Info Ops Officer Offers Artificial Intelligence Roadmap – Breaking Defense

Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) relies on the JARVIS artificial intelligence to help pilot his Iron Man suit. (Marvel Comics/Paramount Pictures)

Artificial intelligence, machine learning and autonomy are central to the future of American war. In particular, the Pentagon wants todevelop software that can absorb more information from more sources than a human can, analyzeit andeither advise the human how to respond or in high-speed situations like cyber warfare and missile defense act on its own with careful limits.Call it the War Algorithm,the holy grailof a single mathematical equation designed togive the US military near-perfect understanding of what is happening on the battlefield and help its human designers to react more quickly than our adversaries and thus win our wars. Our coverage of this issue attracted the attention ofCapt. Chris Telley, an Army information operations officer studying at the Naval Postgraduate School. In this op-ed, he offers something of a roadmap for the Pentagon to follow as it pursues this highly complex and challenging goal. Read on! The Editor.

If I had an hour to solve a problem Id spend 55 minutes thinking about the problem and five minutes thinking about solutions. Albert Einstein

Artificial intelligence is to be the crown jewel of the Defense Departmentsmuch-discussedThird Offset, the US militarys effort to prepare for the next 20 years. Unfortunately, joint collaborative human-machine battle networks are off to a slow, evenstumbling, start. Recognizing that todays AI is different from the robots that have come before, the Pentagon must seize what may be just a fleeting opportunity to get ahead on the adoption curve. Adapting the military to the coming radical change requires some simultaneous baby steps to learn first and buy second while growing leaders who can wield the tools of the fourth industrial revolution.

First and foremost, the US must be willing to stomach the cost to build cutting-edge systems. AI functions wired into free or discounted Internet services workbecause the companies profit byselling user data; the Pentagonis probablynot eligible for this discount. Also, some of our more stovepiped tactical networks may have difficulty providing the large numbers of training data points, up to 10,000,000 events, needed to teach a learning machine. Military AIs will go to school with crayons untilwe invest significant capital in open architecture data networks. Furthermore, the technicians needed to integrate military AI wont becheap either. According to data from Glassdoor,AI engineersearn a national average of 35 percent more thancybersecurity engineers, whom DoD is already jumping throughhoopsto recruit and those technical skills arent getting any less valuable.

Last year AI went from research concept toengineering application, one CEO said.Another thinks the next 10years may mean the dawn of anAge of Artificial Intelligence. This isnt just hype. In 2013 anOxford studyforecast that 47 percent of total US jobs were susceptible to computerization.Notably, white-collar workers are beginning to be replaced. It now seems that any job which involves routine manipulation of information on a computer is vulnerable to automation. J.P. Morgan is now using AI solutions to slice360,000 man hoursfrom loan reviews eachweek. This year,insurance claimsworkers began to be replaced by IBMs Watson Explorer. The crux of our human failing is that an AI is capable of analyzingintuitive solutionsout of millions of possible results and manipulating those answers far faster than we can. The fastesthuman gamerscan click a keyboard or mouse at a rate of several hundred actions per minute; a computer can do tens of thousands.

Planners DoDs white-collar workers will be replaced before riflemen. They are just as susceptible to automation as their civilian peers. Right now,synthesizing knowledge and producinga creative and flexible array of means to accomplish assigned missions belongs to staff planners. These service members and defense civilians usebasically the same tools PowerPoint, Excel, etc. as does a contemporary office worker. If a robot can buy stocks and turn a profit or satisfactorily answer 20,000,000 helpdesk queries, certainly it can understand the tactical terms and control measure graphics that compose the language of tactics. After all, field manuals and technique publications are just a voluminous trove of and, or, and not logic gates that can be algorithmically diagrammed.

Enemy contact front?Envelop! Need to plan field logistics?Lay thistemplateover semi-permissive terrain! If the product is an Excel workbook or a prefabricated PowerPoint slide, like intelligence preparation of the environment or battlefield calculus, an AI can probably do it better. The robots are coming for us all even the lowly staff officer.

According to Pedro Domingo, author of The Master Algorithm, the best way to not lose your job to a robot is to automate it yourself. The key to effectively and efficiently on-boarding these technologies, as well as the multi-domain battles they will effect, is human capital. We need a bench of service members and government civilians who at least understand the lexicon and how to ask the right questions of the application interface. These leaders will provide adoption capacity for eventually fielding unilaterally developed defense systems that will form the core of the Third Offset. They help us fight on new, cognitive, attack surfaces; Microsofts @TayTweets chatbot was hacked, not with code, but by Internet trolls slyly teaching it bad behaviors. Just as the Navy trains officers to use celestial navigation while still fighting with GPS, DoD needs leaders who can spar in both the twentieth and twenty-first centuries to enable graceful system degradation.

Overall, AI will be in everything but will not be everything, so the Department must create a career path for these people without creating acareer field. The machines will eventually write their own code so we need thinkers to operationalize automation rather than build software. Those skills can be acquired through intermixing funded massive openonline courses,broadening seminarswith academia, andtraining with industrytenures into standard professional timelines. The US is behind in computer science curriculum; if the DoD is to use AI to lighten the cognitive load by 2021, as the Armys Robotic and Autonomous Systems Strategy demands, they, and the rest of DoD, will need to nurture and retain people with skills in robotics, computational math, and computational art.These programs need selection criteria and retention incentives toproduce at least one AI literate leader for every battalion level command on that four-year timeline. This may seem fast, but leading AI experts expected a machine to beat humans at the game Go in2027;it happenedthis year.

Since the AI market space is accelerating quickly, there are many possibilities for dual-use applications for the Defense Department. Though the military, most notably DARPA, has dabbledwith AI in things like thecyberandself-driving cargrand challenges;fielding a variety of functional technologic solutions will provide proven ground before attempting unilateral projects.

There are many promising areas that would help defense planners get their toes in the water. The first is information operations.Predictiveandprogrammaticmarketing are incredibly lucrative algorithmically powered tools and they are already in use. Combined with AI systems forjournalistic contentcreation, perhaps DoD can overcome ahistorically slowinfluence apparatus to beat state and non-state adversary propaganda. (Editors note: We are VERY uneasy with this idea for moral and more provincial reasons.) Can Google Maps, or its competitors, tell us where traffic isnt, compared to where it was yesterday as a blend of HUMINT/SIGINT to identify roadside bombs (IEDs)? Similar questions should be asked of emerging applications to compete with humans in the strategy game StarCraft, to help combined arms planning at the tactical level. The tools being built to examine cancer genomes could also be developed to model the cell mutations of extremist networks.

Small, short timeline endeavors like Project Maven, recently created touse machine learning for wading through intelligence data, must provide the network integration experience needed for building larger programs of record. Many small successes will certainly be needed to garner senior leader buy-in if decisive AI tools are to survive the Valley of Death between lab experiments and the transition to a program of record.

Fortunately, the AImarket spaceis still coalescing. Unfortunately, it is an exponential technology so every success or failure is amplified by an order of magnitude. So far, Deputy Defense Secretary Bob Work wants$12 billion to $15 billionin 2017 for programs aimed at human-machine collaboration and combat teamingand has received11 recommendationsfrom the Defense Departments Innovation Advisory board toget started.If even half of those dollars go to AI research then the DoD will have matched theventure capitalspent last year on relevant startups. However, our adversaries will seek to gain advantage. China has already spent billions on AI research programs and they have state-owned investor companies, like ZGC Capitol, residing in Santa Clara, Calif.; their military leaders are aiming toward the leading edge of a military revolution of intelligentization. Its also worth noting that many resources, like Googles TensorFlow, are freely available online for whomever decides to use the technology.

So, the time is now for Artificial Intelligence; strategic surprise featuring things like data driven behavior change or A.I. modulated denial of the electromagnetic spectrum will pose difficult challenges from which to recover. If we are to ride the disruptive wave of what some call the Great Restructuring, existing AI applications should be re-purposed before attempting defense-only machine learning systems. Also, developing a cadre of AI-savvy leaders is essential for rapid application integration, as well as for planning to handle graceful system degradation. The right AI investment, in understanding, strategy, and leaders, should be our starting block for a race that will surely reshape thecharacter of warin ways we can only begin to imagine.

Capt. Chris Telley is an Army information operations officer assigned to the Naval Postgraduate School. He commanded in Afghanistan and served in Iraq as a United States Marine. He tweets at @chris_telleyThese are the opinions of the author and do not reflect the position of the Army or the United States Government.

