A journey to Jupiter, without leaving Earth – Blastr

[Image credit: Voyager 3]

I dont mean to make this blog all Jupiter all the time, but cmon. Its Jupiter.

The biggest planet in our solar system is truly a monster: At 140,000 kilometers in diameter, it can be resolved into a disk and viewed with some detail with only binoculars or a small telescoe, even at a typical distance from Earth of 700 million kilometers.

So, what happens when you take more than a thousand images of Jupiter from 91 gifted amateur astronomers across the Earth and process them to combine them into a global map that changes over time?

Magnificence.

And I can prove it. Watch:

That incredible video is the product of Voyager 3, a group of amateur astronomers in Sweden. Voyagers 1 and 2 were two of the most successful probes ever launched by NASA, and the group originally banded together to recreate the famous approach video to Jupiter made from Voyager 1 images. So, the name works for me.

In this case, the task was to create a high-resolution moving map of Jupiters clouds using the combined images from dozens of astronomers. Once the images were taken, Christoffer Svenske and Johan Warell still faced the daunting task of combining them. The images were taken across 3.5 months, which poses quite a problem. Jupiter rotates once every ten hours, and it doesnt have a solid surface: What we see are the cloud tops, which roil and flow and change on a daily basis.

Also, from Earth, we only see Jupiter from one angle. It orbits the Sun in pretty much the same planewe do, and its spin axis is perpendicular to that plane. That means the polar regions are very difficult to observe.

But thats what computers are for. They combined the images to make 54 full-planet maps covering different times, then interpolated them to double that number and provide for a smoother video flow*.

Once they did this, a lot of things became possible. For example, each pixel in the image can be remapped to show Jupiter in different ways, like the cylindrical projection at the top of this article. They also mapped them onto a sphere, so that virtual flybys become possible. Amazing.

Theres a lot to see! The banding on Jupiter is caused by convection rising and falling air. In the lighter zones, air is rising and cooling, allowing ammonia ice crystals to form. These are very reflective, so the zones are brighter. The darker belts are where air is sinking, and the ammonia is clearer vapor, so we see deeper into Jupiters atmosphere.

One thing that struck me is how fast the light-colored equatorial zone region flows relative to everything else. It zips along in an eastward direction, in whats called a jet. Appropriate.

You can see the Great Red Spot to the south, and I love how the air flows around it, creating huge vortices to its left. Lots of other smaller storms can be seen all over the place, too.

Im fascinated by the view looking down on the south pole. Due to geometry, when we view Jupiter from Earth the equator will in general show the most detail, since were looking straight down on it from Earth; closer to the poles, perspective foreshortens details, blurring them. But in the artificial polar projection,the equatorial features are near the planets limb (the outer circumference), so they get foreshortened. At the same time, the polar details are still blurred in the original images, so theyre still fuzzy even though it looks like were peering straight down at them. The highest resolution features in the polar map are therefore at mid latitudes, where real resolution and remapping balance. Pretty cool.

Mind you, we cant see that view from Earth! But we do get images of it from spacecraft, like Juno, which just dipped down over Jupiters poles for the fourth time in its mission. Its amazing to see any detail at all near the pole of Jupiter in the Voyager 3 images, and still,they managed to show quite a bit there.

This sort of work shows once again what a valuable asset so-called amateur astronomers can be to science; maps like this can be important in identifying features in the Juno images, for example. And I say so-called amateurs because that adjective is misleading. The line between professional and amateur has been blurred increasingly over the years; with high-quality digital video cameras and powerful computers to process the data, the sort of thing that can be done by a few individuals more than rivals what professionals could do in the past. It surpasses it, in many cases by leaps and bounds. What used to be the purview of huge observatories is now possible to achieve from someones back yard. Incredible images of the heavens, precise measurements of variable stars and asteroids, and more, all because of a revolution in technology.

And, of course, the intense dedication of people who truly love their craft. Dont discount that. It can go a very, very long way it can discover entire worlds.

* Interpolation is a mathematical technique that lets you fill in gaps in data by making assumptions about the data around the gap. For example, if a feature in the images moves ten pixels in an hour, then in half that time it should move half that distance. The actual process can be considerably more complex than that, but thats the general idea.

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A journey to Jupiter, without leaving Earth - Blastr

Local astronomers help map asteroid – Sierra Vista Herald

On Jan. 26, the asteroid 693 Zerbinetta, a 40-mile wide rock that orbits the sun in a five year orbit, passed in front of a faint star in the constellation Auriga casting a thin shadow on the Earth that blocked the star from observers in the southwestern United States. As it happened, Sierra Vista fell close to the centerline of the predicted path of this occultation.

By precisely timing the blocking of the star at several points along the asteroid shadows path, scientists can build a map of the asteroid. With enough data points, the shape and size of the asteroid is revealed and knowledge of its rotation rate and orbit can be refined.

Members of IOTA, the International Occultation Timing Association, travel the world over filming and timing these occultations to build a database of asteroid measurements. They often enlist the help of other amateur astronomers along the predicted path of the event.

On the night of Jan. 25, members of the Huachuca Astronomy Club (HAC) were enlisted by IOTA member, Paul Maley of Carefree, Arizona, to record the passage of Zerbinetta in front of the faint star known by the catalog designation 2UCAC 46262076. The asteroid would block the star for only a few seconds, just minutes past midnight on the morning of Jan. 26. The measurement had to be perfect or the data would be useless.

The Patterson Observatory, on the campus of the University of Arizona Sierra Vista, was deemed to be just 1.98 miles from the centerline. HAC members David Roemer, Rick Burke and Ken Duncan manned the observatory and operated a video camera attached to an 8-inch telescope that rides piggyback on the observatorys 20-inch telescope. Special software was downloaded into the observatorys computer to insert a precise time stamp into the recorded video.

Mr. Maley set up similar equipment at my own observatory about eight miles east of Patterson and about three miles from the centerline.

Reducing the recorded video data to a graph of time versus brightness, a scientifically valuable data set is produced. Comparing that data from several sites along the path yields the desired information that can then add to our knowledge of this asteroid.

The Patterson Observatory is owned by the University South Foundation, Inc. and is operated by volunteers from the Huachuca Astronomy Club. This is not the first time that valuable science has been collected at the Patterson. It has been used previously to record an asteroid occultation, it is occasionally used to record asteroid observations for the Lunar and Planetary Laboratorys Target Asteroid Campaign and HAC astronomers used Patterson to participate in the worldwide Comet ISON observing campaign. Plans to participate in LPLs 4*P comet coma morphology study are ongoing as well. The observatory is open to the public once a month for a free open house observing session called Public Night.

The next Public Night is March 2. Doors open at 7 p.m.

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Local astronomers help map asteroid - Sierra Vista Herald

Inside Intel Corporation’s Artificial Intelligence Strategy – Motley Fool

A much discussed area in technology these days is artificial intelligence, a type of machine learning. Artificial intelligence is a workload that requires an immense amount of processing power, which is why companies like microprocessor giant Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) -- a company that brings in tens of billions of dollars from sales of processors -- see this market as an interesting long-term growth opportunity.

Interestingly, although Intel is a major supplier of processors for artificial intelligence workloads, the company doesn't get nearly as much attention for its efforts in this market as does graphics specialist NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) -- a company that has seen significant revenue and profit growth from artificial intelligence applications as its long-term investments in this space are paying off.

Intel CEO Brian Krzanich at the company's AI day back in November 2016. Image source: Intel.

Intel went over its artificial intelligence strategy at its Feb. 9 investor meeting. Let's look at what the company had to say about the market and how it plans to win in it.

According to Intel, only 7% of server sales in 2016 were used for artificial intelligence workloads, but it is the "fastest-growing data center workload."

Within that 7%, the company says that 60% of those servers were used for "classical machine learning" while the remaining 40% were used for "deep learning."

The company then went on to show that of the servers used for classical machine learning, 97% used Intel Xeon processors to handle the computations, 2% used alternative architectures, and 1% used Intel processors paired with graphics processing units (likely from NVIDIA).

Among servers used for deep learning applications, the chipmaker says that 91% use just Intel Xeon processors to handle the computations, 7% use Xeon processors paired with graphics processing units, while 2% use alternative architectures altogether.

The point that Intel is trying to make is that its chips overwhelmingly dominate the market for servers that run artificial intelligence workloads today.

Intel clearly views graphics processors from the likes of NVIDIA as a threat to its position in the artificial intelligence market -- a reasonable viewpoint considering that NVIDIA's data center graphics processor business continues to grow at a phenomenal rate (revenue was up 145% in the company's fiscal year 2017).

The risk is that that those graphics processors, though usually paired with Intel Xeon processors, will reduce the demand for said Xeon processor (i.e., if some number of Xeon processors can be replaced by one Xeon processor and some smaller number of graphics processors, then Intel loses).

Intel's strategy, then, appears to be to cast a very wide net with a wide range of different architectures and hope that it can offer better solutions for specific types of artificial intelligence workloads than the graphics chipmakers like NVIDIA can.

Intel's broad AI product portfolio. Image source: Intel.

Look at the slide above and you'll notice Intel has different solutions for different types of workloads. It's promoting its next-generation Xeon processor (known as Skylake-EP) as the standard, general-purpose artificial intelligence processor.

From there, the offerings get more targeted. For some workloads, it will offer a specialized version of its Xeon Phi processor called Knights Mill. For others, it's going to offer combined Xeon processor with Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) chips. And, for still others, the company plans to offer a chip that combines a Xeon processor with a specialized deep learning chip called Lake Crest (based on technology that Intel acquired when it picked up start-up Nervana Systems).

Intel's strategy looks as solid as it can possibly be as it seems to be throwing its entire technical arsenal at the problem -- I'd say the company is well positioned to profit from the continued proliferation of artificial intelligence workloads.

What will only become evidence in time, though, will be how much market share Intel will ultimately be able to capture in this market. The underlying market growth should mean that Intel's revenue and profits here will grow, but obviously, the magnitude of that growth will depend on its ability to defend its market share while at the same time defending its average selling prices.

