The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Daily Archives: March 12, 2017
Maryland takes next step toward offshore wind – Baltimore Sun – Baltimore Sun
Posted: March 12, 2017 at 8:33 pm
Hearings starting Monday could determine whether Maryland becomes a leader in the development of offshore wind power in the United States.
The Maryland Public Service Commission will begin what could be two weeks of hearings on proposals from two developers to build wind farms in the Atlantic Ocean off Maryland. The two developers are competing for up to $1.9 billion in subsidies over 20 years, paid for by the state's electricity ratepayers, a crucial financing mechanism for developers to recoup the cost of building the massive wind farms.
The commission is expected to decide whether to move forward with one by May 17.
Offshore wind energy, which is booming in Europe, offers significant potential to replace aging energy infrastructure along the East Coast, create jobs and bolster the economy.
The federal government has leased thousands of acres off the Eact Coast to be developed into wind farms, but the industry has yet to take off in the United States. Wind development has been hobbled largely by its cost as well as regulatory hurdles and opposition from politicians opposed to subsidizing energy, coastal residents worried about views and environmentalists worried about migratory birds.
Only one small offshore wind farm has been installed in the United States, just five turbines off Block Island in Rhode Island. But other projects are in the works off Massachusetts, New Jersey and North Carolinia.
If Maryland successfully becomes one of the first states to establish an offshore wind farm, the project could position the state to be a leader in the industry and serve as a hub for the contractors who could service future offshore wind farms up and down the East Coast.
"The opportunity Maryland has is huge," said Liz Burdock, executive director of the Business Network for Offshore Wind, a national advocacy group. "Where the infrastructure goes into place, where first companies set up, will be the base for where the rest of the industry is served."
Maryland has set a goal of getting a quarter of the state's power from renewable sources by 2020. Of that, up to 2.5 percent must come from offshore wind.
To meet those goals, utility companies such as Baltimore Gas & Electric Co., will be required to buy energy credits from offshore wind farms, solar companies and other renewable energy producers.
To encourage development in offshore wind, state lawmakers in 2013 approved legislation that will allow energy companies to pass on the cost of the offshore wind credits to ratepayers. Under the law, residential power bills could go up $1.50 a month and businesses could pay up to 1.5 percent more, to support an offshore wind project once it is up and running.
The Maryland Public Service Commission will decide how much utilities should pay for the offshore energy credits and from which project, essential determining which might get built.
"Maryland wants to be a leader in renewable energy and wants to have more homegrown renewable energy," said James McGarry, a policy director for Chesapeake Climate Action Network, an environmental nonprofit in Takoma Park. "Offshore wind is potentially the biggest untapped source of homegrown renewable energy."
The two proposals under consideration are from US Wind, a Baltimore-based subsidiary of Italian energy and construction giant Toto Holding SpA, and Deepwater Wind, the Providence, R.I. -based developer of the only wind farm off the U.S. coast.
In 2014, US Wind won a federal auction for the leases of two offshore wind sites off the coast of Ocean City. The company wants to build a 750-megawatt wind farm with 187 turbines on the 80,000-acre site. The project would be built in three stages, with the first capable of creating 250 megawatts of wind power. The first stage could be complete by 2020 and the entire project could be built by 2022.
The first stage of the project would cost about $1 billion, said Paul Rich, US Wind's director of project development. He declined to share the proposed impact to ratepayers' energy bills.
Rich said he thinks the company's "go big" approach is Maryland's best bet for establishing itself as a long-term industry leader.
The plan calls for manufacturing facilities at Sparrows Point in Baltimore County that would be run by contractors who will make the massive turbines and bases they sit on. Rich envisions those facilities becoming the go-to resource for future projects up and down the East Coast.
All told, the project could create 5,000 construction, fabrication, electrical and support jobs, he said.
"We are trying to embrace a vision," Rich said. "This will be the Silicon Valley of industrial activity for the offshore wind industry for the whole East Coast."