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Info Ops Officer Offers Artificial Intelligence Roadmap - Breaking Defense

This Is How Google Wants to ‘Humanize’ Artificial Intelligence – Fortune

Googles plans a big research project aimed at making artificial intelligence more useful.

The search giant debuted an initiative on Monday that brings together various Google researchers to study how people interact with software powered by AI technologies like machine learning.

Companies like Facebook ( fb ) and Google ( goog ) have been using AI to improve tasks like quickly translating languages and recognizing objects in pictures. But the technology has the potential to be able to do more.

The problem for companies like Google is to figure out more uses for AI beyond simply improving existing products and create entirely new products based on AI.

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One way Google hopes the project, called PAIR (short for People plus AI Research), will lead to more compelling uses of AI is to focus on the human side, Google researchers Martin Wattenberg and Fernanda Vigas wrote in a blog post. They want to figure out how and where to best use it from a human standpointand not just simply create AI-powered software for its own sake.

We don't have all the answersthat's what makes this interesting researchbut we have some ideas about where to look, the two researchers wrote.

Some of PAIRs goals include looking at how professionals like doctors, designers, farmers, and musicians could use AI to aid and augment their work. The researchers did not mention how exactly PAIR will do accomplish this in the Monday announcement, but Google has been already looking at how AI can aid specific industries like healthcare through its DeepMind business unit , for example.

The initiative also hopes to discover ways to ensure machine learning is inclusive, so everyone can benefit from breakthroughs in AI. Left unsaid is the fact that big companies like Google and Facebook are hiring many of the top leaders in areas like deep learning , which has led to some academics questioning whether big companies are hoarding AI talent and failing to share breakthroughs in AI to increase their own profits.

The researchers also wrote that PAIR would create AI tools and guidelines for developers that would make it easier to build AI-powered software thats easier of troubleshooting if something goes wrong. One of the ways AI-powered software is different from traditional varieties is that conventional testing and debugging methods fail to work on AI software that constantly changes based on the data it ingests.

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This Is How Google Wants to 'Humanize' Artificial Intelligence - Fortune

Artificial Intelligence and the Robot Apocalypse: Why We Need New Rules to Keep Humans Safe – Newsweek

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

How do you stop a robot from hurting people? Many existing robots, such as those assembling cars in factories, shut down immediately when a human comes near. But this quick fix wouldnt work for something like a self-driving car that might have to move to avoid a collision, or a care robot that might need to catch an old person if they fall. With robots set to become our servants, companions and co-workers, we need to deal with the increasingly complex situations this will create and the ethical and safety questions this will raise.

Science fiction already envisioned this problem and has suggested various potential solutions. The most famous was author Isaac Asimovs Three Laws of Robotics, which are designed to prevent robots harming humans. But since 2005my colleagues and I at the University of Hertfordshire have been working on an idea that could be an alternative.

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Instead of laws to restrict robot behavior, we think robots should be empowered to maximize the possible ways they can act so they can pick the best solution for any given scenario. As we describe in a new paper in Frontiers, this principle could form the basis of a new set of universal guidelines for robots to keep humans as safe as possible.

Asimovs Three Laws are as follows:

While these laws sound plausible, numerous arguments have demonstrated why they are inadequate. Asimovs own stories are arguably a deconstruction of the laws, showing how they repeatedly fail in different situations. Most attempts to draft new guidelines follow a similar principle to create safe, compliant and robust robots.

One problem with any explicitly formulated robot guidelines is the need to translate them into a format that robots can work with. Understanding the full range of human language and the experience it represents is a very hard job for a robot. Broad behavioral goals, such as preventing harm to humans or protecting a robots existence, can mean different things in different contexts. Sticking to the rules might end up leaving a robot helpless to act as its creators might hope.

Our alternative concept, empowerment, stands for the opposite of helplessness. Being empowered means having the ability to affect a situation and being aware that you can. We have been developing ways to translate this social concept into a quantifiable and operational technical language. This would endow robots with the drive to keep their options open and act in a way that increases their influence on the world.

When we tried simulating how robots would use the empowerment principle in various scenarios, we found they would often act in surprisingly natural ways. It typically only requires them to model how the real world works but doesnt need any specialised artificial intelligence programming designed to deal with the particular scenario.

But to keep people safe, the robots need to try to maintain or improve human empowerment as well as their own. This essentially means being protective and supportive. Opening a locked door for someone would increase their empowerment. Restraining them would result in a short-term loss of empowerment. And significantly hurting them could remove their empowerment altogether. At the same time, the robot has to try to maintain its own empowerment, for example by ensuring it has enough power to operate and it does not get stuck or damaged.

Using this general principle rather than predefined rules of behavior would allow the robot to take account of the context and evaluate scenarios no one has previously envisaged. For example, instead of always following the rule dont push humans, a robot would generally avoid pushing them but still be able to push them out of the way of a falling object. The human might still be harmed but less so than if the robot didnt push them.

In the film I, Robot, based on several Asimov stories, robots create an oppressive state that is supposed to minimize the overall harm to humans by keeping them confined and protected. But our principle would avoid such a scenario because it would mean a loss of human empowerment.

While empowerment provides a new way of thinking about safe robot behavior, we still have much work to do on scaling up its efficiency so it can easily be deployed on any robot and translate to good and safe behaviour in all respects. This poses a very difficult challenge. But we firmly believe empowerment can lead us towards a practical solution to the ongoing and highly debated problem of how to rein in robots behavior, and how to keep robotsin the most naive senseethical.

Christoph Salgeis aMarie Curie Global Fellow at theUniversity of Hertfordshire.

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Artificial Intelligence and the Robot Apocalypse: Why We Need New Rules to Keep Humans Safe - Newsweek

New artificial intelligence will favour who else? but the affluent classes – Evening Standard

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New artificial intelligence will favour who else? but the affluent classes - Evening Standard

Want to make Artificial Intelligence as inexpensive as possible: Prakash Mallya, MD for Sales and Marketing, Intel India – Economic Times

Prakash Mallya , recently appointed MD for Sales and Marketing, Intel India , is back in his homeland after 12 years. A 17-year veteran at Intel, the Lucknow-born Mallya says Intel wants to democratise artificial intelligence by making it as inexpensive as possible. In his first interview after taking over in February, Mallya also tells ET about the scope for PCs in India, and opportunities for Intel.

Edited excerpts:

What is the work done by Intel on the artificial intelligence (AI) front in India? There are a few barriers we are trying to break through in AI globally and in India. Our single biggest desire is to make AI as inexpensive as possible, i.e., democratising AI. That's the reason we announced on the 'AI Day' training 15,000 people on developers, partners and ecosystem providers. We have alliance with online education providers for AI-specific courses.

The second part is the tools for AI are not very easy to use. So, we are trying to simplify those tools. Third is standardisation. As long as we have standards-based solutions and infrastructure even in AI space, I think we will succeed as an industry. Because standards drive costs to go down and hence many more people to use it.

How are you engaging with AI startups in India? Reports say that there are about 300 AI startups in India, many of them doing work in healthcare, education, etc. I have met customers doing work in video surveillance and analytics in the videos space using machine learning (ML) and deep learning (DL) algorithms. We are engaged with companies that are in human resource space that are using AI. There are agriculture-oriented companies that are into ML and DL applications.

Is there a growth opportunity for personal computers (PCs) in India? If you look at PC penetration, it's single digit today. Digitisation in India provides citizens to adopt technology. GST (goods and services tax) is an example. We have millions of SMEs (small and medium enterprises).

I truly believe that the adoption of GST is an opportunity for companies to leverage on technologies like PCs to automate their processes. As the GST rollout happened on July 1, I do see the transformation in the SME space to be significant.

From a content creation, learning and education standpoint, PCs are vital. Hence, the work that we do with the government, MHRD (ministry of human resources development), etc. is oriented towards sharing the value of using PCs.

How are you working with the government? Do you have a business unit dedicated to government sales? Yes, we have a government-focused team in India. There are lots of effort being put in video surveillance, smart transportation, etc. Have we reached a stage where everything is figured out and large deployment underway? No. But, we are making serious progress. There are proof of concepts, there are requirements on the datacentre front and the edge device deployment.

I am optimistic that over a period of time, the vision of 100 smart cities will get realised on usages, deployment, and improving the citizens' quality of life. With respect to newer technology like IoT (internet of things), there is an evolution in our requirement.