Ashraf Eassa owns shares of Intel. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends Intel. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Inside Intel Corporation's Artificial Intelligence Strategy - Motley Fool

No hype, just fact: Artificial intelligence in simple business terms – ZDNet

Image from Wikimedia Commons

Artificial intelligence, machine learning, cognitive computing, deep learning, and related terms have become interchangeable jargon referring to AI. Although it's hard to believe, the level of marketing hype around AI has even surpassed digital transformation.

To break through the hype and nonsense, I asked the Chief Data Scientist of Dun and Bradstreet to explain AI in straightforward business terms. It's a complicated assignment, so I went to Anthony Scriffignano, one of the smartest, most accomplished data scientists I know. Anthony is a brilliant communicator, making him an ideal candidate to explain AI.

In the short video embedded above, Anthony gives a succinct introduction to AI for business people. Watch the video and enjoy un-hyped truth about an important topic.

How to Implement AI and Machine Learning

The next wave of IT innovation will be powered by artificial intelligence and machine learning. We look at the ways companies can take advantage of it and how to get started.

The conversation is part of the CXOTALK series, where you can watch the full-length, unedited discussion with Anthony Scriffignano and read a complete transcript.

If there's nothing else that our industry is good for, it's creating terms that people can use that have ambiguous meaning, and can be taken to mean almost anything in any situation. And this is certainly one of them. So, it's one of those things that you understand, but then when you try to define it, scholars will disagree on the exact definition. But, artificial intelligence collectively is a bunch of technologies that we run into. So, you'll hear "AI." You'll hear "machine learning." You'll hear "deep learning," [or] sometimes "deep belief." "Neuromorphic computing" is something that you might run into, or "neural networks;" "natural language processing;" "inference algorithms;" "recommendation engines." All of these fall into that category.

And some of the things that you might touch upon are autonomous systems bots. Sometimes, we will hear talk of... Well, Siri is probably the most obvious example that anybody runs into (or any of the other I won't try to name them all because I'll forget one), but things of that nature where you have these assistants that try to sort of mimic the behavior of a person. When you're on a website, and it says, "Click here to talk to Shelly!" or "Click here to talk to Doug!" You're not talking to a person; you're talking to a bot. So, those are examples of this.

Generally speaking, that's the broad brush. And then if you think about it as a computer scientist, you would say that these are systems processes that are designed to do any one of several things. One of them is to mimic human behavior. Another one is to mimic human thought process. Another is to "behave intelligently" you know, put that in quotes. Another is to "behave rationally," and that's a subject of a huge debate. Another one is to "behave ethically," and that's an even bigger debate. Those are some of the categories that these systems and processes fall into.

And then there are ways to categorize the actual algorithms. So, there are deterministic approaches; there are non-deterministic approaches; there are rules-based approaches. So, there are different ways you can look at this: you can look at it from the bottom up; the way it just ended; or regarding what you see and touch and experience.

They're not synonymous. So, cognitive computing is very different than machine learning, and I will call both of them a type of AI. Just to try and describe those three. So, I would say artificial intelligence is all of that stuff I just described. It's a collection of things designed to either mimic behavior, mimic thinking, behave intelligently, behave rationally, behave empathetically. Those are the systems and processes that are in the collection of soup that we call artificial intelligence.

Cognitive computing is primarily an IBM term. It's a phenomenal approach to curating massive amounts of information that can be ingested into what's called the cognitive stack. And then to be able to create connections among all of the ingested material, so that the user can discover a particular problem, or a particular question can be explored that hasn't been anticipated.

Machine learning is almost the opposite of that. Where you have a goal function, you have something very specific that you try and define in the data. And, the machine learning will look at lots of disparate data, and try to create proximity to this goal function basically try to find what you told it to look for. Typically, you do that by either training the system, or by watching it behave, and turning knobs and buttons, so there's unsupervised, supervised learning. And that's very, very different than cognitive computing.

So, a model is a method of looking at a set of data in the past, or a set of data that's already been collected, and describing it in a mathematical way. And we have techniques based on regression, where we continue to refine that model until it behaves within a certain performance. It predicts the outcome that we intend it to predict, in retrospect. And then, assuming that we can extrapolate from the frame we're into the future, which is a big assumption, we can use that model to try to predict what happens going forward mathematically.

The most obvious example of this that we have right now is the elections, right? So we look at the polling data. We look at the phase of the moon. We look at the shoe sizes. Whatever we decide to look at, we say, "This is what's going to happen." And then, something happens that maybe the model didn't predict.

So, now we get into AI. The way some systems work, not all, is they say: "Show me something that looks like what you're looking for, and then I'll go find lots of other things that look just like it. So train me. Give me a webpage, and tell me on that web page which things you find to be interesting. I'll find a whole bunch of other web pages that looks like that. Give me a set of signals that you consider to be a danger, and then when I see those signals, I'll tell you that something dangerous is happening." That's what we call "training."

Sure. So imagine that I gave a whole bunch of people, and the gold standard here is that they have to be similarly incentivized and similarly instructed, so I can't get, you know, five computer scientists and four interns ... You try to get people that more or less have either they're completely randomly dispersed, or they're all trying to do the same thing. There are two different ways to do it, right? And you show them lots and lots of pictures, right? You show them pictures of mountains, mixed in with pictures of camels, and pictures of things that are maybe almost mountains, like ice cream cones; and you let them tell you which ones are mountains. And then, the machine is watching and learning from people's behavior when they pick out mountains, to pick out mountains like people do. That's called a heuristic approach.

AI, Automation, and Tech Jobs

There are some things that machines are simply better at doing than humans, but humans still have plenty going for them. Here's a look at how the two are going to work in concert to deliver a more powerful future for IT, and the human race.

When we look at people, and we model their behavior by watching it, and then doing the same thing they did. That's a type of learning. That heuristic modeling is one of the ways that machine learning can work, not the only way.

There's a lot of easy ways to trick this. So, people's faces are a great example. When you look at people's faces, and we probably all know that there are techniques for modeling with certain points on a face, you know, the corners of the eyes. I don't want to get into any IP here, but there are certain places where you build angles between these certain places, and then those angles don't typically change much. And then you see mugshots with people with their eyes wide open, or with crazy expressions in their mouth. And those are people trying to confound those algorithms by distorting their face. It's why you're not supposed to smile in your passport picture. But, machine learning has gotten much better than that now. We have things like the Eigenface, and other techniques for modeling the rotation and distortion of the face and determining that it's the same thing.

So, these things get better and better and better over time. And sometimes, as people try to confound the training, we learn from that behavior as well. So, this thing all feeds into itself, and these things get better, and better, and better. And eventually, they approach the goal, if you will, of yes, it only finds mountains. It never misses a mountain, and it never gets confused by an ice cream cone.

The original way that this was done was through gamification or just image tagging. So, they either had people play a game, or they had people trying to help, saying, "This is a mountain," "This is not a mountain," "This is Mount Fuji," "This is Mount Kilimanjaro." So, they got a bunch of words. They got a bunch of people that use words to describe pictures (like Amazon Mechanical Turk).

Using those techniques, they just basically curated a bunch of words and said, "Alright, the word 'mountain' is often associated with there's a high correlation statistically between the use of the word 'mountain' and this image. Therefore, when people are looking for a mountain, give them this image. When they're looking for Mount Fuji, give them this image and not this image." And that was a trick of using human brains and using words. That's not the only way it works today. There are many more sophisticated ways today.

Please see the list of upcoming CXOTALK episodes. Thank you to my colleague, Lisbeth Shaw, for assistance with this post.

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No hype, just fact: Artificial intelligence in simple business terms - ZDNet

Forget artificial intelligence. Elon Musk wants you to become a cyborg – Hot Air

posted at 2:21 pm on February 13, 2017 by Jazz Shaw

I suppose that whole idea about make America great again was only going to last just so long. Its been several weeks and were a nation with a critically short attention span so its probably time to start working on a new catchphrase. How about, make human beings great again?

That seems to be what tech genius Elon Musk has in mind with his latest brainstorm. Rather than working on super fast trains or putting people on Mars, the entrepreneur has realized that the one thing truly holding the human race back is human beings. Clearly we have our flaws and shortcomings in terms of everyday physical limitations, but the real roadblock to our success is our poorly functioning brains. Musk has the solution and it involves incorporating some new high-tech gadgets which will allow your gray matter to input and output data at a rate which will hopefully allow you to keep up with the Skynet robots who are sure to be arriving shortly. (CNBC)

Billionaire Elon Musk is known for his futuristic ideas and his latest suggestion might just save us from being irrelevant as artificial intelligence (AI) grows more prominent.

The Tesla and SpaceX CEO said on Monday that humans need to merge with machines to become a sort of cyborg.

Over time I think we will probably see a closer merger of biological intelligence and digital intelligence, Musk told an audience at the World Government Summit in Dubai, where he also launched Tesla in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Its mostly about the bandwidth, the speed of the connection between your brain and the digital version of yourself, particularly output.

Yes, I written extensively here about artificial intelligence in the past and its no secret that Im not a fan. Take what you will from the fact that I own my own copy of The Forbin Project on DVD. Smart robots worry me, mainly because I assume that if they are all that intelligent it wouldnt take them long to figure out that we would be fairly easy pickings.

But the subject matter which Elon Musk is dealing with isnt some sort of new artificial brain. Hes talking about the ones inside our heads. These sorts of adaptations, if anything, are even more troubling. This is not to say that Im some sort of technophobe who doesnt want to see mankind benefit from cutting-edge advancements in medical science. There are breakthroughs being made on a regular basis which allow victims of terrible injuries to recover much of their previous normal functionality. I think thats great. Robotic limbs and exoskeletons may someday be improving the lives of people across the globe and not just a few test subjects.

But our brains? That worries me. There is still, even in the 21st century, so much we dont understand about the human brain. What makes it tick? How do we actually store and retrieve data from inside of our minds? How does the brain miraculously repair itself sometimes after traumatic injuries? You can ask a dozen different doctors and come up with nearly as many answers to all of those questions. If we start turning ourselves into computers beginning with the rate at which we process and transfer information, how long before we reach the edge of sacrificing an important part of whatever it is that makes us humans?

Excerpt from:

Forget artificial intelligence. Elon Musk wants you to become a cyborg - Hot Air

Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Cyber Security – Huffington Post

How do you need to think about business strategy and the impact of machine learning and AI?