Meanwhile Deepwater Wind is proposing a smaller, $720 million project that executives called the "right size" for Maryland.
The Skipjack Wind Farm would be located on a 96,400-acre site about 17 nautical miles northeast of Ocean City, actually in waters off Delaware. The company has proposed building 15 turbines, capable of producing 120 megawatts of energy, with the possibility of adding more turbines in the future. Construction could start in 2020 with the farm operational by 2022.
Deepwater has proposed a price for its energy that would cost residential customers 34 cents a month, said Deepwater CEO Jeff Grybowski.
Deepwater acquired the site's lease last year from utility company NRG Energy. The lease had been among the first granted by the federal government in 2012, but NRG's planned wind farm stalled due to financial constraints.
Deepwater leaders said their more conservative proposal is based on their experience developing the only other offshore U.S. wind farm.
The five-turbine Block Island Wind Farm is capable of producing just a quarter of the energy as the proposed Skipjack Wind Farm and took almost a decade to bring to fruition, said Chris van Beek, president of Deepwater, who discussed the project at an event hosted by Business Network for Offshore Wind in Linthicum Heights last week that also featured a presentation by US Wind.
"The problems we had, we were able to handle them because it was small," van Beek said. "I think we start small and prove to the industry that a wind farm can be built and is possible, and I think that's more important than the size of the project."
The Skipjack project also calls for manufacturing operations at Sparrows Point and several hundred construction jobs.
Both companies would establish operations and maintenance offices in Ocean City.
Regardless of which developer Maryland regulators chose, labor unions say the project could be a lifesaver for trade workers who have struggled to find jobs as manufacturing declined in Maryland.
"The promise is enormous for our ready and willing, skilled ironworking workforce and apprenticeship program," said William Beckman, a representative of the Ironworkers Local 5, in testimony submitted to the public service commission. "We will all thrive with exciting new economic development projects that can revive our great city."
Despite such promise, cost remains a concern among consumer advocates. Maryland People's Counsel Paula Carmody, whose office represents residential utility consumer interests, worries that the projects could end up being more costly and a bigger burden to consumers than projected.
"This is a cost impact what that risk or impact might have on the rates they pay in the future, that's what we're talking about," Carmody said. "What we are taking a look at is the level of uncertainty in those projections."
twitter.com/sarahgantz
View post:
Maryland takes next step toward offshore wind - Baltimore Sun - Baltimore Sun
Posted in Offshore
Comments Off on Maryland takes next step toward offshore wind – Baltimore Sun – Baltimore Sun
SP Phase 19B Offshore Platform Installed – Financial Tribune
Posted: at 8:33 pm
In line with plans to fast-track gas production from South Pars Gas Field in the Persian Gulf, the last offshore platform of South Pars Gas Field's Phase 19 has been successfully installed, the phase's contractor said on Monday. Platform 19B, which weighs 1640 tons, was constructed at an estimated cost of $150 million. It has the capacity to extract 500 million cubic feet (over 14.2 million cubic meters) of natural gas per day, Hamidreza Masoudi was quoted as saying by Shana. According to the official, platform 19B is connected to platform 19A via an 18-inch pipeline will be fully operational by April. "Platforms 19A and 19C with the capacity to extract 14 mcm/d and 28 mcm/d of gas, respectively have already been installed," he added, noting that as soon as the new platform goes on stream, the whole phase will move 56 mcm/d of gas to a refinery located in the Pars Kangan region of Pars Special Energy Economic Zone (PSEEZ) where it will be processed and injected into the national gas grid. Moreover, the phase will produce 75,000 barrels of gas condensate, 1 million tons of liquefied natural gas and 1 million tons of ethane per year. Masoudi said that more than 7.2 million barrels of condensates, worth $1.4 billion, have been shipped to target destinations from Phase 19 during the past year. The official added that Phase 19 was developed by a consortium of Petropars Limited, Petropars Iran and Iranian Offshore Engineering and Construction Company under an engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract. According to Masoudi, Phase 19 complies with all health, safety and environment (HSE) protocols ratified by the National Iranian Oil Company. Phase 19 is one of the few South Pars phases designed with advanced equipment for curbing associated petroleum gases that are burned off in flares.