For demands like smart cities and private sector digitisation across industrial, across surveillance, or healthcare, you see people test different usages.

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Want to make Artificial Intelligence as inexpensive as possible: Prakash Mallya, MD for Sales and Marketing, Intel India - Economic Times

How artificial intelligence could battle sexual harassment in the workplace – Fox News

Your email was blocked, weve contacted an HR representative.

This message could go a long way towards weeding out some of the sexual explicit messaging in the workplace, most recently highlighted by a New York Timesreport.

Although it would by no means block all suggestive comments that occur in the workplace, there is a way to make an artificial intelligence (AI) become more aware of what is happening in the digital realm. This could happen as employees increasingly use workplace tools like Slack and Microsoft Teams, send emails using a corporate server or text using company-managed apps.

AI services in the workplace already can analyze workers e-mails to determine if they feel unhappy about their job, says Michelle Lee Flores, a labor and employment attorney. In the same way, AI can use the data-analysis technology (such as data monitoring) to determine if sexually suggestive communications are being sent.

RANSOMWARE: WHAT IS IT?

Of course, there are privacy implications. In terms of Slack, it is an official communication channel sanctioned and managed by the company in question. The intent is to discuss projects related to the firm, not to ask people out on a date. Flores says AI could be seen as a reporting tool to scan messages and determine if an innocuous comment could be misinterpreted.

If the computer and handheld devices are company issued, employees should have no expectation of privacy as to anything in the emails or texts, she says.

When someone sends a sexually explicit image over email or one employee starts hounding another, an AI can be ever watchful, reducing how often the suggestive comments and photos are distributed. Theres also the threat of reporting. An AI can be a powerful leveraging tool, one that knows exactly what to look for at all times.

More than anything, AI could curb the tide. A bot installed on Slack or on a corporate email server could at least look for obvious harassment issues and flag them.

Dr. Jim Gunderson, an AI expert, says he could see some value in using artifical intelligence as a reporting tool, and could augment some HR functions. However, he notes that even humans sometimes have a hard time determining whether an off-hand comment was suggestive or merely a joke. He says sexual harassment is usually subtle -- a word or a gesture.

HOW AI FIGHTS THE WAR ON FAKE NEWS

If we had the AI super-nanny that could monitor speech and gesture, action and emails in the workplace, scanning tirelessly for infractions and harassment it would inevitably exchange a sexual-harassment free workplace for an oppressive work environment, he adds.

Part of the issue is that an AI can make mistakes. When Microsoft released a Twitter bot called Tay into the wild last year, users trained it to use hate speech.

Though artificial intelligence has become more prevalent in recent years, the technology is far from perfect. An AI could wrongly identify a message that is discussing the problem of sexual abuse or read into a comment that is meant as a harmless joke, unnecessarily putting an employee under the microscope.

But still, there is hope. Experts say an AI that watches our conversations is impartial -- it can flag and block content in a way that is unobtrusive and helpful, not as a corporate overlord that is watching everything we say.

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How artificial intelligence could battle sexual harassment in the workplace - Fox News

Taking Flight: Ohio Valley’s Aerospace Exports Take Top Dollars … – WKMS

Aircraft manufacturing has a long history in the Ohio Valley region stretching back to the Wright Brothers first shop. Today aerospace products are among the areas top-dollar exports -- the second biggest export for Ohio, and number one for Kentucky. Becca Schimmel visited one aerospace facility in rural Kentucky to learn how the industry has developed, and where it might be heading.

From the outsideSummit Aviation, in the small town of Somerset, Kentucky, looks like any other nondescript, white warehouse. But inside workers craft parts for drones, weapons casings, wing stabilizers and other high-flying products.

Summit is one of many small manufacturers making up the growing aerospace industry in the Ohio Valley. Highly specialized companies are landing in Kentucky and Ohio for the proximity to important raw materials and the promise of some political sway.

Aerospace and aviation have a long history in the region Ohio gave us the Wright Brothers, after all. A lot has changed since the two decided theyd find a way to fly. Now aerospace products are among the regions top-dollar exports.

Aircraft and their parts are now Ohios second-highest value exports. In Kentucky, aerospace products are at the top of the export value list, exceeding other manufactured goods and traditional commodities such as coal and agricultural exports.

Scott Roush, director of manufacturing at Summit, said there are a couple of reasons for locating in a rural part of Kentucky. One is that its inCongressman Hal Rogers district.

Were here and there are a number of other defense contractors here because of the congressmen, said Roush.

Rogers represents eastern Kentuckys 5th district and serves on powerfuldefense and spending committees. Roush said the congressman approached Sikorsky a decade ago and asked the company to put work in Somerset. He said that connection has helped Summit get its foot in the door.

So when we go and say, Were Summit Aviation with 50 employees, and youre going in to meet with a billion-dollar corporation, they may not take you seriously unless you have that extra push to say, Hey, at least let these people in and let them show you what they can do, Roush said.

In an emailed statement Rogers said, bringing new industry to southern and eastern Kentucky has been a top priority.

Supply and Defense

Summit is whats known as a build-to-print facility. Clients send blueprints and the company builds according to those plans. Many of Summits products, such as wing stabilizers, are sent to legendary helicopter makersSikorsky, and could later become part of one of the Armys Black Hawk helicopters. About 70 percent of the work at Summit is for defense contracts and Roush said that makes the supply chain important.

Especially on the defense side there are specific limitations to where you can get, what countries you can get raw materials from, Roush said.

Defense contractors must comply withlawsspecifying that material formilitary contractsbe sourced domestically.

That highlights another one of the regions strong selling points: Century Aluminum in Hawesville, Kentucky. Century is just 166 miles northwest of Somerset and is home to the countryslast smelterproducing high-purity aluminum, which is used for many aerospace products.

It makes sense for the smelting operation to be reasonably close to one of their major customers, said Dan Stohr, communications director for the Aerospace Industries Association.

Stohr said about 90 percent of exports in the aerospace industry are for commercial aircraft. Most parts for defense contracts stay in the country. He said once a part is made, the same company will often also provide most maintenance, generating more revenue for the manufacturer.

Its cheaper and easier for a major company to buy those finished products as opposed to finishing them, themselves. And so from an economic standpoint these small shops provide an invaluable service, Stohr said.

The Jobs Picture

Stohr said this industry also provides a lot of high-skill, quality jobsabout 2.4 million nationwide.

But the regions dependence on smaller companies could also have some downsides. Mike Shields is a workforce researcher atPolicy Matters Ohio, a nonprofit, labor-leaning research institute. He said hes skeptical about the quality of the jobs in the regions aerospace sector.

People who are in the same type of job are oftentimes not earning as high of wages and are not experiencing the same job quality in some of these smaller firms than they do in a comparable role in a well-recognized firm, Shields said.

Shields said traditionally manufacturing jobs are stable high-paying jobs, but that isnt necessarily a given anymore. Hes also concerned about how successful the aerospace industry can be in the long run if its made up of small businesses.

Its harder for them to be profitable, Shields said. He explained that smaller companies making interchangeable component parts are easily undercut by competitors. He said a companys products must be unique in order to stand out in the supply network.

The Trump Factor

On the manufacturing floor of Summit Aviation, workers check off on each step of their work on the various projects going on. These days theres another element in the industrys political picture: a new President who wants to beef up defense and domestic aluminum production.

The perception is that a Republican-led government will lead to more defense spending. But I dont think weve seen the effect of that, Roush said.

Roush said its too early to tell if his industry will hit new heights, but talk of increased spending, proximity to materials, and being in a political players back yard doesnt hurt their chances.

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Taking Flight: Ohio Valley's Aerospace Exports Take Top Dollars ... - WKMS

Reliance Group: Reliance Infrastructure gets go-ahead for $1-billion … – Economic Times

MUMBAI: Reliance Infrastructure of Anil Ambani-led Reliance Group has received government approvals for its planned $1-billion greenfield aerospace park near Nagpur.

We can now start working on the first unit by August and hope to complete it by first quarter of 2018, said Rajesh Dhingra, chief executive officer at Reliance Defence, an arm of Reliance Infra.

All our aerospace-related units will be based in this one location. We will invest around $1 billion (about Rs 6,500 crore) on developing the entire part, he told ET.