With the wider convergence of technology with objects, buildings and biological advances described in the 4th industrial revolution by the World Economic Forum, where is the boundary of the human and the machine? What is going on in technology that today include rapid developments from statistical predictive analysis of data of mean time between failures to machine algorithms and neural nets that can learn and enable complex automation from connected cars to website recommendations, social media profiling and surveillance? The recent progress in the field of deep learning has been extraordinary and some cases, alarming from near human or beyond human capabilities around image and voice translation in real-time to prowess in winning games from Jeopardy five years ago, to GO and Poker that where recently thought too ambiguous, open ended or too nuanced to automate.

Machine intelligence is everywhere in facial recognition at airports to emotional sensing algorithms; machine generated Art work; legal and medical advisory search to sometimes fowl mouthed social chat bots. The Google company AI team recently announced they developed Google Neural Machine Translation system, GNMT, using a new technique that is improving results to near human translation speed accuracy. These advances that Google describe as machine translation at production scale, are testament to the rapid real-time advancement of AI into human experience and intelligence as well as beyond human capabilities. Andrew Ng of Stanford and Chief Scientist at Baidu Research famously said that word translation of 95% is 1 in every 20 words would likely be wrong, going to 99% is game changing. Andrew was quoted in a recent HBR article saying, "If a typical person can do a mental task with less than one second of thought, we can probably automate it using AI either now or in the near future."

But you can't run the 100 meters in 1 second by 10 Usain Bolts

The Rubik's cube solving Sub1 robot built by Infineon that in 2016 could physically manipulate and solve a Rubik's cube in just half a second (0.637 seconds) compared to the official human world record of just under 5 seconds. It was proof that a 100 meter race could never be done in one second by ten Usain Bolts. The Sub1 robot was a reminder that in some cases no human could ever complete at that speed, much like automated trader algorithms trading in milliseconds on the financial stock markets. But the Sub1 robot was also built as a demonstration for driverless cars and the potential for superior machine reaction times to offer safer driving from the human frailties and inabilities to be fully responsive all the time.

But Google and Andrew NG and others still stress there is much that AI can not do today, the rapid development like these are creating a multitude of automation and intelligent systems into personal, social settings to corporations and society as a whole.

The things that Business leaders need to be aware of in the rise of machine intelligence and AI in business strategy include cyber security as a major headline to keep an eye on.

Innovation and machine learning and the threat of "modification of facts" to cyber security

We are beginning to connect lots of things, we are beginning to automate lots of things and there is a sub text in the 4th Industrial revolution. What we have seen is we have ideas years and years and sometimes a century before such as Alan Turing's insights into the Thinking Machine; but the step does not happen until the technologies are available to implement the those, and then suddenly society kind of jumps.

I think we are at the point where there are lots of these ideas, and technology has become very cheap and we can implement so many of them including 3D printing, the internet of things, sensors in particular which gives the vast amount of data that machine learning needs. So all of a sudden cheap sensors are enabling machine learning.

So all of these innovations and ideas are coming together, and people are excited about "I can control the heating from my mobile phone". My reaction is, "Wait a minute, where is that information being stored?". The they say "Well it is secure", but that is a grey scale, it is not black and white.

We hear and read about cyber hackers break into things with some much ease what is really secure? This is particularly an issue with Internet of Things security because we are connecting so many things, suddenly. We may think it is wonderful my home knows where I am but so do a lot of other people know. It is as much about prevention as it is tracking and the impact of machine learning and AI on this such as the recent example of a hackers using ransomware and locking hotel guests put of their hotel rooms remotely demanding a Bitcoin payment to release the system. How do we company executives need to respond to this?

The threat of Modification

Many years ago we developed fingerprint recognition in the late 1970's that by the early 1990's had evolved into an integrated automated fingerprint identification system which later became part of the field of biometrics combining many types of identification. At the time machine driven finger print recognition was wonderful, but nobody was interested even if you "do not need keys anymore" but they could not see it. Ten years later, 911 happened and all of a sudden everyone wanted finger print recognition. Over that period of time all of this biometric information gets stored somewhere as digital information. As soon as that happens it is not the security of it that is the main worry, it can get copied, moved or deleted. Modification is a bigger worry, if somebody gets to the data and changes a link how do you then prove who you are if the original reference data has been edited?

Excerpt ideas draft from the new Book "The 4th Industrial Revolution: An executive guide to applying Artificial Intelligence" Palgrave macmillan, 2017. Mark Skilton, Felix Hovespian

Hotel ransomed by hackers as guests locked out of rooms, The Local, 28 January 2017 http://www.thelocal.at/20170128/hotel-ransomed-by-hackers-as-guests-locked-in-rooms

Andrew Ng shares the astonishing ways deep learning is changing the world , import.io, https://www.import.io/post/andrew-ng-shares-the-astonishing-ways-deep-learning-is-changing-the-world/

What Artificial Intelligence Can and Can't Do Right Now, Andrew Ng, November 2016 , Harvard Business Review, https://hbr.org/2016/11/what-artificial-intelligence-can-and-cant-do-right-now

A Neural Network for Machine Translation, at Production Scale, 27 Sept 2016 https://research.googleblog.com/2016/09/a-neural-network-for-machine.html

Machine generated Art https://deepart.io/

This Blogger's Books and Other Items from...

Building the Digital Enterprise: A Guide to Constructing Monetization Models Using Digital Technologies (Business in the Digital Economy)

by Mark Skilton

Building Digital Ecosystem Architectures: A Guide to Enterprise Architecting Digital Technologies in the Digital Enterprise (Business in the Digital Economy)

by Mark Skilton

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Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Cyber Security - Huffington Post

Salesforce adds ‘Einstein’ artificial intelligence tools to its customer service platform – GeekWire

Einstein Case Predictions will be available in Salesforce Service Cloud as part of the new release.

Call centers aint what they used to be.

Thats because customers rely on an increasingly wide range of tools to connect with businesses, including social media, email, texting, and other messaging platforms. Today, enterprise technologygiant Salesforce is rolling out new artificial intelligence tools tokeep those communication channels running smoothly, and triagecustomer service requests as they come in.

Salesforce calls the technologyService Cloud Einstein, extending itsEinstein artificial intelligence initiative to its Service Cloud customer service platform. Its a collectionof tools that use machine learning to inform, guide and learn from the work of customer service agents and contact center managers.

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff launched the largerEinstein project last year, promising to bring artificial intelligence to all of the companys products and services. Its part of a broader pushby the technology industry to develop new systems that learn from large amounts of data to guide and support human activities and decisions.

Using the Service Cloud Einstein tools, managers can see big-picture insights like which contact centers are resulting in the most customer satisfaction andwhether certain products are generating more inquiries than others. They can also funnel tickets to specific agents and centers, depending on demand and performance, based on suggestions from the system.

The software also provides information on each customer. If, for example, a customer has a history of reporting low satisfaction, the agent may take a different approach or prepare for a more difficult exchange. Einstein suggests a priority level, based on the customers history and the content of their request.The software learns how accurate its prediction was, based on whether the agent accepts or rejects the priority.

Salesforce is also launching a subscription-based app called Intelligent Field Service, which guidescustomer service agents who make house calls, helping them manage their appointments, organize tasks, and communicate with other members of their team.

The new Service Cloud technologiesare rolling out starting today,with some coming later in the year.

[Editors Note: Salesforce is a GeekWire annual sponsor.]

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Salesforce adds 'Einstein' artificial intelligence tools to its customer service platform - GeekWire

College hosts free talk on artificial intelligence – CSS News

Rob Larson

A free talk later this month will examine the relationship between humans and artificial intelligence.

Rob Larson, Ph.D., assistant professor of Communication and Media Studies, will give remarks titled "The Robot Next Door" at 3:40 p.m. Friday, Feb. 24 in Tower Hall room 4119. A Q&A will follow. The event is free, and refreshments will be provided.

Larson will explore the recent media-related technological progress now regularly depicted in popular culture through film and television. The popularity of HBO's "Westworld," AMC/BBC's "Humans," the "Black Mirror" series on Netflix and films like "Ex Machina" and "Her" reveals society's preoccupation with artificial intelligence and robots. Larson's presentation will address questions about whether robots will replace humans in the workforce, whether people are being outsmarted by AI, and the meaning of the Singularity hypothesis and whether it will ever be more than science fiction.

His talk will draw from pop culture references, discuss household appliances like iRobot's automated Roomba vacuum cleaner and Amazon's Dash Button, and engage with theories from the fields of aesthetics and computing, such as the Turing Test (a test developed in the 1950s to gauge intelligence in a computer) and the Uncanny Valley (a vaguely disturbing level of realism in robots and computer-generated figures). The presentation is an ethical inquiry into the foundations of human dignity as humans spend more of their lives interacting daily with "non-humanity." The presentation will be followed by a Q&A session.

The workshop is part of a faculty colloquium series now in its tenth year. The series provides visibility to diverse research projects by faculty members in St. Scholastica's School of Arts and Letters.

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College hosts free talk on artificial intelligence - CSS News

Aerospace Can Make America Great Again – Highland Community News (subscription)

SpaceX just launched ten Iridium Communications satellites into low-Earth orbit. These satellites will beam phone and data service to tens of thousands of Americans who live or work in areas too remote for regular coverage.

Until recently, blasting bus-sized satellites into space using rockets that can be reused belonged in the realm of science fiction. Now, such activities seem routine.

Policymakers should take note. Americans are set to reap the benefits of aerospace firms' race to tame the Final Frontier -- and the industry's investments in manufacturing will create new jobs and wealth in the United States, not just shuffle around current jobs by moving around government dollars.

Since its inception, the aerospace industry has produced technologies that improve Americans' quality of life. NASA helped invent memory foam, scratch-resistant glasses, insulin pumps and hundreds of other products we use every day.

Now, private companies are driving aerospace innovation. Thanks to satellite Internet firms, airplane passengers can enjoy Wi-Fi while cruising at 30,000 feet. That has made flying more enjoyable -- and far more productive. The technology also makes it possible for Americans in remote areas to access high-speed Internet.

Satellite internet has yet to reach its full potential. The satellite "internet of things" market is expected to grow nearly 20 percent each year through 2022. Improved connectivity -- made possible by new satellites -- will improve the efficiency of a wide range of appliances, not just computers and smartphones.