Read more here:
SP Phase 19B Offshore Platform Installed - Financial Tribune
Posted in Offshore
Comments Off on SP Phase 19B Offshore Platform Installed – Financial Tribune
Speak out about your experiences – Hibbing Daily Tribune
Posted: at 8:30 pm
HIBBING An innovative program designed to bring generations to together is inviting Hibbing residents of all ages to Speak Out.
Hibbing is the newest community to step forward to join the Northland Foundations AGE to age: bringing generations together, which is an initiative of the Northland Foundations KIDS PLUS Program.
For 25 years, KIDS PLUS has been working with communities in northeastern Minnesota to improve the wellbeing of children and youth, from birth to adulthood, said Lynn Haglin, Northland Foundation vice-president and KIDS PLUS director. AGE to age began in 2008 with a handful of communities and has now grown, with the latest addition of Hibbing, to 16 sites throughout the seven-county region.
To show residents what AGE to age is all about, community members are invited to a Speak Out event from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 14, in Hibbing Community College commons, where dinner will be served and, as the organizers hope, much conversation will be had.
This is a special opportunity to hear from Hibbing area residents representing a span of many decades from present-day youth to people in their 80s or 90s, speakers will share what it was like to grow up in Hibbing, Haglin explained. The audience can listen to these interesting stories, ask questions and share their insights as well. It will be a chance to learn about their community history and find out what has stayed the same and what is different about being a young person in Hibbing whether they grew up in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and so on, up to today.
The program aims to create intergenerational connections between Hibbing residents to not only learn from each other, but to work together to build a stronger community by using these discussions to develop plans and projects for the area.
As Haglin pointed out, it is rare for discussions of this type to occur these days.
In many communities today, there arent many intentional ways for young people to meet and benefit from the older generations, she said. In many cases, weve lost the inter-generational connections that families and communities used to have in the past. Grandchildren may not live near grandparents. Neighbors may not know neighbors as well as they once did. AGE to age links the generations to share their time and talents.
In other cities participating in the program, projects developed through these dialogues have included community gardens, walking clubs, teaching traditional activities such as crafts, baking, language, storytelling and helping older adults with smartphone and computer technology.
However, there is no one telling residents what to do.
Each community knows best what its resources are and what its needs are, and AGE to age being guided by and engaging local people at each site allows the program to be unique in each location, Haglin explained.
In fact, the greatest resource in making these decisions is each and every resident of Hibbing.
This is a chance to understand one another better and learn some of the things that we share in common, no matter our age, Haglin said. We hope the room is full of people of all generations.
What: Northland Foundations AGE to age: bringing generations together Speak Out
When: 5 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 14. A light supper from 5 to 5:30 p.m.
Where: Hibbing Community College Commons, 1515 E. 25th St.
Who: Youth, parents, adults 55-plus, parents, and representatives from K-12 and higher education, state/local/tribal government, faith communities, youth serving organizations, health and human services, civic organizations and businesses. Ages 9 to 99 are welcome.
See more here:
Posted in Intentional Communities
Comments Off on Speak out about your experiences – Hibbing Daily Tribune
The Promise of Paradise features area – 100 Mile House Free Press
Posted: at 8:30 pm
The Promise of Paradise
image credit: Tara Sprickerhoff
A new book by journalist Andrew Scott called The Promise of Paradise showcases some of the unique stories British Columbia and the South Cariboo have on offer.
The book delves into the history of "intentional" or "utopian" communities throughout British Columbia, exploring their roots and the many different attempts to build idealistic colonies in the wilderness of B.C.
The Promise of Paradise is an updated version of a book by the same name, published 20 years ago by Scott. The new edition contains a chapter on the history of the Emissaries of Divine Light the spiritual community led by Martin Exeter that helped found 100 Mile House as well as how intentional communities have evolved in British Columbia.