The board of approval for special economic zones (SEZs) in the ministry of commerce has given its approval to the proposed aerospace park spread across 289 acres at Mihan near Nagpur.

The park aims to carry out business worth over Rs 200,000 crore over the next 30 years, the company said.

In the first phase, the project will build manufacturing unit for production of aircraft, electronic warfare systems, radars, unmanned aerial vehicles, maintenance repair and overhaul for commercial aircraft, and complete eco system, including ancillary units and suppliers, to support these large projects. This development will be spread over 104 acres and the second phase will cover an additional area of 185 acres.

Dhingra, who is a former Indian Air Force officer, has been at the helm for the companys aerospace business even before it acquired Pipavav Defence & Offshore Engineering in 2015 to make a foray into the sector.

Since the acquisition, Reliance Defence has signed collaboration deals with international defence manufacturers and joined the race to grab a slice of the countrys defence spend along with other private players like Larsen & Toubro, Tata Group, and Mahindra Group.

Reliance Group last year entered into separate joint ventures with French defence majors Dassault Aviation and Thales. In both the ventures, the Indian partner will hold majority 51% stake. The company has already incorporated the Dassault JV and it will be the first project it undertakes in the aerospace park, officials said.

Both the JVs will be based out of Mihan SEZ and will work towards the execution of offset obligation worth up to Rs 30,000 crore for the 36 Rafale fighter jets being bought by India for Rs 60,000 crore, the company said.

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Reliance Group: Reliance Infrastructure gets go-ahead for $1-billion ... - Economic Times

Aerospace guru explains why SpaceX reuses rockets and it’s not to save money – BGR

SpaceXs reusable rocket technology has been hailed as the future of space travel, and even the Russians have admitted that the company seems to be on to something, but when it comes to return on investment, one of SpaceXs founding team members says that launching the same first stages multiple times isnt actually where the company sees the boost to its bottom line.

Jim Cantrell is the CEO of Vector Space Systems. Hes worked for NASAs Jet Propulsion Lab and was a founding member of both SpaceX and the Google Lunar X Prize-winning Moon Express. When it comes to the space industry, hes the kind of guy who you should listen to, and in a recent response to a Quora question about exactly how much money SpaceX is saving by reusing its Falcon rocket, Cantrell revealed the real reason (he believes) the company has pursued reusable hardware so vigorously isnt actually to save money, but to increase the number of launches the company is able to perform.

Reusability allows a marked increase in flight rates, Cantrell explained. Reverse engineered financial models of SpaceX show that to reach a good strong positive cash flow, they need more than the traditional 1012 launches per year that sized rocket has demonstrated. Reusability should easily double the amount of flights possible from a mere production and logistics standpoint.

As far as the discounts being offered to clients whose devices and cargo is being launch on flight-proven rockets, I am thinking that very few, if any, of the SpaceX Falcon 9 first stages are going to be re-used for more than 3 or so flights, Cantrell said. SpaceX will therefore not break even on the reusability portion of the equation.

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Aerospace guru explains why SpaceX reuses rockets and it's not to save money - BGR

Zodiac Aerospace Taps Birst’s Cloud-Based Networked Business Analytics Platform – PR Newswire (press release)

At Infor's customer event, Inforum 2017 at the Javits Center, Norman Hussey, Director of Business Analytics at Zodiac Aerospace, and Pedro Arellano, Vice President of Product Strategy at Birst, will present "Birst BI & Analytics The newest addition to Infor" [TECH-104 session], at 3 p.m., Wednesday, July 12, in Room 1E17.

Zodiac Aerospace, headquartered in Plaisir (Paris), France, has about 35,000 employees at more than 100 sites around the globe. With annual revenues of more than 5 billion Euros, the company has grown significantly, through a number of acquisitions, in recent years. These acquisitions have enabled Zodiac Aerospace to strengthen its position as a major participant in the aircraft cabin industry and to become the worldwide leader in commercial aircraft seats.

Zodiac Aerospace is utilizing several Infor Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) platforms, which are designed to meet the unique business requirements of manufacturers in the aerospace industry, which helps the company manage the core and supporting processes in its business.

As a result of the company's organic growth and acquisition activity, it formed several business units operating over multiple ERP systems. Several legacy BI systems were in place, including a central BI platform and enterprise data warehouse. However, this system requires Zodiac Aerospace's Central IT team to manage this complex process, serving as the central clearinghouse for reporting requests from the business units.

Zodiac Aerospace needed responsiveness to its capability in BI and Analytics that would provide self-service analytics to business units across the enterprise thus reducing the business units' reliance on central reporting and enable a faster, more efficient order-fulfilment process. It also wanted a cloud-based solution, which would support development and usage anywhere (regardless of geography) and provide easy sharing of insights.

The company explored using desktop discovery solutions, but those solutions were not able to prepare data for analysis, in an integrated fashion, nor connect/analyze data on an enterprise scale. Consequently, they sometimes produced inconsistent reporting that undermined trust in the decision-making process.

Enter Birst's networked business analytics platform. With the platform's patented, Automated Data Refinement (ADR) technology and self-service capabilities, Zodiac Aerospace's business units are able to prepare and analyze data quickly, reducing their reliance on Central IT and identifying issues in the customer order process. For example, the Birst solution helped identify customer orders, which, at times, were not synchronized with their customer's system. This capability reduces the risk of missed shipments, improving on-time delivery.

Birst's networked business analytics platform provided quick-to-market, added-value content. Business users could generate reports in minutes instead of weeks and boost efficiencies across the entire supply chain. By networking analytic instances (spaces) together, the Birst platform enables Zodiac Aerospace to quickly deliver specific content and shorten its time-to-market and avoid the administrative hassle of people and business units working with data in isolation.

Further, the Birst platform offered a fully integrated, automated analytics data store and integrated data preparation capabilities along with rapid and reliable connectivity to the Infor M3 platform and other systems.

According to Norman Hussey, Director of Business Analytics at Zodiac Aerospace, "Birst's fully contained data store and data warehouse is a great value. Data connectivity is also very powerful and simple, which gives us faster time-to-market."

Hussey also noted that the desktop discovery systems, which Zodiac Aerospace evaluated, "needed back-end data preparation done before they could start. Birst has that full process integrated. Most importantly, Birst's fully integrated stack in the cloud enables you to focus on delivering what your organization needs, without worries about memory, disks, support, and backups."

Brad Peters, Senior Vice President and General Manager of Birst, said, "With Birst's networked business analytics platform, we believe Zodiac Aerospace can continue to achieve greater levels of operational excellence, reduce risks and maintain strong service-level agreements with its customers. Birst creates a network of analytics that connects every part of the organization through trusted insights."

Birst & Zodiac Aerospace to present at Inforum, July 12, in New York

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.@ZodiacAerospace taps @BirstBI networked business #analytics to strengthen #supplychain and scale self-service http://bit.ly/2sFChaB

About Birst, an Infor Company

Birst is an advanced networked business analytics platform. Organizations can achieve a new level of trusted insight and decision making by connecting their data and people via a network of analytics services. Birst scales from individuals to the enterprise in a manner that is smart, connected, and scalable. Learn more at http://www.birst.com.

About Infor

Infor builds business software for specific industries in the cloud. With 16,000 employees and more than 90,000 customers in over 170 countries, Infor software is designed for progress. To learn more, please visitwww.infor.com.

Media contact: Steve Bauer Birst, an Infor company (628) 444-5101 (650) 670-7135 (mobile) sbauer@birst.com

View original content:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/zodiac-aerospace-taps-birsts-cloud-based-networked-business-analytics-platform-300485967.html

SOURCE Infor

https://www.birst.com

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Zodiac Aerospace Taps Birst's Cloud-Based Networked Business Analytics Platform - PR Newswire (press release)

Honeywell investing $10 million, 30 jobs in Greer’s aerospace facility – GreerToday

Enlarge photo

Honeywell

Honeywell will invest $10 million, create about 30 skilled high-tech jobs and expand its Greer aerospace facility5,000 square feet.

The expansion includes 5,000 square feet of manufacturing space.

The first phase of expansion will begin in the third quarter with an estimated completion date in 2019.

The Greer facility is a major center for the companys machining, special processes, and maintenance, repair and overhaul services for both commercial and military aircraft.

Honeywell just completed a $25 million expansion that created 30 jobs between 2011-2106.