Launching new satellites to support this increased connectivity would have been far too expensive a few years ago. But today, thanks to California-based SpaceX and Washington-based Blue Origin's advances in rocket manufacturing, the cost of launches has plummeted. The Air Force is showing interest in ultra-low cost access to space, where reusable launch technologies stimulate tactical innovation in space operations.

Next-generation rockets have even made space-based businesses look viable.

Made in Space, a California startup, recently sent a 3D printer to the International Space Station, laying the groundwork for manufacturing in zero gravity. The firm plans to produce optical fiber in space, which would eliminate the microscopic imperfections caused by gravity. This high quality fiber could revolutionize everything from medical devices to telecommunications.

Aerospace firms aren't just spurring technological progress; they're supporting millions of jobs. America's aerospace sector employs over 1.2 million people and indirectly supports an additional 3.2 million jobs.

These jobs are helping to replace losses we've seen in the broader manufacturing sector. While the number of overall American manufacturing jobs dropped 22 percent from 2002 to 2012, jobs in the aerospace industry grew 7 percent. Aerospace exports also generated a trade surplus of over $80 billion in 2015 -- the highest in the manufacturing sector.

Aerospace companies are even leading the charge to revitalize the manufacturing workforce.

Firms are designing their own educational programs, often at community colleges, to train workers. Northrop Grumman, for instance, has partnered with Antelope Valley College in Lancaster, California to create a sixteen-week vocational program in aircraft manufacturing. The firm recruits many of the students upon graduation. Such public-private partnerships could serve as a model for manufacturers in other sectors.

Private aerospace companies are strengthening the labor force and pouring billions of dollars into new technologies that will improve Americans lives. That's a reason to cheer every liftoff.

Rebecca Grant, Ph.D., is president of IRIS Independent Research, a public-policy research organization, and director of the Washington Security Forum. She is the former director of the General Billy Mitchell Institute for Airpower Studies at the Air Force Association.

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Aerospace Can Make America Great Again - Highland Community News (subscription)

Using X-Ray Inspection to Examine Turbine Blades in the Aerospace Industry – AZoM

Table of Content

Introduction Wall Thickness Erosion and Wear 3D Inspection

During inspection of complex turbine components, most demands can be satisfied using computed tomography (CT) X-ray technology. It is important to examine several aspects of the blade to ensure quality and performance. Turbine manufacturers are usually concerned with the erosion, wear, and wall thickness of the blade.

A wall thickness analysis can be carried out in Volume Graphics, color coordinating wall thickness to scale. A predefined inspection can be set up with inspect/reject requirements, which will indicate if the wall thickness is too thin.

Another important aspect is airflow. When in use, air is pumped through so the blade is maintained in a cool state. Vent holes are drilled following the cast process. It is important to examine the drilling to ensure that no hotspot is created by striking the back wall during the drilling process.

Generally, composite manufacturers try to identify delamination, wrinkles, porosities, lack of material, and fiber orientation problems.

The composite material is made of layers, where fibers are distributed in three dimensions, which makes 3D X-ray scanning important. The material properties are anisotropic as they vary based on the material orientation.

Manufacturers are concerned about the delamination of the layers, as this leads to a reduction in reinforcement with the structure becoming compromised. Porosity detection is also important because porosity can turn into a stress point to form a crack or delamination. Fiber orientation is critical to the strength of the structure being assembled.

The 3D rendering capabilities of North Star Imagings proprietary efX-CT software enables multiple virtual cross sections through the part in multiple axes, and the resolution often enables observing individual composite fibers that are only a few micrometers in size. Wrinkles and delamination are identifiable. Porosities are measurable and quantifiable.

CT allows focus to be placed on observing the true indication and its location. Using 3D images, the relationship of the actual indications can be observed, their size can be quantified, and the relationship to machine surfaces and edges can be seen.

Another dynamic feature of CT is the capability to create a surface rendering of the component. Creating a polygonal mesh to extract the surface information and the ability to define or surface items such as gas porosity within a weld increases measurement ability and accuracy.

Surface extraction can be very simple for products like tube welds or castings where the material is somewhat homogenous. In the case of North Star Imaging's tubing weld, the porosity indications have a surface created around them, which allows the post- processing software to measure these features or create a porosity report as per threshold size settings for maximum and minimum indications.

At this stage, the interpreter has the full capability of reviewing the data in 3D. They can measure the indication, review spacing and orientation, and make decisions on part quality with data that was previously unavailable.

Download the Brochure for More Information

This information has been sourced, reviewed and adapted from materials provided by North Star Imaging, Inc.

For more information on this source, please visit North Star Imaging, Inc.

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Using X-Ray Inspection to Examine Turbine Blades in the Aerospace Industry - AZoM

Bengaluru ideally placed to emerge as a hub for aerospace and defence – YourStory.com

At a session on Aerospace and Defence at the Make in India Karnataka conference on Monday, various speakers from large MNCs and defence PSUs echoed the view that brand Bengaluru was firmly entrenched as the aerospace and defence capitalof the country and was gearing up to play a larger role in the world.

Speakers were of the view that, with the large number of defence SMEs and MSMEs in the city and the abundance of human capital, it was easy for companies to set up shop in Bengaluru and find the right talent.

The speakers views mirrored the Karnataka governments intention of betting big on defence and aerospace, especially with Aero India 2017 starting on February 14 at the Yelahanka Air Force Station, where the chatter is veering towards offsets and Make in India.

Hindustan Aeronautics Limited chairman Suvarna Raju said that Karnataka has the potential for greater industrial participation owing to a large number of engineering colleges that churn out thousands of graduates. Though a majority of these graduates are not readily employable, they can be moulded into a good workforce to fit the needs of foreign companies as well as Indian companies that produce for them.

Karnataka is the first state to come out with an aerospace policy as well as have two exclusive aerospace parks. All this will help Karnataka become an aerospace hub by 2023 and an MRO hub a few years down the line, Raju said.

He announced that HAL had already trained four lakh hands under a National Skill Development Corporation programme for aerospace precision engineering, and that these trained people could be employed in the industry to make precision components and other products.

Raju said that HAL also had 5,200 MSMEs or ancillary units attached to it, and that the defence PSU would soon turn into an integrator and outsource most of its production. The defence offsets is a good policy and huge investments are expected in this sector, he added.

Baba Kalyani, chairman of Bharat Forge, said that the Make in India programme initiated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi two and a half years ago is bearing fruit now. It means that we will be manufacturing four to five times the quantity we are making now, he said, giving the audience a sense of how big this sector is going to be.

On a cautionary note, Kalyani said the industry needs to see orders flowing in. Of course, that means one has to plan in all respects right now, he added.

Lauding the UK for its excellent university-industry programme, he called for replicating such programmes in the country.

UKs Minister for Defence Procurement Harriett Baldwin, who is in the city to attend the Make in India-Karnataka conference, said that India and the UK make for ideal partners in defence and aerospace. The UK, despite leaving the EU, wants to reach out to other places. That is one of the reasons why UK Prime Minister Therasa May chose to make India her first stop after Europe. Fewer barriers and more trade between our two countries will make us prosper and secure, she said.

She emphasised that Bengaluru had a special relationship with the UK as several Britishcompanies had been partnering with HAL for decades.

The panel, moderated by Sandeep Maini who headed the aerospace policy, was chaired by the states industries commissioner and had panellists representing large MNCs that are based in Bengaluru or have their R&D facilities here.

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Bengaluru ideally placed to emerge as a hub for aerospace and defence - YourStory.com

Best of Both Worlds: Aerospace Engineering and Business Merge in New Courses – University of Virginia

One student uses the collaborative courses to better understand the financial viability of the supersonic aircraft he dreams of engineering. Another plans to apply her new knowledge of engineering and manufacturing to conducting stock research when she joins a New York City equity firm after graduation.

The students are enrolled in two courses pairing students in the University of Virginias mechanical and aerospace engineering masters program with faculty and students in the McIntire School of Commerce. One course, Manufacturing in the Global Economy, taught by visiting lecturer and Rolls-Royce executive Dean Roberts, helps students understand how supply chains and government regulations affect the aerospace or automotive industries. The second, Managing Sustainable Development, taught by Associate Professor of Commerce Brad Brown, explores how engineering and technology advances could impact developing nations or address global issues like climate change.

These courses will help students in the Commerce School better understand mechanical and aerospace engineering, and help engineering students better understand how to deal with manufacturing lines, supply chains and other business concepts, Associate Chair of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Chris Li said.

This new partnership is a great example of cross-school collaboration between the schools of Commerce and Engineering to provide University of Virginia students a unique academic experience with renowned professors, said Eric Loth, who chairs the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. This combination provides our students with world-class knowledge and expertise that will produce the next generation of national leaders and keep UVA attheforefront ofacademicexcellence.

The courses, launched in January, include a mixture of graduate engineering students and undergraduate and graduate business students. According to Roberts, the variety of students backgrounds makes for a lively classroom.

It is really exciting, because in one classroom you have people that are going to go into investment banking, consulting or finance, mixing with those who will be designing aircraft or developing new materials, Roberts said. It is a really eclectic bunch of individuals and makes for a profound learning experience.

Roberts leads efforts to research, analyze and sell new initiatives at Rolls-Royce, which has a longstanding partnership with UVAs School of Engineering and Applied Science. He recently published a book based on the course content, Entering the Civil Aircraft Industry: Business Realities at the Technological Frontier.

His course uses industries like aerospace manufacturing to study how management practices can encourage innovation and how government intervention can affect growth. For example, in one week students examined how the Northern Atlantic Free Trade Agreement impacted the aerospace industry in Mexico before talking about the concept of comparative advantage as a basis for free trade.

The course is very current, taking on live issues that are very topical right now, he said. At the same time, it gives students a very broad grounding in manufacturing in a global sense.

Browns course, which focuses on sustainable development, also has a global mindset. He encourages students to examine how technology and business can help people around the world lift themselves out of poverty or help alleviate global concerns like climate change.

The engineering students bring lots of ideas, and the course helps them think about how their ideas could be applied in countries that do not have robust infrastructure or resources, Brown said.

Fourth-year commerce student Sarah McCann, a student in Roberts course, said that talking with her engineering classmates has helped her better understand the technical realities of manufacturing a product.