"Quite a bit has happened in the last 20 years and nobody else has really written about it," says Scott.
Scott says it was important to include the Emissaries of Divine Light in the revised version of the book.
"They were one of the largest and most successful for a long time of communal intentional communities in British Columbia."
While the Emissaries of Divine Light were spread throughout B.C., they were headquartered in 100 Mile House for many years. Scott says they were unusual because of their size.
"They built 100 Mile House. There were hundreds and hundreds of other communal communities in the 60s and 70s but most of them might have had a dozen or 20 people. At the most, to have 100 people working together and learning together is unusual, but to have 1,000 is unprecedented."
Among other stories, the book also tells the history of the Ochiltree Organic Commune, a "rebel commune" with an interesting history that often brought meat to more traditional "hippy" vegetarian conferences and often saw themselves in conflict with other groups or local government. The group has now morphed into the Community Enhancement and Economic Development Society (CEEDS) located near Horse Lake.
The new version of the book also includes a chapter on modern day intentional communities.
"The earlier communities were often led by a single charismatic leader who inspired people and had followers. While he was leading, if he was doing a good job, some of those communities flourished."
Styles of intentional communities have since changed, however.
"Over the years what I call distributed forms of leadership became more successful," he says. "Most intentional communities are really based on developing consensus, not having a strong leader, but having everyone at once participate in the leadership."
Scott tells the stories though a combination of careful archival research and first-person accounts, where he brings the stories and people featured in the book to life.
"I generally have a lot of respect for people who have stuck out doing these kinds of things. The Emissaries of Divine Light are very much reduced in size, but they keep hanging on and I wish them well," he says.
"There have been a lot of hilarious accidents and failures over the years, but generally speaking I think people will feel inspired reading about these groups."
Read more from the original source:
The Promise of Paradise features area - 100 Mile House Free Press
Posted in Intentional Communities
Comments Off on The Promise of Paradise features area – 100 Mile House Free Press
MIT Conference To Focus On Space Travel For The Public – CBS Boston / WBZ
Posted: at 8:30 pm
CBS Boston / WBZ | MIT Conference To Focus On Space Travel For The Public CBS Boston / WBZ Participants will discuss making space travel affordable to the public, sharing the cost of space access, and the relationship between private space companies and governments. Speakers will include: Jeffrey Hoffman, a former NASA astronaut who is ... Travel to the Red Planet is the next big biz (ad)venture |
More here:
MIT Conference To Focus On Space Travel For The Public - CBS Boston / WBZ
Posted in Space Travel
Comments Off on MIT Conference To Focus On Space Travel For The Public – CBS Boston / WBZ
How Fully Synthetic Complex Life Just Got a Lot Closer – Singularity Hub
Posted: at 8:29 pm
From domestication to selective breeding and right up to DNA editing, humans have long sought to bend the genetic makeup of animals and plants to our needs. Now an international team has taken a significant step towards building the genome of a complex organism from scratcha major milestone in the quest for fully synthetic life.
Led by Jef Boeke, a geneticist at New York University Langone Medical Center, the Synthetic Yeast Project (Sc2.0) has now built five new synthetic chromosomes for the single-celled fungus S. cerevisiae, more commonly known as Bakers yeast.
Boekes lab had previously synthesized the first synthetic yeast chromosome in 2014, meaning that more than a third of the organisms genome16 chromosomes in totalhas now been replaced with engineered alternatives. The consortium has also finished designing the entire genome and expects to have synthesized working versions of all the chromosomes within the year.
Sc2.0 is not the first major effort to create synthetic life. In 2010, geneticist Craig Venter manufactured the entire genome of the bacteria Mycoplasma mycoides and transplanted it into another Mycoplasma species, creating the first self-replicating synthetic organism. This genome was almost identical to the original, but then last year his team released new research in which they had whittled down the organisms genome to just 473 genesthe bare bones required for life.