The aerospace industry is one of the most competitive industries in the world, and South Carolina in particular hosts nearly 200 aerospace-related companies, Jason Lewandowski, senior director for the Greer Site, Honeywell Aerospace, stated.

Our facility expansion means that we not only increase our capabilities, but Honeywell continues to contribute to South Carolinas burgeoning aerospace economy, Lewandowski said.

The South Carolina Department of Commerce has also committed additional tax incentives over the next 20 years to support the continued progress of the facility, according to Honeywell officials.

This investment positions our manufacturing network for future growth to help us maintain leadership and drive innovation, Lewandowski said. We will benefit greatly from South Carolinas wealth of engineering and manufacturing talent to strengthen our technical capabilities and provide production support from Greer.

The South Carolina Department of Commerce has also committed additional tax incentives over the next 20 years to support the continued progress of the facility, according to Honeywell officials.

Honeywell first established manufacturing operations at its Greer facility in 1982. The site has grown into a dedicated hub for aerospace manufacturing where its engineers and technicians provide commercial, military and government customers with original equipment manufacturer production, maintenance, repair and overhaul support for Honeywells industry-leading family of engines.

More than 1,000 employees work in various Honeywell divisions within South Carolina.

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Honeywell investing $10 million, 30 jobs in Greer's aerospace facility - GreerToday

Boeing ramping up Alabama aerospace employment, investment … – Alabama Today

With a legacy in Alabama that spans more than half a century,Boeing Co. is looking toward the future with plans for new jobs, investment and breakthrough developments at its operations in the state.

The aerospace manufacturer, which has about 2,700 Alabama employees, expects to add 400 more by 2020, along with an additional capital investment of $70 million.

As the leading aerospace manufacturer in Alabama, Boeing supports a diverse portfolio of programs from missile defense programs such as the Ground-based Midcourse Defense system which recentlysuccessfully intercepteda mock Intercontinental ballistic missile during a test to space exploration programs such as theSpace Launch Systemfamily of rockets that will take us to Mars, said Ken Tucker, director of State and Local Government Operations for Boeing in Alabama.

Boeing is investing in the future of Alabama as a center of innovation, continuing to bring highly skilled jobs and growth to the region.

The company is one of the key success stories touted by business recruiters as they seek to expand the states aviation and aerospace industry.Last week, the team was working at theParis Air Show,where leaders of the worlds top aerospace firms convened.

Boeings continued growth in Alabama is a testament to the companys strategic vision, as well as the skillful execution by its workforce in the state, said Greg Canfield, secretary of the Alabama Department of Commerce.

Boeing innovation in Alabama is key to our nations defense and space programs, and we cant wait to see what they do next.

Alabama operations

Boeings Alabama operations are centered at two main facilities in Huntsville, in theJetplex Industrial Parkand atRedstone Gateway.

The company first established a presence in Huntsville in 1962 to support the new U.S. space programs, and today the local operations provide a wide variety of innovations and capabilities for both the commercial and defense sectors.

In addition to the successful performance of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense system, which happened at the end of May, another recent development for Boeing in Alabama is the expansion of the Patriot Advanced Capability-3 Missile Seeker facility in Huntsville.

The 28,000-square-foot facility will include machinery and other capabilities to support the missile defense program for theU.S. Army.

The expansion is progressing well and is on track to provide enhanced production capabilities by the end of the year, said Jennifer Wollman, a Boeing spokeswoman.

Other Boeing operations in Alabama include the Huntsville Design Center, which supports 20 major programs such as the new 777X, 737 Max and 787, andBoeing Research & Technology, a research center that develops future aerospace solutions for defense and commercial businesses.

Huntsville also is home to NASAs Space Launch System program, where Boeing is responsible for the design, development, testing and manufacture of the core and upper stages, as well as the avionics for the nations next-generation rocket to transport people and cargo to deep space.

Moving forward

Arecent economic impact studyshowed the company contributes more than $2 billion annually to the states economy and sustains nearly 8,400 direct and indirect jobs.

The study also showed that Boeing:

When the study was released, Boeing also announced an additional 400 jobs and $70 million in capital investment by 2020.

While our employment in the state currently remains steady with approximately 2,700 employees, we expect to see that increase in the coming years, Wollman said. We also continue moving forward with our capital investment plans and expect to have more to share on that later this year.

Republished with permission of Alabama NewsCenter.

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Boeing ramping up Alabama aerospace employment, investment ... - Alabama Today

Celebrating diversity – News24

IN general, the South African Constitution, as is clear from its preamble where reference to deity occurs, reflects a bias in favour of religion, as opposed to atheism and agnosticism. This bias in favour of religion is a departure from the pure principle of equality between believers and non-believers as set out in section nine.

In particular, section 15 of the Constitution provides that everyone has the right to freedom of conscience, religion, belief and opinion. It states further that religious observances may be conducted at state and state-aided institutions provided that:

those observances follow rules made by appropriate authorities;

they are conducted on an equitable basis; and

attendance at them is free and voluntary.

This provision obviously reflects a bias in favour of religion in general, unlike the position in the United States where religious exercises, such as prayers, are not permitted in the schools. In the U.S., the idea of neutrality does not even permit one minute of silence for meditation or voluntary prayer.

How section 15 is actually interpreted and applied in practice is a great challenge, particularly when there is a dominant religion, as is the position in South Africa,with the Christian religion.

So for instance, mandatory school prayers obviously constitute a violation of religious freedom, but even voluntary prayers could constitute a violation by putting pressure on children to participate. Also, is it practical to allow for religious observances for every religious faith, regardless of how large or small their representation in a school?

It is therefore the interpretation of the above provision of the Constitution, which is central to the recent landmark judgment of Judge Willem van der Linde in the South Gauteng High Court, in which he categorically ruled against the promotion of one religious denomination over any other at public schools by declaring that neither a school governing body nor a public school may lawfully hold that it subscribes to only a particular religion to the exclusion of others.

This seminal judgment was initiated in May by the Organisation for Religious Education and Democracy (Ogod), which brought an application to the high court seeking an order ruling against having a dominant religion observed in public schools.

It had profound reservations about the practices of scripture reading and singing of hymns in assembly, and the decoration of the walls of the school with Bible verses.

It was argued by the schools in question that as a result of religious freedom they are entitled to have an ethos or character, determined by their governing bodies, based on the community that feeds the schools with pupils. This reflects a conservative or fundamentalist Christian theological approach, as expressed by the Christian View Network, which did not approve of the ruling by Van der Linde. However, such an approach must inevitably lead to the domination of one religion over others.

Ogod brought the application against six Afrikaans state schools.

The gravamen of its argument was that the religious practices at these schools gave rise to the suppression of the scientific teaching of evolution, and a dogmatic religious ethos that in effect was a form of coercion and a gross abuse of the rights of pupils.

In his judgment, Van der Linde declared that public schools are indeed not rarefied but public ones that need to achieve universal and non-discriminatory access to education.

Referring to section 15 of the Constitution, the judge stated that provision for religious policies and observances must be conducted on a free, voluntary and equitable basis. As a result, he declared unequivocally that in this country, our diversity is celebrated, not tolerated.

He therefore questioned the acceptance by schools using rules laid down by the governing body, to hold out to be exclusively a single denomination, be it Christian, Muslim, Buddhist or atheist. What is clear from the judgment is that although religious observances and practices in schools are permissible, protecting children from coercion is essential. This allows broad-based religious education, rather than dogmatic instruction that promotes one religion over another.

It is therefore, according to Reverend Ian Booth, chairperson of Diakonia Council of Churches, not the responsibility of public schools to teach and instruct children in their respective faiths. This should be done in places of worship.

This is the viewpoint of a minister with a liberal Christian theology, in contrast with that expressed by the Christian View Network. In the pluralistic society that South Africa is, cultural and religious tolerance are essential for social cohesion.

This is necessary to protect our celebrated diversity. In this regard, Van Lindes judgment makes a fundamentally sound contribution to our jurisprudence, which has been widely welcomed by most religious commentators, who include leaders in the Hindu, Tamil, Muslim and Christian faiths.

George Devenish is an emeritus professor at UKZN and one of the scholars who assisted in drafting the Interim Constitution in 1993.

24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.