As business students we are used to talking about high-level strategy, which is certainly important, McCann said. Hearing from engineers helps to understand the technical aspects of making these products and grounds us in what is really happening in the industry.

McCann believes the insights she has gained from her classmates and from a professor with more than 30 years of experience in the industry will be very helpful when she starts her job researching stocks at an equity firm in New York City this summer.

She is not alone in viewing the course as an excellent asset to future employers. Alejandro Nava Moncada, an engineering graduate student enrolled in Browns course, said the course has helped him learn more about nonprofits and other organizations working to alleviate poverty in developing nations while teaching him the managerial skills he hopes to apply in his career.

The class really pushes me to go beyond the engineering perspective and understand the dynamics of the business world, said Moncada, who also earned his undergraduate engineering degree from UVA in 2016. My goal is to become a project manager overseeing bigger and bigger projects over time, which is why I am glad to get more business classes.

Fellow engineering student Mohan Jayathirtha, enrolled in the global manufacturing course, wants to be ready for challenges facing engineers in the automotive industry.

I am very passionate about the automotive industry and I see it taking a turn in the coming years, as electric or even self-driving cars become more common, said Jayathirtha, who worked as a product engineer for an automotive company in India before coming to UVA.

If I focus only on the technical aspects of my job, I dont feel as completely connected to the automotive industry as I could be if I understood the business side, he said. This class gives me that connection with how the industry works and the far-reaching impact it has on the global economy.

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Best of Both Worlds: Aerospace Engineering and Business Merge in New Courses - University of Virginia

State’s aerospace companies to head to Australian air show – Hartford Business

Howard French | Journal Inquirer

Connecticut aerospace companies, ranging from Vernon's 50-employee Soldream Inc. to East Hartford-based jet engine giant Pratt & Whitney, will be promoting their products at Australia's Avalon Air Show the week of Feb. 27.

The U.S. Department of Commerce Export Assistance Center in Middletown has organized a delegation of companies from Connecticut and other northeastern states to travel to Australia for the Avalon Air Show, Anne S. Evans, commerce department district director said.

One of Pratt's major products, its F135 military engine, will be front and center as the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter makes its first appearance in the Australian air show. The plane, built by Lockheed Martin, uses the Pratt engine exclusively.

Two of the state-of-the-art combat aircraft will be flown there from their U.S. base, where Australian pilots are being trained, the air show website says. The planes will be part of the air show's "extensive ground display of military aircraft," the website adds.

The Royal Australian Air Force has ordered 72 of the planes.

Soldream, founded in 1992, is a subcontractor for Pratt and several other aerospace companies as well as the Defense Department. The company in 2010 moved from Tolland to its 25,000-square-foot plant at 129 Reservoir Road, Vernon.

The regional northeastern U.S. delegation also includes Interpro Technologies of Deep River, Specialty Cable Corp. in Wallingford, and Connecticut Coining Inc., of Bethel, Evans said. They will be joined by similar companies from New York to Vermont, she said.

Evans said the last such trade mission to Australia in 2013 paid dividends for the local companies that took part.

"That mission had an aerospace/defense component, but also included a number of other companies in the software, medical device, and tourism sectors," Evans said. A number of those companies have been doing business in Australia over the more than three years since the trade show, she said.

Evans said her office is working closely with Australia's State of Victoria to arrange for companies from Victoria and other parts of Australia to share exhibit space with the Northeast USA exhibit. There also will be a number of "pre-arranged one-on-one meetings" for the northeast contingent with potential Australian customers and partners.

U.S. Rep. Joseph D. Courtney, D-2nd District, has worked with the Commerce Department to forge a business relationship with Australia, Evans said.

In September, Courtney hosted a breakfast meeting in Washington, D.C., for the Victoria member of parliament who is head of their business and trade department, she said.

Victoria, in turn, is hosting a luncheon for the U.S. companies on Feb. 27 that will include a session on doing business with the Australian defense forces, Evans said.

Courtney has led several trade trips abroad since 2009, taking Connecticut companies to Belgium, Great Britain, and Israel.

The Connecticut District Export Council is organizing the Australian trip, with each company paying its own costs, Evans said.

"There is no government funding for this trip," she added.

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State's aerospace companies to head to Australian air show - Hartford Business

Genetic Engineering – The Canadian Encyclopedia

Interspecies gene transfer occurs naturally; interspecies hybrids produced by sexual means can lead to new species with genetic components of both pre-existing species. Interspecies hybridization played an important role in the development of domesticated plants.

Interspecies gene transfer occurs naturally; interspecies hybrids produced by sexual means can lead to new species with genetic components of both pre-existing species. Interspecies hybridization played an important role in the development of domesticated plants. Interspecies hybrids can also be produced artificiallly between sexually incompatible species. Cells of both plants and animals can be caused to fuse, producing viable hybrid cell-lines. Cultured hybrid plant cells can regenerate whole plants, so cell fusion allows crosses of sexually incompatible species. Most animal cells cannot regenerate whole individuals; however, the fusion of antibody-forming cells (which are difficult to culture) and "transformed" (cancer-like) cells, gives rise to immortal cell-lines, each producing one particular antibody, so-called monoclonal antibodies. These cell-lines can be used for the commercial production of diagnostic and antidisease antibody preparations. (Fusions involving human cells play a major role in investigations of human heredity and GENETIC DISEASE.)

In nature, the transfer of genes between sexually incompatible species also occurs; for example, genes can be carried between species during viral infection. In its most limited sense, genetic engineering exploits the possibility of such transfers between remotely related species. There are two principle methods. First, genes from one organism can be implanted within another, so that the implanted genes function in the host organism. Alternatively, the new host organism (often a micro-organism) produces quantities of the DNA segment that contains a foreign gene, which can then be analysed and modified in the test tube, before return to the species from which the gene originated. Dr Michael SMITH of the University of British Columbia was the corecipient of the 1993 NOBEL PRIZE in Chemistry for his invention of one of the most direct means to modify gene structure in the test tube, a technique known as in vitro mutagenesis.

The continuing development of modern genetic engineering depends upon a number of major technical advances: cloning, gene cloning and DNA sequencing.

Cloning is the production of a group of genetically identical cells or individuals from a single starting cell; all members of a clone are effectively genetically identical. Most single-celled organisms, many plants and a few multicellular animals form clones as a means of reproduction - "asexual" reproduction. In humans, identical twins are clones, developing after the separation of the earliest cells formed from a single fertilized egg.

Cloning is not strictly genetic engineering, since the genome normally remains unaltered, but it is a practical means to propagate engineered organisms.

In combination with test-tube fertilization and embryo transplants, Alta Genetics of Calgary is a world leader in the use of artificial twinning as a tool in the genetic engineering of cattle. Manipulating plant hormones in plant cell cultures can yield clones consisting of millions of plantlets, which may be packageable to form artificial seed.

Cloning of genetically engineered animals is generally difficult. Clones of frogs have been produced by transplanting identical nuclei from a single embryo, each to a different nucleus-free egg. This technique is not applicable to mammals. However, clones of cells derived from very young mammalian embryos (embryonic stem cells) can be used to reconstitute whole animals and are widely used for genetic engineering of mice. There is no reported instance of cloning of humans by any artificial means. Nonetheless, frequent calls for regulation of human cloning and genetic engineering occur, which stem from the same considerations that lead most commentators to reject eugenics.

Gene cloning is fundamental to genetic engineering. A segment of DNA from any donor organism is joined in the test tube to a second DNA molecule, known as a vector, to form a "recombinant " DNA molecule.

The design of appropriate vectors is an important practical area. Entry of DNA into each kind of cell is best mediated by different vectors. For BACTERIA, vectors are based on DNA molecules that move between cells in nature - bacterial VIRUSES and plasmids. Mammalian vectors usually derive from mammalian viruses. In higher plants, the favoured system is the infectious agent of crown-gall tumours.

Gene cloning in microbes has reached commercial application, notably with the marketing of human INSULIN produced by bacteria. Many similar products are now available, including growth hormones, blood-clotting factors and antiviral interferons. Gene cloning has revolutionized the understanding of genes, cells and diseases particularly of CANCER. It has raised the diagnosis of hereditary disease to high science, has contributed precise diagnostic tools for infectious disease and is fundamental to the use of DNA testing in forensic science.

The ability to clone genes led directly to the discovery of the means to analyse the precise chemical structure of DNA; that is, DNA sequencing. A worldwide co-operative project, the Human Genome Project, is now underway, with the object of cloning and sequencing the totality of human DNA, which contains perhaps 100000 or more genes. To date, at least 80% of the DNA has been cloned and localized roughly within the human chromosome set. It is predicted that the sequencing will be effectively completed in less than 20 years. However, it is clear that the biological meaning of the DNA structure will take decades, if not centuries, to decipher.

To avoid potential hazards deriving from genetic engineering, gene cloning even in bacteria is publicly regulated in Canada and the US by the scientific granting agencies and in some other countries by law. Biological containment, the deliberate hereditary debilitation of host cells and vectors, is required. In using mammals and higher plants, especially strict regulations apply, requiring physical isolation.

A great deal of work remains, both in the development of techniques and in the acquisition of fundamental knowledge needed to apply the techniques appropriately. Nonetheless, genetic engineering promises a world of tailor-made CROP plants and farm animals; cures for hereditary disease by gene replacement therapy; an analytical understanding of cancer and its treatment; and a world in which much of our present-day harsh chemical technology is replaced by milder, organism-dependent, fermentation processing.

In Canada, genetic engineering research is taking place in the laboratories of universities, industries, and federal and provincial research organizations. In the industrial sector, medical applications are being developed, for example at Ayerst Laboratories, Montral, AVENTIS PASTEUR LTD., Toronto, and theINSTITUT ARMAND-FRAPPIER, Laval-des-Rapides, Qubec.

Inco is researching applications for MINING and METALLURGY, and LABATT'S BREWERIESis applying recombinant DNA techniques to brewing technologies. A large number of Canadian companies engage in the research and development of genetically engineered products, particularly in the area of PHARMACEUTICALS and medical diagnostics. As many as half of the federally operated NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL Research Institutes have significant involvement with genetic engineering, including the Biotechnology Research Institute (Montral) and the Plant Biotechnology Institute (Saskatoon), whose mandates are largely in this area. The Veterinary Infectious Disease Organization, based at University of Saskatchewan, is using genetic engineering technology for production of new vaccines for livestock diseases.

