but few have lived up to their consumer friendly claims. However, the Nest security system, which includes indoor and outdoor cameras as well as a smoke detector, is well designed and surprisingly easy to set up. You don't need any kind of networking expertise to rig up the equipment and keep an eye on your home from anywhere in the world, provided you have a good internet connection. But you do need deep pockets.

Nest home security cameras are available in two flavours, each with the necessary USB cables and USB-to-240V power point converters.

Once activated, they provide round-the-clock coverage of your home. They stream video to a smartphone, tablet or computer web browser using your home Wi-Fi and Nest's cloud service, and upload a portion to your account for review. A Nest camera doesn't use any local storage whatsoever, so you can tap in wherever you want, as long as you're connected to the internet via broadband or a 3G/4G mobile network.

The available features and functions vary depending on whether you stick with the free service or sign up for a Nest Aware subscription. A free account will notify you by phone and email when the cameras detect movement or sounds, and give you access to incident snapshots in the cloud for three hours. Pony up for a paid account that costs $14 a month per device, and you'll get access to:

You can bump up video history to 30 days for $30 a month, and get two months free on either option if you buy an annual subscription. These subscriptions are activated on a per-device basis. You could, for example, buy three cameras, sign one up to Aware, and leave the other two on a free account.

Everything is controlled via the app or web portal, including:

There's also the option to create a list of emergency contacts, so you can get in touch with emergency services, family or your neighbour, for example, if something seems amiss.

Video is captured in 1080p by default, while live streams are available in 360p, 720p or 1080p. You can adjust these to suit your bandwidth and data limits, or let Nest adjust on the fly.

The indoor and outdoor cameras are essentially plug and play (with a little QR code scanning), simple to use and deliver on almost all of their promises. Cameras quickly ping your smartphone, tablet and email when they detect movement, whether the subject is smack bang in the middle, or in the bottom corner, of its field of view. Movement needs to be relatively substantial, and both cameras do a pretty good job at ignoring things like plants and animals. However, you'll probably get the occasional notification about a tree branch in the wind, a pet cat, or a pet cat climbing on a tree branch.

Mic sensitivity is adjustable as well, so you won't receive a stream of notifications if you live in a noisy area.

You can also use the camera to have a conversation with the person poking around your home, as it includes a speaker and support for a smartphone mic.

Nest Aware ups the ante by differentiating between general motion and human figures. If an Aware-activated camera spots a body, it will send a different alert. It also enhances the microphone software, so it can identify human speech from dog barks, and adds custom detection zones. This lets you highlight a space within the camera's field of view to add special instructions, such as 'ignore'. Say there's a birds nest in your backyard with heavy winged traffic that regularly pings your phone you can highlight the space and tell your camera to dismiss any activity.

Though the cameras are active 24 hours a day by default, you can only review footage with a Nest Aware account. Once activated, you have the freedom to browse recent footage using a timeline on the app or web browser. Wading through hours and hours of video sounds like an arduous task, but Nest makes things a lot easier by highlighting alert points that you can quickly jump between. If you find something worth keeping, the clips tool will convert the capture into a short video (30 seconds by default), which is saved to your account. From here, you can download it as an .mp4 file, or even share it on social media if you really want.

But while this is a useful addition, it demands a serious chunk of data. The default mid-quality setting chews through a whopping 120GB every month, and even low-quality video still requires 30GB, minimum. Free accounts use far less data, as they only upload when someone is watching the live stream, according to Nest.

You'd probably need at least three cameras with Nest Aware to keep an eye on the average home; one out the front, one in the back and an indoor camera for the loungeroom. That amounts to 360GB of data every month. To put this in perspective, high-definition Netflix uses 3GB of data per hour. The average person watches 18 hours of TV a week, which converts to 216GB of streaming data per month. A home protected by Nest needs approximately 150GB more data than HD Netflix.

Nest has been designed for a world with high-speed internet access at home, work and on the go, something which just isn't accessible in Australia. We tested live streams during peak and off-peak usage periods in a typical suburban home with an ADSL2 connection, and found live footage to be a little laggy and blocky, even in well-lit environments. Once we hit peak time around 7.00pm, the stream dropped out every few minutes and fell to a low resolution.

Default medium-quality uploads require around 0.5 Mbps, while full quality needs 1.2Mbps per camera. This is all well and good in theory as it fits within the limitations of an ADSL connection, but almost all connected homes have a number of devices vying for limited bandwidth. This isn't a slight against Nest mind you, it's just a service built for a market with much better infrastructure than Australia.

Other than that, the Nest cameras are robust home security products with just a few shortcomings:

It also lacked a few features we felt were essential or at least useful, such as:

These cameras can also communicate with Google products (both companies are owned by Alphabet Inc.). For example, Nest supports voice controls via Google Home a 'smart speaker' that uses an intelligent personal assistant (like Apple's Siri) to carry out a user's voice commands.