As impressive as these feats are, though, M. mycoides is far simpler than yeast, with just a single chromosome. Yeast is a eukaryote, a group that includes all complex lifelike plants and animalsand is also at the heart of crucial processes like baking, brewing and, more recently, synthesizing chemicals.
The organism has been genetically modified to mass-produce insulin, antibiotics, vaccines, biofuel and even perfume. Lab experiments have shown yeast can be tweaked to produce a wide variety of chemicals, and it has even been used to generate electricity in microbial fuel cells.
All of this has been done using established genetic engineering approaches, where sections of the organisms DNA are substituted with useful genes from elsewhere. But the ability to build the organisms entire genome from the bottom up could give scientists far greater control over what the yeast is able to produce.
This work sets the stage for completion of designer synthetic genomes to address unmet needs in medicine and industry, Boeke said in a press release. Beyond any one application, the papers confirm that newly-created systems and software can answer basic questions about the nature of genetic machinery by reprogramming chromosomes in living cells.
The breakthrough was revealed in a series of seven papers published in a special edition of the journal Science last Thursday March 9, featuring more than 200 authors from labs across the world. In the main paper, researchers led by Joel Bader, a professor of biomedical engineering at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, explain how the synthetic genome has been redesigned to make it easier to manipulate.
By removing non-coding DNA, the new genome has been made roughly eight percent smaller than the natural one, and also includes 17 rather than 16 chromosomes. Thats because all of the yeasts transfer RNA (tRNA)responsible for putting amino acids in the right order when building proteinsnormally spread out through the genome have all been put into a single extra chromosome. This helps boost the robustness of the genome because tRNA are notoriously unstable and prone to mutation due to how often they are transcribed.
The new design also includes a biochemical system known as SCRaMbLE that makes it much easier to customize chromosomes. Some 5,000 DNA tags placed throughout the genome can be targeted with a mutation that causes protein to randomly modify the organisms genetic code. Scientists can then see if the changes lead to any desirable characteristics, such as producing interesting new chemicals or strains able to survive in extreme environments.
Were shortcutting evolution by millions of years, Patrick Cai, whose lab at the University of Edinburgh is building the 17th chromosome, told Wired. Our goal here is not engineering a particular kind of yeast, but the kind of yeast that is amenable to engineering.
Key to the international collaboration at the heart of the project was the creation of a piece of software called BioStudio. Effectively a piece of version control software, the program allows multiple users to simultaneously edit the genome and accept and reject changes. Most importantly, it allows rollbacks to previous designs when problems crop up.
Translating this code into real-life chromosomes follows a similar incremental process, with small chunks of genome being sequentially introduced into live yeast that is then compared against natural yeast to see how the modified strains do. If the synthetic yeast encounters problems, the researchers know which section is carrying the fault and can go back and debug the faulty code.
One of the most impressive aspects of the research is the wholesale changes the group has made to the organisms genetic code. The fact that they were able to do this across five different chromosomes, and the fitness is still similar to wild-type cells, thats pretty impressive, Dan Gibson at Synthetic Genomics, a biotech company developing synthetic chromosomes in another yeast species, told New Scientist.
Genome synthesis is not simple or cheap, though. Harvard University geneticist George Church told Nature its unlikely to replace tools like CRISPRa workhorse of genetic engineering that allows targeted genetic edits by adding or removing short sections of DNAin anything other than the most complicated rewrites of the genetic code.
Nonetheless, the research has dramatically expanded the scope of whats possible in genetic engineering. Theyve been able to induce radical changes in the code, so it emboldens you to be even more radical, said Church.
Image Credit: CDC/Maxine Jalbert, Dr. Leo Kaufman
Go here to see the original:
How Fully Synthetic Complex Life Just Got a Lot Closer - Singularity Hub
Posted in Singularity
Comments Off on How Fully Synthetic Complex Life Just Got a Lot Closer – Singularity Hub
Last of the flood-damaged Ascension Parish Schools to get students back Monday – The Advocate
Posted: at 8:26 pm
PRAIRIEVILLE Students of Galvez Middle School will return to their home campus Monday, where temporary classroom buildings, a dining hall, library and band tent have been set up until the flood-damaged school can be repaired, the Ascension Parish school district announced Friday.