See also ANIMAL BREEDING; PLANT BREEDING; HUMAN GENOME PROJECT; BIOTECHNOLOGY; TRANSPLANTATION.

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Genetic Engineering - The Canadian Encyclopedia

How evolution alters biological invasions – Phys.org – Phys.Org

February 13, 2017 by Todd B. Bates A paramecium, one of the protozoans used in the Rutgers evolution and invasions experiment. Credit: Peter J. Morin

Biological invasions pose major threats to biodiversity, but little is known about how evolution might alter their impacts over time.

Now, Rutgers University scientists have performed the first study of how evolution unfolds after invasions change native systems.

The experimental invasionselaborate experiments designed by doctoral student Cara A. Faillace and her adviser, Professor Peter J. Morintook place in glass jars suitable for savory jam or jelly, with thousands of microscopic organisms on each side. After entering the jarsuncharted territory - the invaders won some battles and lost some against the "natives."

"Oftentimes, we know the initial impacts of invasive species but we don't know the long-term impactsif things will get better or worse," said Morin, a distinguished professor in the Department of Ecology, Evolution & Natural Resources in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences. "Cara found that both things can happen, and it will depend a lot on the details of the biology of the species that's introduced and the biology of the community that's invaded."

The Rutgers scientists coauthored a study"Evolution Alters the Consequences of Invasions in Experimental Communities"that was published recently in Nature Ecology & Evolution.

Typically, biological invasions unfold when humans introduce exotic species - either accidentally or on purpose - into areas where they are not native, Faillace said. Invasive species, a subset of exotic species, usually are ecologically or economically harmful.

"Invasions can cause extinctions and that's been documented globally," she said. "They can also reduce diversity through competition, predation and when they introduce a pathogen."

In their study, the Rutgers researchers compared the performance of populations of resident and invading species before and after they interacted, and potentially evolved, for about 200 to 400 generations. They used two different groups of resident species consisting of aquatic bacteria, ciliates - protozoans with hair-like projections called ciliaand rotifers, organisms with cilia-laced mouths and retractable feet. The ciliates and rotifers were collected from Bamboo Pond in Rutgers Gardens in New Brunswick.

For the nearly two-year experiments, one species from each group was designated as an invader of the other community. One group had five ciliates and a rotifer. The other group had three different ciliates and a different rotifer.

The organisms' worlds were loosely lidded 8.5-ounce jarsabout the size of a jelly jar. The jars contained food, vitamins, sterile water and two sterile wheat seeds for extra nutrients.

There were likely hundreds of thousands of protozoans in a microcosm, or jar, and populations turned over fairly quickly, with many chances for mutations, Morin said.

"Every time an individual divides, it's still alive and it takes six to 24 hours for most of these organisms to reproduce," he said.

The study's results showed that the microbes' interactions altered the performance of the resident and invading species, and the researchers think evolution led to differences in performance.

A couple of species were abundant in the beginning but went extinct (they could not be found in the jar) after being invaded, Faillace added.

In nature, most biological invasions are accidental, Morin said.

"It took several tries to get the European starling in North America established, and that was intentional," he said. "Now they're the bane of every native bird."

"Gypsy moths were brought to North America by someone who wanted to see if they could establish a silk industry using gypsy moths," Morin said. "The cage they were kept in was damaged, they were released and the rest is history."

Yet many organisms, such as the emerald ash borer, which kills ash trees, get introduced accidentally through commerce, Faillace said. They include the Asian longhorned beetle, which also attacks and kills trees and likely arrived in shipping containers or pallets.

Biological invasions are especially damaging when a predator or pathogen is introduced and when native species have never encountered a predator, the scientists said.

Climate change is a major factor in biological invasions and its impact is likely increasing, Faillace said.

"Presumably as climate shifts, the species that can invade will change or the ranges of species that have invaded will change," she said.

"The bottom line is that we should expect to see changes in the impacts of invasive species as invaders and native species evolve over time," Morin said.

Explore further: Predator or not? Invasive snails hide even when they don't know

More information: Cara A. Faillace et al, Evolution alters the consequences of invasions in experimental communities, Nature Ecology & Evolution (2016). DOI: 10.1038/s41559-016-0013

Recognizing the signs of a predator can mean the difference between living to see another day and becoming another critter's midday snack.

Biological invasions get less prime-time coverage than natural disasters, but may be more economically damaging and warrant corresponding investments in preparedness and response planning, according to three biologists writing ...

The second longest river in the UK, the River Thames, contains 96 non-native species, making it one of the most highly invaded freshwater systems in the world.

When non-native herbivores invade new geographic regions, the consequences can be devastating to the native plants. Epidemic levels of herbivory damage may ensue because the delicate biological interactions that keep everything ...

Invasions from alien species such as Japanese Knotweed and grey squirrels threaten the economies and livelihoods of residents of some of the world's poorest nations, new University of Exeter research shows.

For the first time it is now possible to get a comprehensive overview of which alien species are present in Europe, their impacts and consequences for the environment and society. More than 11,000 alien species have been ...

Biological invasions pose major threats to biodiversity, but little is known about how evolution might alter their impacts over time.

From eyes the size of basketballs to appendages that blink and glow, deep-sea dwellers have developed some strange features to help them survive their cold, dark habitat.

Growing up in tough conditions can make wild animals live longer, new research suggests.

Cells need to repair damaged DNA in our genes to prevent the development of cancer and other diseases. Our cells therefore activate and send "repair-proteins" to the damaged parts within the DNA. To do this, an elaborate ...

Previous studies of flocks, swarms, and schools suggest that animal societies may verge on a "critical" pointin other words, they are extremely sensitive and can be easily tipped into a new social regime. But exactly how ...

A team at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute has discovered how a promising malarial vaccine target - the protein RH5 - helps parasites to invade human red blood
cells. Published today in Nature Communications, the study ...

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How evolution alters biological invasions - Phys.org - Phys.Org

Roses are red, violets are bluewhat gives flowers those eye-catching hues? – Phys.Org

February 13, 2017 by Cheryl Dybas Knock-your-eyes-out red: A flowering plant native to Mexico called early jessamine or red cestrum. Credit: Stacey Smith

To solve the mystery of why roses are red and violets are blue, scientists are peering into the genes of plant petals.

"When you ask anyone how one flower is different from another, for most of us, color is the feature that first comes to mind," says evolutionary biologist Stacey Smith of the University of Colorado Boulder.

Most people don't think about why a flower is a particular color, but it's an important question for biologists, says Prosanta Chakrabarty, a program director in the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Environmental Biology, which funds Smith's research.

Smith and her team are "looking at the genetics of flower colors, and at changes in those colors over time," Chakrabarty says.

It all comes down to biochemistry

In nature, flowers come in hues that span the rainbow.

"On a microscopic level, the colors come from the biochemical composition of petal cells," Smith says.

Pigments are the main chemicals responsible. Plants contain thousands of pigment compounds, all of which belong to three major groups: flavonoids, carotenoids and betalains. Most flower colors come from flavonoids and carotenoids.

"In addition to giving flowers their colors, carotenoids and anthocyaninswhich are flavonoidshave antioxidant and other medicinal properties, including anti-cancer, antibacterial, antifungal and anti-inflammatory activity," says Simon Malcomber, a program director in NSF's Division of Environmental Biology.

Malcomber says the research could show how plants evolved to synthesize the carotenoids and anthocyanins that produce red flowers. "The results could be used in future drug discovery research," he says.

Much of Smith's work is focused on understanding how changes in flavonoid and carotenoid biochemistry relate to differences in flower colors. She and colleagues conduct research on the tomato family, a group of about 2,800 species that includes tomatoes, eggplants, chili peppers, tobacco and potatoes.

"These domesticated species don't have a terribly wide range of flower colors and patterns, but their wild relatives often do," Smith says. "So we study wild, or undomesticated, species, which are most diverse in South America."

Hot pursuit of red-hot color

Smith has had her share of adventures in the fieldlike the time she tried to find a plant with red flowers that lives at the base of a volcanic crater in Ecuador.

"It was my very first field trip, and I wasn't super-savvy," Smith says. "I took a bus to the outside of the crater, dragged my suitcase up to the rim then down into the crater, assuming there would be a village and a way to get out. There was neither. Thankfully, there was a park station nearby where I was able to stay overnight. I found the species in full flower in the forest the next day."

Smith is currently in hot pursuit of an answer to the question: When did red flowers first appear in the tomato family? "We thought that red flowers might have evolved many times independently of each other because red-flowered species are scattered among many branches of this family tree," she says.

Just 34 species in the entire tomato family, however, have red flowers.

"With such a small number, we can take samples of every one of these species to find out whether it represents an independent origin, and to determine the biochemistry of how it makes red flowers," Smith says.

She and other biologists traveled from Brazil to Colombia to Mexico to track down red flowers and measure their pigments. "We found surprising patterns," Smith says, "including that nearly every red-flowered species represents a new origin of the color, so red flowers have evolved at least 30 different times."

While the researchers expected that flowers would be red due to the presence of red pigments, they found that plants often combine yellow-orange carotenoids with purple anthocyanins to produce red flowers.

"Our studies are now aimed at tracing the entire genetic pathway by which plants make flower colors and identifying genetic changes to see if there are common mechanisms," Smith says.

The scientists want to know, for example, what changes have taken place since flowers first became red.

Answers in a petunia

"We're focusing on a single branch of the tomato family [petunias], creating an evolutionary history and conducting measurements of gene expression, pigment production and flower color," says Smith.

Petunias and their colorful relatives are good choices for this research, according to Smith.

"Most of us have seen the tremendous variation in petunia colors at our local nurseries, and indeed, petunias have served as models for studying flower color and biochemistry for decades."

Few people, though, are aware of the variation in petunias' wild relatives, most of which are found in Argentina and Brazil. "We're harnessing this natural diversity, as well as genetic information already available from ornamental petunias, to reconstruct the evolutionary history of flower colors," says Smith.

"If earlier studies taught us anything," she adds, "we shouldn't expect flowers to play by the rules."

Will roses always be red, and violets blue?