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Celebrating diversity - News24

An Interview With Rick Rosner on Women and the Future (Part 4) – The Good Men Project (blog)

Scott Douglas Jacobsen: Ethics exists beyond issues of the sexes. Issues of global concern. Ongoing problems needing comprehensive solutions such as differing ethnic, ideological, linguistic, national, and religious groups converging on common goals for viable and long-term human relations in a globalized world scarce in resources without any land-based frontiers for further expansionand exploitation, UNinternational diplomatic resolutions for common initiatives such as humanitarian initiatives through General Assembly Third Committee (Social, Humanitarian and Cultural), Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), United Childrens Fund (UNICEF), United Nations Develop Programme (UNDP), World Food Programme (WFP), Food And Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO), United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), United Nations Human Populations Settlement Programme (UN-HABITAT), Interagency Standing Committee (IASC), and issues of UN humanitarian thematic import such as demining, early warning and disaster detection, the merger of theories of the grandest magnitude (e.g., general and special relativity) and the most minute (e.g., quantum mechanics), medical issues such as Malaria, Cancer, and new outbreaks of Ebola, nuclear wasteand fossil fuel emissions, severe practices of infibulation, clitoridectomy, or excision among the varied, creative means of female and male genital mutilation based in socio-cultural and religious practices,stabilization of human population growthprior to exceeding the planets present and future supportive capacity for humans, reduction of religious and national extremism, continuous efforts of conservation of cultural and biological diversity, energy production, distribution, and sustainability, economic sustainability, provision of basic necessities of clean water, food, and shelter,IAEAand other organizations work for reduction and eventual elimination of nuclear armaments, culture wars over certainty in ethics on no evidence (faith-based ethics)and lack of certainty in morality because of too much data while lacking a coherent framework for action (aforementioned bland multiculturalism transformed into prescription of cultural/ethical relativism), acidification of the oceans, problems of corruption, continued annexation of land, issues of international justice handled by such organs as the International Court of Justice, introduction of rapid acceleration of technological capabilities while adapting to the upheavals following in its wake, issues of drug and human trafficking, other serious problems of children and armed conflict including child soldiers, terrorist activity, education of new generations linked to new technological and informational access, smooth integration of national economies into a global economy for increased trade and prosperity, and the list appears endless and growing.

If collated, they form one question:How best to solve problems in civil society?

Main issue, all subordinate queries and comprehensive, coherent solutions require sacrifice. You might ask, Cui bono?(Who benefits?) Answer: all in sum. Problem: few feel the need to sacrifice past the superficial. Some Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram protestations to represent themselves as just people while not behaving in the real world as just people. Hashtags and celebrity speeches help in outreach and advertisement, but we need long-term, pragmatic solutions to coincide with them more. Nothing hyperbolic to disturb healthy human societies, but reasonable and relatively rapid transitions into sustainable solutions.You have stated positive trajectories by thinking about the future. You talked of some, but not all. What about these collection of problems and the growing list?

Rick Rosner: I believe the best instrument of change is information. Informed people more readily disbelieve stupid shit. Widespread ignorance and distrust of well-substantiated facts are usually signs of somebody getting away with something.

We know society is trending in an egalitarian direction. Trends towards equality are in a race with technology remaking society. For me, the question becomes, How many lives and generations will be spent in misery before social and tech trends make things better and/or weird?

The happy possible eventual situation is that tech creates a utopia in which all people get what they want. The unhappy possible eventuality is that tech debunks the importance or centrality of humanity, and humans are afterthoughts the stepchildren of the future being taken care of but not really having their concerns addressed because their level of existence isnt taken seriously by posthumans. (And of course theres the possibility that AI gets out of hand, eats everything and craps out robots. Lets try to avoid that.)

Tech will solve some huge problems. One of the biggest is the steadily growing population. People who have a shot at technical, earthly immortality (50 to 80 years from now) will reproduce less. When transferrable consciousness becomes commonplace (120 to 150 years from now), posthuman people may not reproduce at all (though traditional human enclaves will still spit out a steady stream of kids). The uncoupling of individual consciousness from the body it was born into solves a bunch of, perhaps most, current problems and anticipated problems crowding, food, pollution, global warming by allowing people to live in ways that leave less of a footprint. (Not that their choices will be made for purely ecological concerns. People will always follow their own interests, and posthuman people will choose a variety of non-fleshy containers (200 years from now) because virtual or semi-robotic containers will be cheaper, more convenient, more versatile and exciting.)

But our current problems will be largely replaced by fantastically weird problems. Virtual people will be subject to virtual attacks and virtual disease. Agglomerations of consciousness may become bad actors. People may sic nanotech swarms on each other. You can find all this stuff in good near-future science fiction. William Gibsons new novel,The Peripheral, which takes place about 20 years and 90 years from now, can serve as a good, fun intro to the future. In it, some impossible stuff happens, but its the possible stuff thats interesting and scary. There are websites devoted to the future in a very non-la-de-dah way. Look athttp://io9.com/andhttp://boingboing.net/ theyre entertaining and informative.

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An Interview With Rick Rosner on Women and the Future (Part 4) - The Good Men Project (blog)

Andrew Moore’s ascension keeps his mom on the edge of her seat – The Register-Guard

SEATTLE Although Chris Smith didnt get the decision in his first major league start, Ryon Healy made sure Oaklands 36-year-old right-hander contributed to an Athletics victory.

Healy bounced a ground-rule RBI double to right-center with two outs in the ninth inning Saturday night to give the As a 4-3 victory over the Seattle Mariners after Smith pitched six solid innings.

That was like a personal goal. Walking to the field today, you think about it and I said if I can get six innings, three runs in the big leagues, thats a quality start, said Smith, called up Saturday from Triple-A Nashville. Its a little different in the minor leagues, but to do it in the big leagues, that was like a good personal pat on the back.

Rajai Davis opened the ninth with a slow-rolling infield single to third off Edwin Diaz (2-4), who relieved to open the inning. Davis stole second as Matt Joyce struck out. Yonder Alonso was walked intentionally with two outs and Healy then ripped an 0-2 slider into the gap.

I was one pitch away and I missed that slider, Diaz said. I threw a fastball up and in, and he looked back. I was supposed to go with the fastball again, but I decided to throw the slider, but I missed in the middle and he hit it pretty good.

Sean Doolittle (1-0) pitched the eighth for the victory. Santiago Casilla finished for his 15th save, despite allowing a two-out double.

Alonso and Marcus Semien had solo homers for the Athletics off rookie Andrew Moore, who allowed three runs in six innings in his third start.

Smith, called up from Triple-A Nashville, made his first major league start after 63 relief appearances. He left after six innings tied 3-3. The right-hander allowed six hits, struck out four and walked one. Smiths career record remains 1-0 with a victory in relief in 2008 with Boston.

I was hoping to get him into the sixth today and he gave us six and allowed us to go to the three guys that we go to to tie or win games, Oakland manager Bob Melvin said. He did every bit of his job and probably a little bit more. It was fun to see.

Semien, activated off the disabled list Thursday after missing 74 games, snapped a 2-2 tie in the fifth with his first homer, a one-out solo shot.

Jarrod Dyson knotted it 3-3 when he opened the bottom half with his fifth home run.

Oakland took a 1-0 lead in the second on singles by Healy, Bruce Maxwell and Jaycob Brugman and made it to 2-0 in the third on Alonsos 20th homer.

Seattle tied it in the bottom half on doubles by Dyson and Jean Segura and Ben Gamels RBI single.

Mariners right fielder Mitch Haniger saved at least one run in the fourth with a running grab of Davis drive deep into the corner to end the inning with two aboard.

It might be one and done, so I was really enjoying it, Smith said. But, at the same time, I was really trying to lock it in. I can go from zero to 100 in the blink of an eye, so I had to slow myself down. Really take it in, but really know that, hey, Ive got a job to do.

On Sunday, Oakland rookie RHP Daniel Gossett (1-3, 6.23 ERA) closes out the four-game series at Safeco Field. He has walked just three in 26 innings in his five starts since being called up, but has allowed seven homers.

Seattle will counter with Felix Hernandez (3-3, 5.04 ERA), who makes his fourth start since coming off the DL on June 23. The longtime ace, who entered the season with a career 3.16 ERA, is 1-1 with has a 5.50 ERA since return after missing almost two months with right shoulder inflammation.

Seattle infielder Shawn OMalley (recovering appendix surgery) made his first two rehab appearances in the Arizona rookie league, both times in the leadoff spot as DH. He went 2 for 2 on Friday with a triple, and three walks. OMalley had one hit in three at-bats Saturday with an RBI.