Galvez Middle is the last of five flood-damaged Ascension Parish public schools that have had their student bodies reunited in recent weeks, after more than six months spent at sites off campus.
Temporary buildings are in use at the middle school, as well as at St. Amant High, Galvez Primary and Lake Elementary.
Students at St. Amant Primary, are back together at the former location of the River Parishes Community College on La. 22 in Sorrento.
Galvez Middle teachers will move classroom materials from host site Central Middle School over the weekend.
Parents will be getting information from Galvez Middle School Principal Michelle Bourque on schedules, classroom locations and drop-off and pick-up locations for students, the school district said.
Continue reading here:
Last of the flood-damaged Ascension Parish Schools to get students back Monday - The Advocate
Posted in Ascension
Comments Off on Last of the flood-damaged Ascension Parish Schools to get students back Monday – The Advocate
Space Exploration: US congress approves $19.5 billion for NASA to get humans to Mars by 2033 – NTA News
Posted: at 8:25 pm
United State Congress has passed a huge funding bill that gives NASA $19.5 billion for space exploration and has presented it to the president. The NASA Authorization Act of 2017 is focused on transforming NASA back into the great scientific organization it was during the Apollo Program. The bill authorizes NASA programs like the Space Station, deep space exploration, and asteroid redirect missions for 2017. Also included in the bill is a mandate for human space travel to Mars in 2033.
As part of the mission, Congress has asked NASA to create an initial human exploration roadmap by December 2017. The roadmap, which NASA has been working on for a while, is a step by step guide on how to get to Mars. It includes ever expanding stages of space travel starting with low-Earth orbit, then cislunar space, and culminating in the mission to Mars. NASA calls these stages Earth Reliant, Proving Ground, and Earth Independent.
The authorization report;
SEC. 435. MARS 2033 REPORT.
(a) In General.Not later than 120 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall contract with an independent, non-governmental systems engineering and technical assistance organization to study a Mars human space flight mission to be launched in 2033.
(b) Contents.The study shall include
(1) a technical development, test, fielding, and operations plan using the Space Launch System, Orion, and other systems to successfully launch such a Mars human space flight mission by 2033;
(2) an annual budget profile, including cost estimates, for the technical development, test, fielding, and operations plan to carry out a Mars human space flight mission by 2033; and
(3) a comparison of the annual budget profile to the 5-year budget profile contained in the Presidents budget request for fiscal year 2017 under section 1105 of title 31, United States Code.
(c) Report.Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on the study, including findings and recommendations regarding the Mars 2033 human space flight mission described in subsection (a).
(d) Assessment.Not later than 60 days after the date the report is submitted under subsection (c), the Administrator shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress an assessment by the NASA Advisory Council of whether the proposal for a Mars human space flight mission to be launched in 2033 is in the strategic interests of the United States in space exploration.
NASA has often been criticized for being slow to adapt to change and advancements in technology. They have their old ways of doing things and are traditionally very hesitant to explore new options. This has given rise to the private space industry and companies like SpaceX.
Ever since Apollo 11, NASA has had its sights set on Mars as the new final frontier. The Curiosity and 2020 rovers are key tools in discovering what resources Mars has to offer. This funding bill and Mars mandate has the space community rejoicing; and for good reason. Were one step closer to what will arguably be the greatest event in human exploration, ever.
Source: Techspot
Innocent Korie is an ICT and Project Management Professional with very good flair in business development, and social media management. He has a degree in Electronic & Computer Engineering. He is currently stationed at the Online Unit of Nigerian Television Authority
View original post here:
Posted in Space Exploration
Comments Off on Space Exploration: US congress approves $19.5 billion for NASA to get humans to Mars by 2033 – NTA News
Solarstone shows off his ‘State Of Mind’ with ethereal trance … – Dancing Astronaut
Posted: at 8:23 pm
When Solarstone released his Pure album in 2012, he thought itd be his last. As it turned out, Pure became the starting point of a mass movement within the trance scene that turned him into one of the leading figures bringing the genres true ethos back to life.