Explore further: Turning pretty penstemon flowers from blue to red

While roses are red, and violets are blue, how exactly do flower colors change?

Flower colors that contrast with their background are more important to foraging bees than patterns of colored veins on pale flowers according to new research, by Heather Whitney from the University of Cambridge in the UK, ...

(Phys.org) -- A team of researchers in Australia has shown that the evolution of flowers in that country was driven by the preferences of bees, rather than the other way around. In their paper published in the Proceedings ...

Researchers have uncovered the secret recipe to making some petunias such a rare shade of blue. The findings may help to explain and manipulate the color of other ornamental flowers, not to mention the taste of fruits and ...

Male hummingbirds drive female birds away from their preferred yellow-flowered plant, which may have implications for flower diversification, according a study published Jan. 27, 2016 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by ...

Roses are red, violets are blue. Everybody knows that, but what makes them so? Although plant breeders were aware of some of the genes involved, there was as yet no quantitative study of how pigment turns a flower red, blue ...

Biological invasions pose major threats to biodiversity, but little is known about how evolution might alter their impacts over time.

From eyes the size of basketballs to appendages that blink and glow, deep-sea dwellers have developed some strange features to help them survive their cold, dark habitat.

Growing up in tough conditions can make wild animals live longer, new research suggests.

Cells need to repair damaged DNA in our genes to prevent the development of cancer and other diseases. Our cells therefore activate and send "repair-proteins" to the damaged parts within the DNA. To do this, an elaborate ...

Previous studies of flocks, swarms, and schools suggest that animal societies may verge on a "critical" pointin other words, they are extremely sensitive and can be easily tipped into a new social regime. But exactly how ...

A team at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute has discovered how a promising malarial vaccine target - the protein RH5 - helps parasites to invade human red blood cells. Published today in Nature Communications, the study ...

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Zuma’s interventions will deal with white monopoly capital – Office of ANC Chief Whip – Politicsweb

POLITICS Zuma's interventions will deal with white monopoly capital - Office of ANC Chief Whip

Moloto Mothapo |

12 February 2017

Reprehensible and deeply embarrassing conduct of opposition MPs at SONA deeply disturbing

MATTERS RELATING TO THE STATE OF THE NATION ADDDRESS

The ANC in Parliament welcomes Presidents Zumas plan for radical economic transformation as presented in his State of the Nation Address last night. The speech demonstrated commitment to fundamentally change the structure, systems, institutions and patterns of ownership, management and control of the economy in favour of all South Africans, especially the poor, the majority of whom are African and female.

As the ANC in this Parliament, we are poised to hold the executive accountable on the commitments it has made to the nation in relation to radical socio-economic transformation.

We are committing ourselves to thoroughly consult the people on every Act that facilitates radical socio-economic transformation, including those that have been referred back to parliament, such as the Expropriation Bill and the Restitution of Land Rights Amendment Act. We acknowledge that in some cases the NCOP has defaulted on ensuring meaningful public participation. We will ensure that that all our people are sufficiently involved in the law-making processes as they impact on their lives.

We welcome the new regulations that make it compulsory for big contractors to subcontract 30% of business to black owned enterprises which were gazetted last month. We further welcome the anticipation of new legislation which will among others address the need to have a more inclusive economy and de-concentrate the high levels of ownership and control we see in many sectors. These interventions will go a long way in dealing with white monopoly capital and ensuring that all South Africans are able to participate in the economy of our country.

On land, we note the need for parliament to speed up the process of the Expropriation Bill in order to pursue land reform and land redistribution. We further welcome the announcement of a draft Property Practitioners Bill which will be published by the Department of Human Settlements for public comment with the purpose of establishing a more inclusive, representative sector, towards radical economic transformation.

We are pleased with the announcement that this government will in the remaining years of this administration focus on relooking the NSFAS threshold of R122 000 to allow the poor and working class greater access to higher education.

The African National Congress in Parliament is deeply disturbed by the reprehensible and deeply embarrassing conduct of Members of Parliament which displayed itself last night in full view of the national and the international community during the occasion of the 2017 State of the Nation Address.

The annual State of the Nation Address presents an opportunity for government to account to the public on its performance and to present its set of priorities for the future. South Africans, the majority of whom are Black and poor, look forward to this important annual presidential address to hear how their government plans to continue to respond to their socioeconomic challenges and improve their conditions of life. For its part, Parliament is enjoined by the Constitution to enable a platform for the executive to report regarding its work and to conduct oversight over its performance.

When Members of Parliament connive in order to prevent the executive from accounting to the people, they are not only guilty of dereliction of their Constitutional function but they are also in violation of the right of South Africans to hear and hold their government to account. Public representatives should not be a barrier between the people and the government they have elected. Parliament is the uppermost representative body of the people that represents their democratic will, hopes and aspirations. Any attack on the institution or obstruction of its Constitutional function represents a direct onslaught on the people.

The happenings at Parliament last night are a national shame that, if not thoroughly and decisively nipped in the bud, will destroy the mainstay of our constitutional democracy. Blood, sweat and tears were shed for the attainment of this democracy, together with one of the best constitutions in the world, for it to be destroyed by unbridled acts of anarchy which show scant regard for the law, the rules, the Constitution and the people to whom Parliament belongs. The people of South Africa must rise up and speak out against this rampant anarchy and protect their public institutions.

The conduct of the EFF Members of Parliament last night, which involved blatant acts of criminality and intimidation, is the clearest indication yet that the Partys resoluteness to render dysfunctional and subsequently destroy one of the most important institutions of the people. When a party of few MPs violate the rules and procedures of Parliament at will, and even unleashes violence against those tasked with preserving and maintaining the orderly management of the House, then our national liberty is at stake. This cannot be allowed to continue.

As part of a clearly orchestrated plan to obstruct this years first sitting of Parliament, EFF MPs yesterday transgressed all rules governing joint sittings of the two Houses of Parliament. They rose in a synchronised chaotic fashion insisting on frivolous points of order which have no basis in the law or rules, unleashed a torrent of profanity at the President, the Presiding Officers and the House while demonstrating utter contempt for the public.

In the face of extreme provocation and vulgarity, the presiding officers displayed great restraint, patience and reasonableness delaying the Presidents speech for over an hour before correctly ordering the removal of the EFF MPs. EFFs response to this procedural mechanism provided for in the rules was violence: beating the parliamentary protection staff with fists and helmets and pelting them with water bottles and other objects. A number of staff members were injured in the process. We strongly believe that the violent attacks using water bottles and helmets calls for the tightening of the House rules to ensure safety of all MPs and staff.

The EFF MPs also left a trail of damage to parliamentary property, which includes the door of the ANC Chief Whips reception area. As the parliamentary staff was removing the disruptive MPs from the Chamber, we are reliable informed by eye-witness sources that a member of the EFF in the public gallery simultaneously threw a tear gas powder, which we believe was part of the well-orchestrated disruption. We are confident that the cameras of Parliament will be able to expose this individual, including identifying specific MPs responsible for the damage to property, so that they can face the full might of the law. Members of the parliamentary staff must be applauded for responding swiftly by pouring water on the substance to minimise its effect.

We condemn in the strongest terms the repulsive conduct of these EFF MPs and their supporters, whose intention was to collapse the most important sitting of the two Houses of Parliament, undermine the rights of South Africans, and to destroy the institution. The behaviour of these MPs warrants a criminal probe by the law enforcement agencies and a parliamentary investigation by the powers and privileges committee. A clear message must be sent to these individuals that peoples institutions cannot be attacked and be subjected to acts of criminality with impunity.

We equally condemn the opportunistic DA for partaking in the disruption through frivolous points of order in solidarity with its coalition partner. The DAs use of the painful and sad matter of the deaths of psychiatric patients in Gauteng for political posturing is shameful. The DA deliberately sought to use this tragedy as a tool for political grandstanding and disruption of Parliament.

If the DA was sincere about Parliament paying respects for the deceased, it would have followed the normal parliamentary procedure of alerting the presiding officers and all parties ahead of the sitting, as it is normally the case with matters of this nature. While the ANC in Parliament supports the remembrance of deceased by Parliament, the manner in which the DA sprung the matter was disingenuous, disappointing and disrespectful to the memory of the victims and the bereaved families.

The families of the deceased should not have been made to witness their deceased loved ones being placed at the centre of such deliberate disorderliness by the DA. If the DA respected the memory of the deceased as we do, and was sensitive to the feelings of their families, it would have treated the matter with deserved respect by consulted with all parties as dictated by procedure instead of using as a stepping stone for walk-out and disruption.

We have noted the announcement around the deployment of members of the SANDF to assist with law and order enforcement during the State of the Nation Address during the sitting of the House. We will write to the Speaker of the National Assembly for clarification on this matter.

Statement issued by the Office of the ANC Chief Whip, 10 February 2017

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Zuma's interventions will deal with white monopoly capital - Office of ANC Chief Whip - Politicsweb

Organize to defeat Trump’s Muslim ban | Fight Back! – Fight Back! Newspaper

Commentary by Danya Zituni |

February 12, 2017

Minneapolis protest against Trump's Muslim ban. (Fight Back! News/staff)

Tampa, FL - On Jan. 27, President Trump signed an executive order titled Protecting the Nation from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States which bars entry of nationals from seven Muslim-majority countries regardless of whether they have valid visas, green cards or refugee status.

This is a racist attack that specifically targets the people of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. These same countries in the Middle East and Africa have been subjected to the terror of U.S. wars, bombings and economic sanctions for decades. With military bases in foreign lands, armed personnel in 130 countries, and a military budget larger than the next ten governments combined, the U.S. ruling class maintain a worldwide empire of oppression that is constantly at war.

Sovereign governments that dare not bow to U.S. political and economic domination are punished with crippling sanctions as a form of collective punishment against civilians, and are targeted for brutal overthrow through direct invasion or proxy groups. Sanctions on Iran alone have resulted in massive inflation and 40% of the entire population in poverty, while the total death toll from ten years of the U.S.-led War on Terror is estimated at 2 million lives, according to a study from Physicians for Social Responsibility.