Oakland catcher Josh Phegley was reinstated from the paternity list after missing three games. Catcher Ryan Lavarnway, who was called up from Nashville on Wednesday, was designated for assignment.

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Andrew Moore's ascension keeps his mom on the edge of her seat - The Register-Guard

Space Exploration News – Space News, Space Exploration …

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Moon rock on the block: Sotheby’s stages its first space exploration … – The National

Lot 102 Apollo 11 Contingency Lunar Sample Return Bag Used by Neil Armstrong on Apollo 11 to bring back the very first pieces of the moon ever collected traces of which remain in the bag. The only such relic available for private ownership. Estimate$2/4 million. Courtesy Sothebys

Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed.

On July 20, 1969, these eight words crackled across the airwaves, holding the world entranced and altering forever the boundaries of what was considered possible.

The man speaking was Neil Armstrong, whose brevity marked the moment when the lunar module Eagle completed its perilous journey from Apollo 11 and touched down upon the surface of the Moon. The world waited on tenterhooks as hour after hour of checks were carried out. Finally, the hatch opened, and Armstrong descended the ladder to become the first human to set foot on the Moon, with the now immortal words: Thats one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.

There cannot be many who have not, however briefly, glanced at the Moon and wondered what it must have been like for Armstrong to look back at the blue and green planet we call home. The landing may have happened almost five decades ago, but space exploration has not lost its allure. Even those of us who were not born when this momentous event unfolded are caught in its gravitational pull.

With this in mind, it seems only fitting that Sothebys New York has decided to host its first space exploration auction, featuring memorabilia from American-led space missions, exactly 48 years to the day after Apollo 11s lunar landing.

The space programmes are a huge source of inspiration for future generations around the globe, says Cassandra Hatton, space expert and senior specialist, books and manuscripts, at Sothebys New York.

Many of us remember watching in awe as Armstrong first set foot on the Moon, and remember vividly the excitement and sometimes tragedy associated with each launch. This is a field that requires no special background or training to appreciate, and anyone, regardless of their age, can share in the excitement. Space exploration unites us as humans in a common goal of escaping the bonds of Earth to explore what is beyond.

Although an American ultimately became the first person to land on the Moon, for many years Russia led space exploration. In 1957, it launched the worlds first satellite, Sputnik, and in 1961, Russian pilot and cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin was the first man to orbit the Earth, beating his US counterpart Alan Shepard by 23 days. US president JohnF Kennedy ramped up the rivalry between the two countries in 1962, when he declared Americas intention of putting a man on the Moon. Issued as a rally cry, his words We choose to go to the Moon in this decade.... not because [it is] easy, but because [it is] hard marked the start of the so-called space race.

It is difficult to grasp just how huge a task this was at that time. Computing was still in its infancy, and many materials now deemed crucial to any sojourn into the vacuum of space had yet to be invented. To put this into context, the computer that powered the Apollo missions filled almost an entire room, could only execute eight instructionssimultaneously and had decidedly less memory than an Xbox 360 game console. That men trusted their lives to such basic technology seems beyond comprehension, and the crews, made up of experienced fighter plane test pilots, sat helpless inside their capsules, at the mercy of others to send them into and, most crucially, bring them home from the unknown. Although mixed with rhetoric fuelled by the Cold War between the US and Russia, Kennedys unwavering belief and commitment to lunar exploration is partly why the space centre in Florida still bears his name.

Innumerable items were created as part of this dash for the skies, but very few have so far been put up for sale. In 1993, Sothebys staged a Russian space history auction, offering 227 lots over three days, and generating sales in excess of US$6.8 million (Dh25m).

"Houston, We've Had A Problem Here." The Flown Apollo 13 Flight Plan Apollo 13. Flight Plan. Part No. SKB32100082-350. S/N: 1001. [Houston: Manned Spacecraft Center, March 16, 1970] Estimate $30/40,000. Courtesy Sotheby's

Attended by former Russian cosmonauts, with a mood best described as frenzied, the packed sales room jostled to snap up items such as Gagarins handwritten speech for $123,500 (Dh453,655); instructions for the finders of the returned Soviet space dogs Belka and Strelka for $10,350 (Dh38,000);and even a Lunokhod 1lunar rover, which sold for $68,500 (Dh252,000), despite having being left on the Moon since 1971, with no prospect of it ever making a return to Earth.

Crucially, the sale also offered Moon rock, which Hatton is quick to highlight to this day remains the only legal sale of Moon rocks to have ever occurred.

It is this legal provenance that holds the clue as to why most sales have so far offered Soviet, but not US items. Unlike the Soviet Union, which lost any claim to these space items when it collapsed, until recently, US law prohibited all sales of space items, as they were deemed to be owned by Nasa, and ultimately, the American government. This has now changed.

New laws were enacted, Hatton explains, allowing US astronauts who participated in the Mercury, Gemini, or Apollo missions clear title to any artefacts that they received during their missions, and thus, clear title to anyone that they sell or gift such items to.

This means that items that one would normally only find in museums are now available for private ownership.

Thanks to this fundamental shift in policy, the market is expected to open up, kicking off with the Sothebys Space Exploration auction next week. Alongside original charts, maps and engineering models, one item on offer is a photograph taken of Buzz Aldrin by Armstrong, on the surface of the Moon. This is one of the most defining images of the era. Signed by and with a note from Aldrin, it carries a reserve price of between $3,000 and $5,000 (up to Dh18,400).

Also available is a flag carried aboard Apollo 11 signed by Armstrong, Aldrin and the third astronaut on board, Michael Collins. In the years after the mission, Armstrong became uncomfortable with his signature changing hands for large sums, and in later years became so disillusioned that he refused all requests for an autograph. This signed flag is, therefore, estimated to sell for between $40,000 and $60,000 (up to Dh220,500).

Perhaps unexpectedly, the star listing of the sale is an unassuming bag marked Lunar sample return, which comes with a reserve price of between $2m and $4m (up to Dh14.7m).

Lot 116 Buzz Aldrin at Tranquility Base The Apollo programs most iconic image. Large color photograph taken by Neil Armstrong of Buzz Aldrin during their Apollo 11 moonwalk. Signed & inscribed by Buzz Aldrin. Estimate $3/5,000. Courtesy Sotheby's

Shedding light on what makes this so interesting, Hatton explains: The top lot in the sale is the very bag that Neil Armstrong used on the Apollo 11 mission to bring back the first samples of the Moon ever collected.

Called an outer decontamination bag, it still has traces of lunar dust inside it.

We thought that the anniversary date of this historic event was the perfect day on which to sell an artefact of such significance.

One nation that will no doubt be watching the sale with interest is the UAE one of the more recent arrivals to the field of space exploration. In 2014, the countryset out an ambitious plan to be the first Arab nation to send an unmanned probe to Mars, joining the ranks of only nine other nations with its own space programme, dubbed the Emirates Mars Mission.

Fittingly named Hope, the UAEs unmanned spacecraft for the Mars probe aims to gather data about the atmosphere, which it will then share with other research facilities.

Although Hope is on a serious scientific mission, there is a touch of poetry about it, too, timed as it is to arrive on the Red Planet in 2021, to coincide with the 50th anniversary year of a unified UAE.

Covering 60 million miles (equal to 156 non-stop journeys to the Moon) and reliant on solar power, Hope has a difficult voyage ahead of it.

Once in space, and with no air friction to slow it down, it will travel at 126,000kph for seven months to reach its destination.

Once there, transmissions back to Earth will take up to 20 minutes to arrive, meaning the craft must be capable of piloting itself. It must slow itself down enough to enter Mars orbit, where it will, at long last, be able to collect samples and data.

With a single orbit taking 55 hours and covering an ellipse of up to 44,000 kilometres, the entire mission is designed to take almost two years from launch to completion.

In the interim, enthusiasts can get their space fix from the upcoming Sothebys auction, and add to or build up a stockpile of cosmic collectibles.

The head of Sothebys Dubai, Katia Nounou, sums it up perfectly. From those aspiring to be astronauts to those simply reaching for the stars, were thrilled to offer the chance to get one step closer to the Moon this summer, she says.

We hope space exploration inspires all of our visitors to look back on mankinds immense achievements, and to reimagine the impossible as possible.