Since then, a resurgence of sorts has taken place in which the original, traditional sounds have come out on top, and outspoken passion from the fans has led to trance making a notable return to the public psyche as more and more heed to increased demands of the music in various localities. Solarstone recognizes this, and has transcribed his thoughts into a new music which will serve as the backdrop to a brand new project hes reportedly brewing up.
A State Of Mind comes as the introduction to this, and is broken into two different version. Solarstone begins with the ethereal Extended Mix, an eleven-minute gem of a song which unfolds across an ethereal landscape driven along by a smooth, running bass-line and filled with distant, vibrating synth melodies and a central melodic arrangement that feels melancholic in tone. Its various peaks and lulls tell a timeless story and tug at the heartstrings, making this a shining addition to Solarstones contemporary repertoire.
The Pure Mix adapts A State Of Mind to a club setting, inserting a thumping kick and more pronounced samples into the mix to make an ideal peaktime record. It represents the moving, uplifitng sound that Solarstone has built an excellent reputation for over his long years serving trance.
Listen to both mixes below:
Read More:
Solarstone and Giuseppe Ottaviani release 3rd single as PureNRG
Defining Pure: What trance means to Solarstone [Interview]
Solarstone Once feat. Iko (Original Mix)
TOP TRENDING MUSIC
Original post:
Solarstone shows off his 'State Of Mind' with ethereal trance ... - Dancing Astronaut
Posted in Trance
Comments Off on Solarstone shows off his ‘State Of Mind’ with ethereal trance … – Dancing Astronaut
English Trance at a desi festival – Mid-Day
Posted: at 8:23 pm
PrevNext
Groove to the tracks of popular UK band Above & Beyond at a pulsating Holi gig
It's rare to hear of English Trance bands perform at Indian festivals. But for Above & Beyond, who have been coming to India over the years, it is no less than fascinating. The trio, comprising Jono Grant, Tony McGuinness, and Paavo Siljamki, are a unique bunch. They have an acoustic and soulful side to their music too. They also host a weekly radio show titled Group Therapy Radio, and are the owners of London-based music labels, Anjunabeats and Anjunadeep. Ahead of their Holi-themed gig, McGuinness opens up about their work and their association with India.
Excerpts from an interview.
Over the years, what changes have you noticed in India's music scene? Ever since we started our label, Anjunabeats (named after Anjuna beach in Goa) in 1999, we have been fascinated by Indian culture, people, food, music and the parties. The Electronic scene has grown rapidly in the last five years. There is so much enthusiasm and energy in the parties. We can't get enough!
Yours is the only EDM act that is into Trance as well as melodious acoustic music. What inspires you to compose? It can be almost anything a book we've read, a film we've seen or something that's happened to us that sparks a train of thought that needs a musical or lyrical solution. Fiddling with instruments, be it a guitar or a piano, is a fruitful route as well.
Have you played Holi before? What's on the gig playlist? We have not, although we have heard a lot [about the festival] and seen photographs. I am not trying to do much research, let it be a surprise. Every gig we play is especially made for the event and we are looking forward to get into the Holi mood.
Tell us about your collaboration with Lagori, the Indian band. They recorded Indian versions of our songs, Sun & Moon and We Are All We Need (using a sitar and various other Indian instruments). They are available on YouTube. They rewrote the verses but used the choruses from the original versions.
Do you plan to use Indian instruments in your tracks? None of us play or own Indian instruments. It is odd because our record label is named after an Indian beach that was influential in creating a Trance scene in India. We have always felt close to the country and its people, though.
See original here:
Posted in Trance
Comments Off on English Trance at a desi festival – Mid-Day