It can also sync with Nest's smoke detector, Nest Protect (sold separately $189). Protect is similar to the cameras, in that it pings your phone when it detects a potential emergency in this case smoke, or carbon monoxide which can indicate a fire. If you add one to the same account as your cameras, the app will give you the option to open up a live stream to observe and record the fire when Protect identifies an emergency. This helps you to identify the incident's severity, and maintain a record for police, your insurer, and so on.

We tested these functions by lighting a small fire under controlled conditions to activate the smoke detector. As well as setting off an alarm, Nest Protect announced the location of the fire and notified the phone within seconds. These notifications were incremental, starting with a small alert before flashing red when the smoke became thick enough to indicate a significant fire. The app's options to open emergency contacts or connect to a Nest camera were obvious and easy to access.

Just note that while you can legally install Protect in your home, they're not yet certified to Australian safety standards (Nest is compliant in the US, Canada, UK and Europe). This may conflict with your property insurance or body corporate rules if you live in an apartment, townhouses, duplex etc. The certification process is in progress and should be completed soon, according to Nest.

If you can't wait till then, take a look at our smoke alarm reviews.

Aside from the lack of battery backup and local storage, the Nest cameras are a good, if somewhat expensive, home security solution. They're easy to use, the app works as promised, and the centralised nature of the software makes it easy to manage and monitor your entire house at the same time. Plus, the simple integration with other Nest and Google products is a great incentive to invest in a single ecosystem. As far as ease of use goes, Nest knocks it out of the park.

But even if you're willing to foot the subscription bill to open up all the security functions, Australia's less-than-ideal internet speeds put a chokehold on Nest and hold it back from being a great piece of kit. Until our infrastructure is ironed out, few Australians will be able to fully utilise the features on offer. If you're lucky enough to live in an area with suitable speeds and bandwidth however, you'll appreciate the ease of use, notifications, and set and forget functionality.

Continued here:

Nest home security review - CHOICE

Robotics Online – News

August 2017

FASTSUITE and Kawasaki Robotics - The Perfect Fit

POSTED: 08/23/2017

One platform. Endless possibilities. Kawasaki Robotics is your

Association for Advancing Automation Hiring for New Positions, Expanding Office Space to Accommodate Growth

POSTED: 08/22/2017

A3 Seeking Candidates for Director of Educational Programs and Exhibit Sales & Business Development Manager

Association for Advancing Automation Reports Record Setting Growth for North American Robotics Market

POSTED: 08/17/2017

Organizations Research Provides Guide for Robotics and Automation Sales, Likelihood of Additional Growth in 2017

Matrix Design, LLC to Demo New Robotic Deburring Applications System at Gear Expo

POSTED: 08/17/2017

New Modular Robotic Deburr Demo Cell Includes interchangeable stations and FANUC robot

Stubli Booth and Product Information at Pack Expo

POSTED: 08/17/2017

Stubli will showcase a variety of industry-defining products, including its new TX2 line of collaborative robots, at the PACK Expo

Robots: China Breaks Historic Records in Automation

POSTED: 08/16/2017

China has rapidly become a global leader in automation. From 2018 to 2020, a sales increase between 15 and 20

Integro Technologies now Coherix Authorized System Integrator

POSTED: 08/15/2017

Integro Technologies, a premier machine vision integrator, announced today its partnership with Coherix Inc., manufacturers of 3D, high-speed, high definition

Blue Ocean Robotics enters Asian market with Singapore-based Joint Venture

POSTED: 08/14/2017

Blue Ocean Robotics opens Joint Venture office in Singapore and brings its We Create and Commercialize Robots business to the

New ServoWeld Actuators from Tolomatic Offer Lighter Weight and Superior Performance in Automotive Resistance Spot Welding

POSTED: 08/10/2017

Cost-effective actuator design provides the lowest lifetime cost and highest quality welds; broad product family offers many choices to

Intelligrated to Feature Robotic Palletizing and Depalletizing Solutions at PACK EXPO 2017

POSTED: 08/10/2017

Booth demonstrations focus on the flexibility to accommodate variety of workflows, product types and layout requirements

Yaskawa Motoman Adds GP25 Model to High-Speed GP-Series Robot Line

POSTED: 08/09/2017

Dayton, OH The efficient, high-speed Motoman GP25 robot is a new, compact robot that is ideal for assembly, dispensing,

Mitsubishi Electric Automation Introduces HVAC Bypass Controller

POSTED: 08/08/2017

PowerGate H Series Offers Reliable Motor Control in a Small Footprint

OCTOPUZ Expertise Series: Edge Following

POSTED: 08/03/2017

In a continuing series, OCTOPUZ will be examined to determine their expertise in

Technical Textiles and Stubli Solutions at CAMX

POSTED: 08/02/2017

The Composites and Advanced Materials Expo was created by ACMA and SAMPE to connect and advance all aspects of the

DRR wins Visionary New Product Award for ready2spray Paint Robot at AWFS Fair 2017 in Las Vegas

POSTED: 08/01/2017

The Association of Woodworking & Furnishing Suppliers (AWFS) honored Drr with the AWFS Visionary New Product Award at the Fair

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