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Moon rock on the block: Sotheby's stages its first space exploration ... - The National

Nanotech Security Corp (NTSFF) Tenkan Sitting Above Kijun – Davidson Register

Nanotech Security Corp (NTSFF)s moving averages reveal that the Tenkan line of the shares are above the Kijun-Sen line, indicating potential upward momentum building in the bullish chart. Nanotech Security Corp moved0.025 in the most recent session and touched0.9890 on a recent tick.

The Tenkan-Sen is generally used in combination with the Kijun-Sen to create predications of future momentum. A buy signal is created when the Tenkan-sen line moves above the Kijun-Sen, while a sell signal is created when the Tenkan-Sen line moves below the Kijun-Sen line.

Many technical traders use the Tenkan-Sen as a tool for predicting levels where the price of the asset will find short-term support.

When reading Ichimoku Kinko Hyo charts, investors should note that the Tenkan-Sen line leads the Kijun-Sen, and tracks price with more sensitivity because it covers a shorter period of time. When the Tenkan-Sen line crosses and moves above the Kijun-Sen line, this is generally considered a bullish signal. Alternatively, when the Tenkan-Sen line crosses below the Kijun-Sen line, it is considered a bearish signal.

The tenkan sen/kijun sen cross is one of the most traditional trading strategies within the Ichimoku Kinko Hyo system. The signal for this strategy is given when the tenkan sen crosses over the kijun sen. If the tenkan sen crosses above the kijun sen, then it is a bullish signal. Likewise, if the tenkan sen crosses below the kijun sen, then that is a bearish signal. Like all strategies within the Ichimoku system, the tenkan sen/kijun sen cross needs to be viewed in terms of the bigger Ichimoku picture before making any trading decisions, as this will give the strategy the best chances of success. In general, the tenkan sen/kijun sen strategy can be classified into three (3) major classifications: strong, neutral and weak.

Conducting further technical review, shares of Nanotech Security Corp (NTSFF) have a 200-day moving average of 0.93. The 50-day is 0.96, and the 7-day is sitting at 0.98. Using a wider time frame to assess the moving average such as the 200-day, may help block out the noise and chaos that is often caused by daily price fluctuations. In some cases, MAs may be used as strong reference points for spotting support and resistance levels. Employing the use of the moving average for technical equity analysis is still highly popular among traders and investors. The moving average can be used as a reference point to assist with the discovery of buying and selling opportunities.

Investors have the ability to approach the stock market from various angles. This may include using technical analysis, fundamental analysis, or a combination or the two. Investors watching the technical levels may be trying to chart patterns and discover trends in stock price movement. Investors tracking the fundamentals may be looking closely at many different factors. They may be focused on industry performance, earnings estimates, dividend payouts, and other factors. They might also be studying how the company is run, and trying to figure out the true value of the firm. Keeping track of all the data may seem overwhelming, but it may help give a needed boost to the portfolio.

Nanotech Security Corp (NTSFF)s Williams Percent Range or 14 day Williams %R currently sits at -35.00. The Williams %R oscillates in a range from 0 to -100. A reading between 0 and -20 would point to an overbought situation. A reading from -80 to -100 would signal an oversold situation. The Williams %R was developed by Larry Williams. This is a momentum indicator that is the inverse of the Fast Stochastic Oscillator.

Nanotech Security Corp (NTSFF) currently has a 14-day Commodity Channel Index (CCI) of 72.02. Active investors may choose to use this technical indicator as a stock evaluation tool. Used as a coincident indicator, the CCI reading above +100 would reflect strong price action which may signal an uptrend. On the flip side, a reading below -100 may signal a downtrend reflecting weak price action. Using the CCI as a leading indicator, technical analysts may use a +100 reading as an overbought signal and a -100 reading as an oversold indicator, suggesting a trend reversal.

Currently, the 14-day ADX for Nanotech Security Corp (NTSFF) is sitting at 10.42. Generally speaking, an ADX value from 0-25 would indicate an absent or weak trend. A value of 25-50 would support a strong trend. A value of 50-75 would identify a very strong trend, and a value of 75-100 would lead to an extremely strong trend. ADX is used to gauge trend strength but not trend direction. Traders often add the Plus Directional Indicator (+DI) and Minus Directional Indicator (-DI) to identify the direction of a trend.

The RSI, or Relative Strength Index, is a widely used technical momentum indicator that compares price movement over time. The RSI was created by J. Welles Wilder who was striving to measure whether or not a stock was overbought or oversold. The RSI may be useful for spotting abnormal price activity and volatility. The RSI oscillates on a scale from 0 to 100. The normal reading of a stock will fall in the range of 30 to 70. A reading over 70 would indicate that the stock is overbought, and possibly overvalued. A reading under 30 may indicate that the stock is oversold, and possibly undervalued. After a recent check, the 14-day RSI is currently at 54.75, the 7-day stands at 57.43, and the 3-day is sitting at 61.01.

By DR Staff Writer

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Nanotech Security Corp (NTSFF) Tenkan Sitting Above Kijun - Davidson Register

‘Tipping point for NUCLEAR WAR’ North Korea threatens to spark WW3 after US bombing drill – Express.co.uk

The hermit state reacted furiously after two US supersonic bombers performed live-fire drills in South Korea in a show of military strength.

State-run newspaper Rodong newspaper described the region as the "world's biggest tinderbox" and warned: "Don't play with fire on a powder keg."

Yesterday's drill was designed to "sternly respond" to recent missile launches by North Korea.

But the propaganda rag branded it a "dangerous military gambit of warmongers who are trying to ignite the fuse of a nuclear war on the peninsula".

It added: "The US, with its dangerous military provocation, is pushing the risk of a nuclear war on the peninsula to a tipping point.

"A small misjudgment or error can immediately lead to the beginning of a nuclear war, which will inevitably lead to another world war."

GETTY

REUTERS

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Army personnel and people gather at Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang o celebrate the successful test-launch of intercontinental ballistic rocket Hwasong-14

GETTY

Donald Trump's administration and the North's regime under leader Kim Jong-un have exchanged hostile rhetoric for months.

Tension further escalated after North Korea's test-launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) last week.

The North has staged five nuclear tests and has made a significant progress in its missile capability under Kim, who took power in 2011.

GETTY

Mr Trump yesterday told Chinese President Xi Jinping that the United States will stop North Korea "one way or the other".

He said: "I appreciate the things that you have done relative to the very substantial problem that we all face in North Korea, a problem that something has to be done about.

"It may take longer than I'd like, it may take longer than you'd like. But there will be success in the end one way or the other."

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'Tipping point for NUCLEAR WAR' North Korea threatens to spark WW3 after US bombing drill - Express.co.uk

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Trump warns US is planning ‘severe things’ for Kim Jong-un when WW3 breaks out – Daily Star

DONALD Trump has threatened North Korean despot Kim Jong-un with pretty severe things if he continues with his deadly nuke programme.

GETTY

The President lashed out at Kim in a heated rant following the tyrants successful ICBM test this week.

North Koreas missile launch saw their dreaded ICBM fly into the Sea of Japan, after being in the air for more than half an hour.

And Trump was quick to hit back with his own massive military exercises in South Korea as a show of force to the rotund ruler.

Tensions on the Korean peninsular have reached an all time high as US and South Korean forces launched a drill which saw them fire off missiles in response to Kim Jong-un's successful test of an ICBM

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US and South Korean forces fire off missiles from the South's Hyunmu-2 Missile System and the US M20 Multiple Launch Rocket System. The test is in answer to North Korea's test of an ICBM

"I have some pretty severe things that we're thinking about, Trump said in a statement on Thursday.

That doesn't mean we're going to do them. I don't draw red lines.

He added the North is "behaving in a very, very dangerous manner and something will have to be done about it."

Serious concerns have been raised by the international community about North Koreas missile programme.

It is believed Kim's new missile could obliterate a major US city, with an estimated range of around 6,700 km (4,160 miles).

Since 2008, photographer Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, he was able to save photos that was forbidden to take inside the segregated state

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Taking pictures in the DMZ is easy, but if you come too close to the soldiers, they stop you

A US Defence Department spokesman, Captain Jeff Davis, said the US had not seen a missile like the tubby tyrant's latest deadly ICBM.

While Commander of US forces in Korea, Gen Vincent K Brooks, said: "As the combined live fire demonstrated, we may make resolute decisions any time, if the alliance commanders-in-chief order it.

"Whoever thinks differently is making a serious misjudgement."

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Trump warns US is planning 'severe things' for Kim Jong-un when WW3 breaks out - Daily Star

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