Trumps executive order calls for a review of the visa and refugee programs arguing numerous foreign-born individuals have been convicted or implicated in terrorism-related crimes since Sept. 11, 2001. But why should people perceive foreign-born terrorists as grave domestic threats when the FBI continually manufactures its own plots? In 2012, Petra Bartosiewicz in The Nation reviewed the post-9/11 body of terrorism cases and concluded that nearly every major post-9/11 terrorism-related prosecution has involved a sting operation, at the center of which is a government informant. Many informants are incentivized by money, and can be paid as much as $100,000 per assignment. The U.S. government provides the weapons, suggests the targets, and entraps Muslims to justify their War on Terror.

The billions invested yearly by the U.S. government into racist state repression and genocidal wars for corporate profit could instead be used to finance and improve education, health care, people's rights and welfare. However, it is not in the interests of bank-bailing and investor-driven politicians to make such radical changes a reality. Only through organizing independent of the political establishment controlled by and built for the rich can oppressed people harness and exercise our collective power as a conscious and united force to demand change. Through coordinated action we are saying that there can be no business as usual until our demands are met, and that the ruling class who own everything in society cant actually produce anything or make schools run without subservient students or workers.

A federal judge issued a temporary halt on Feb. 4 against the Muslim ban after tens of thousands of people protested in airports, communities and campuses across the country. Around 1000 Yemini owned stores closed for eight hours on Feb. 2 in the city of New York. Grassroots, mass-based organizations such as Arab American Action Network (AAAN) and Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) have continued to organize and raise demands for sanctuary campuses and cities. The Council on American and Islamic Relations (CAIR) has engaged in a legal battle with the Trump administration over the ban.

Additionally, one of the biggest victories for Muslim communities recently was the dismantling of a long existent bi-partisan Muslim registry called the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS). NSEERS devastated our communities, alongside aggressive FBI surveillance and vicious entrapment. Thousands of families were torn apart, jobs were lost; some communities never fully recovered. Only after 14 years of almost constant organizing by groups such as Desis Rising Up and Moving (DRUM) was it successfully dismantled.

The lesson of our recent victories, and nearly every historic struggle that won people's basic rights under this system, is that we need to build organizational power opposed to both parties of the capitalist 1% and their oppressive policies. Organizing paves the way for people to learn through struggle the necessity of organization as a means to protect their rights and welfare, a lesson we must consistently summate when educating our communities about their rights.

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Organize to defeat Trump's Muslim ban | Fight Back! - Fight Back! Newspaper

Visiting Our Past: Odyssey of Clyde pioneer Jacob Shook – Asheville Citizen-Times

Rob Neufeld, Columnist Published 10:58 a.m. ET Feb. 12, 2017 | Updated 6 hours ago

The attic chapel built by Jacob Shook around 1800 was photographed by Henry Neufeld in 2009, soon after the Shook-Smathers house (now a museum) was put on the National Register of Historic Places.(Photo: Courtesy of Henry Neufeld)

When 20-year-old Jacob Shook arrived with his family, after a 600-mile trek, at what is now the Conover area, he was stepping into a political maelstrom.

His starting point had been Williams Township, Pennsylvania, the Lutheran enclave his grandfather, Johannes Schuck, had found after having fled Alsace-Lorraine with his family in 1732.

In 1767, Johannes died, and Jacobs dad, George, age 45, and uncle, Wilhelm Volprecht, 49, pulled up stakes and made the next big exodus, down the Great Wagon Road to greener pastures in Carolina.

Jacob married Isabella Weitzel in 1770, some sources say perhaps having shared expectations on the journey and the American Dream looked as promising as the Cape May shore had looked to Johannes in 1732 when hed led his family off the pink, John and William, after 17 weeks at sea, a mutiny, a quarantine and a customs check.

Jacobs dad, George, had been six years old on the journey.Did Jacob, growing up, witness his dad and grandfather differ on how and even if to tell the saga?

For Johannes, it had been a survival story.One of the strange things that had happened on board, according to Rick Bushongs web-posted history, Murder Lurks on the Pink John and William, was that Joseph Hubley, a writer condemned by the Catholic Church as a heretic, had probably been murdered by a French assassin whom Hubley had hired as a valet.

For George, the John and William experience may have been too grim to tell, for as the ship had taken five extra weeks to come ashore, clean water had run out and many children had died and been thrown overboard.

A pink is a small, flat boat, about the size of a restaurant, with a cargo area below deck.They were generally not used for trans-Atlantic trips, but aging ones came to serve the immigrant and slave markets.

Hearing these stories and seeing his fathers trauma may have given Jacob his first experience of being spared from horror by distance.

Jacobs new big horror was the royal governments war against Regulators militias resisting governmental oppression in western North Carolina. Most of it was taking place many miles east of the Shooks, whod settled on Lyles Creek, a western branch of the Catawba River.

Today, Shook Road, shouldering Lyles Creek, crosses the bucolic Rock Barn Country Club and Spa. Recently, the club went from being semi-private to private. We did sell memberships before, Det Williams, the clubs interim general manager told Cory Spiers of the Hickory Record, in May, but the value of exclusivity wasnt there.

In 1771, all of what is now Catawba County, had contained only 200 families, according to Charles Preslars 1954 History of Catawba County.

While the Shooks were doing such things as communally raising barns, with posts and beams and local stone, in the German fashion, the royal governor was cracking down on suspected rebels; and the rebels were fighting back.

After the May 1771 Battle at Alamance Creek, a Regulator defeat, the royal government offered rebels pardons under oaths of loyalty, a situation, Bob Jones wrote in Jacob Shook and the War of Independence, that could lead to their hanging if ever again caught in arms against the Government.

On August 8, 1774, the Rowan County Committee of Safety responded with a declaration of independence nine months before the famous Mecklenburg Declaration.

The Rowan resolutions opposed taxes levied by Great Britain, affirmed solidarity with New England, instituted a boycott of British goods, encouraged local manufacturing, and opposed slavery.

The women of Rowan formed their own association ad resolved that they will not receive the addresses of any young gentlemenexcept the brave volunteers who served in the expedition to South Carolina, and assisted in subduing the Scovalite Insurgents.

The Scovalites were Scots whom the Crown granted land in the Cross Creek area of South Carolina, and who maintained loyalty to the royal government.

General Griffith Rutherford called for troops to fight the Cross Creek Tories. And Jacob and his younger brother, Andrew, answered the call.

When a large part of Rutherfords army went to stop the Scovalite soldiers from reinforcing the Kings army in Wilmington, the Shooks stayed in Cross Creek to keep guard over that hotbed.Jacob was once again at a distance when the Patriots devastated the Loyalists at Moores Creek, 20 miles inland from Wilmington.

Rutherfords men had gotten there first and had removed the planks from the bridge and greased the runners, so that when the Scovalites crossed, which they felt they must do, they were easy targets in an ambush.

With their faces painted blue, the kilted warriors, dressed in the colors of their clans, raised broadswords as they fell into the six-foot deep water and bagpipes wailed.

Jacobs next call came a few months later.

On April 9, 1776, the N.C. Provincial Congress funded two battalions and three companies of Light Horse, to be led by General Rutherford, to put down the Cherokee, who had begun a series of attacks on North Carolina homes as far east as Rowan County.

Each enlistee would immediately receive a bounty of 3, 40 shillingsabout what contracted workers got for one month of hard labor.John Kaighn, a Pennsylvania merchant, was, by comparison, offering 3 to anyone whod produce 15,000 cocoons on a mulberry tree.

The Congress also resolved that a penalty of 5 be inflicted on any person who shall knowingly secrete, harbour, succour or entertain, for the space of 24 hours, any deserter from the service, with half the fee going to the informer.

Rutherford wrote Colonel William Christian, a fellow commander in Virginia, that he was ready to march and by the assistance of Divine Providence, crush that treacherous, barbarious [qv] Nation of Savages, with their white abbetors, who lost to all sense of Humanity, honor and principle, mean to extinguish every spark of freedom in these United States.

The Shooks marched slowly with a huge army, 1,400 pack horses, and a requisite number of pack horse drivers, across the French Broad at present-day Biltmore Estate; through present-day Pack Square, where they saw the graves of Shawnees killed by Cherokees in 1735; and single-file along mountain trails until they reached a two-week camping spot in present-day Clyde.

That was a somewhat idyllic respite.The corn was high; and fish and game were plentiful.

It preceded the one experience in which Jacob was not lucky enough to be at a distance.We do not know in what ways he was involved in burning crops and homes, killing Cherokees, and capturing prisoners.We do not know what experiences he shared with his brother, and what qualms they expressed.

We do know that they returned home in October, and that, according to John Chappo in his article Shock and Awe for Saber and Scroll, many of Rutherfords men would eventually succumb to disease and exhaustion following the expedition.

In May, 1781, Jacob served again in the militia, and was stationed at Davidsons Fort (now Old Fort).After the war, In 1783, he and two others went to court and presented a charge against a man from Lyles Creek.They accused the man of supporting the king during the war, Wilma Hicks Simpson writes in Greater Than the Mountains Was He.

Old divisions were still fresh.One family genealogist has noted that Jacob had had an anger problem.

Then, Jacob moved his family to Clyde, the beautiful haven salvaged from his nightmare. Several years later, swept up by the Great Awakening, he converted to Methodism, and provided a chapel in the attic of his house, where Methodist Bishop Francis Asbury is said to have preached.

When did Jacobs moment of grace come about?

Reverend T.F. Glenn in his History of Methodism wrote that, one day, under conviction of sin, Jacob went to work in his cornfield, praying and weeping when his burden of guilt was lifted and his soul was flooded with joy.He shouted and praised the LordHe dropped the lines, left his plow, lost his hat, and shouted all over the field.

What was he putting behind him and what did he see ahead?

Rob Neufeld writes the weekly Visiting Our Past column for the Citizen-Times. He is the author of books on history and literature, and manages the WNC book and heritage website,The Read on WNC.Follow him on Twitter@WNC_chronicler; email him at RNeufeld@charter.

More fromRob Neufeld:

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Visiting Our Past: German immigration to WNC

ASHEVILLE CITIZEN TIMES

Visiting Our Past: The Battle of Kings Mountain, 1780

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Visiting Our Past: Asheville long faced tourism stress

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Visiting Our Past: Traveling the wagon road to Carolina

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Visiting Our Past: Odyssey of Clyde pioneer Jacob Shook - Asheville Citizen-Times