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: May 17, 2017
Evolution Is a Western Plot: Serbian Intellectuals – Transitions Online
Posted: May 17, 2017 at 1:55 am
Education minister dismisses plea to teach creationism in schools.
The petition, which was addressed to the Ministry of Education and Science and the parliament, claims there is no scientific evidence for evolution and said "globalists and atheists" were responsible for the acceptance of evolution, writes the U.S. based National Center for Science Education.
Organizers of the petition said they want to challenge the dominant status of Darwinism in schoolbooks and present it alongside other theories of human evolution, RFE/RL says.
Even though Education Minister Mladen Sarcevic said the ministry would not comply with the petition, the science education group cites Tanjug as reporting on 10 May that this is not the first time creationism has been pushed by influential conservatives.
The countrys most famous advocate of creationism, former Education Minister Ljiljana Colic, told Danas.rs she agreed with everything in the petition, saying, "I tell you that the [Darwinian] theory of evolution and claiming that man came from monkeys offends all believers, not just Orthodox."
Colic, now a professor of Ottoman language and paleography at Belgrade University, resigned her cabinet post in 2004 after her proposal to oust Darwinian theory from the school curriculum failed.
In a rejoinder to the petition dated 9 May, the Serbian Biological Society together with other scientific societies and science faculty members said evolution is "the backbone of modern biology."
Compiled by Ky Krauthamer
The rest is here:
Evolution Is a Western Plot: Serbian Intellectuals - Transitions Online
Posted in Evolution
Comments Off on Evolution Is a Western Plot: Serbian Intellectuals – Transitions Online
Intelligent Design Goes International A Report from Istanbul – Discovery Institute
Posted: at 1:55 am
Editors note:The beginning of May was quite interesting as audiences of scientists, scholars, and students in very different parts of the world examinedthe evidence for intelligent design. Weve already highlightedthe launch of a new ID research centeratone of Brazils major universities. That was May 5-6. The same week, May 2-3, mathematician Granville Sewell of the University of Texas at El Paso was in Istanbul. With Winston Ewert, co-author of the new bookIntroduction to Evolutionary Informatics, herepresented the design perspective at a conference on evolution at Uskudar University. Dr. Sewell reports, and provides background on how the meeting came to be.
Unsatisfied and unconvinced by what he was being taught about evolution at Marmara University in Istanbul, Turkey, 21-year-old student Enes Kayan knew there was another side thatwas never presented in his courses. So in 2012, Enes, a member of the Marmara Young Vision Student Club, decided to organize a symposium in which he and other Marmara students could hear alternative views on evolution, including intelligent design.
The idea that evidence against Darwinism, and for intelligent design, could be freely presented at a university angered some students and professors. About 300 of them staged a protest, which Enes said actually worked to his advantage as it brought publicity to the event, which was held on May 16-17, 2012.
Above:Kubra Bingul.
Above:Enes Kayan.
Above: Professor Granville Sewell.
The symposium was such a success that Enes decided to organize a similar event the following year. He invited scientists from outside Marmara University, including some from outside Turkey. Thus the First International Conference on Queried Evolution was held on May 4, 2013, at Marmara University. The meeting was run entirely by students from Marmara Young Vision Student Club, who found sponsors to pay the expenses of the visiting scientists.
The following year Enes organized a second international conference with the Erzurum Young Vision Student Club. This time it was held at Ataturk University in Erzurum in eastern Turkey. Sponsors included the city government of Erzurum and the university itself. Enes invited me as one of the international speakers, and I decided to accept despite the fact that it was held in the middle of the last week of my classes. Andso on May 7, 2014, I was able to participate in the event and witness the work he and his fellow students had done in organizing it.
Since some of the talks were in English while others were in Turkish, a student interpreter provided simultaneous translation. I heard (through the interpreter) mentions of specified complexity, the explanatory filter, irreducible complexity, and other familiar ID terms during some talks. But other speakers presented a range of different viewpoints, including some who defended the traditional Darwinist viewpoint.
The meeting wasas well organized and well run as any scientific conference I have attended. Yet all of the organization and all the work was done by a group of 15to20 students.
In May 2015, athird Congress was held in Ankara. Discovery Institutes Paul Nelson was one of the invited speakers. At my suggestion, the organizers changed theEnglish translation of the title of the conference from Queried Evolution to Evolution under Scrutiny. Pauls report on his trip ishere.
This year, May 2-3, the Fifth International Congress of Evolution metat Uskudar University in Istanbul. There were three international invitees, as well as speakers from several Turkish universities. The lead organizer now was Kubra Bingul, a molecular biology and genetics student at Uskudar. Again, the conference organizers and workers were all students.
I was once moreasked to speak. The title of my talk was Why Evolution Is Different. You can finda video version of my presentation here:
Because of teaching obligations, I was only able to stay one day. However, on the first day it was clear that not only the name of the Congress had changed. Except for my talk, evolution was no longer under scrutiny.
Mustafa Sozen of Bulent Ecevit Universitesi recounted in detail how natural selection has changed the size of the beaks of finches on the Galpagos Islands. Hence we must accept that it can explain everything in evolution.
Rui Diogo of Howard University informedus that (contrary to what I had told the audience) there is no difficulty explaining major evolutionary steps, and gave salamanders developing syndactyly (with fused digits) as an example! Diogo argued that there is nothing special about humans, since, for example, rats have more bones and chimps have more muscles. Furthermore, God had nothing to do with evolution because some of our muscles are not optimally designed.
In short, all the other talks the first day were standard Darwinist fare. Again, simultaneous translation was provided, and again the meeting was run entirely by students, and organization was excellent.
Winston Ewertwas scheduled to speak about Digital Evolution the second day, but became ill the day of his talk. However, he told me his presentationwould be similar to points he makes in an ID the Future podcast here.
So at least two ID-friendly speakers were on the schedule, and that means this Congress wasstill special because it allowed different points of view to be presented. They did invite some other ID speakers from the U.S. who declined, however, citing aU.S. government travel warning for Istanbul.
It wasa nice trip and visitors are treated very well. Ihopethe travel warning will be lifted soon and that more ID-friendlyspeakers will accept next year.
Read the rest here:
Intelligent Design Goes International A Report from Istanbul - Discovery Institute
Posted in Evolution
Comments Off on Intelligent Design Goes International A Report from Istanbul – Discovery Institute
How Robotics Will Change the Food Industry – Forbes
Posted: at 1:54 am
Forbes | How Robotics Will Change the Food Industry Forbes I think we'll see this across industries where basic tasks that can be easily automated eventually will be, and it will pave the way for a workforce that is more productive and efficient. Q: What interesting developments can we expect in robotics in ... |
Go here to read the rest:
Posted in Robotics
Comments Off on How Robotics Will Change the Food Industry – Forbes
Expert discusses the future of human-centered robotics – Phys.Org
Posted: at 1:54 am
May 16, 2017 by Daniel Evans Pritchard "The new frontier is learning how to design the relationships between people, robots, and infrastructure," says David Mindell, the Dibner Professor of the History of Engineering and Manufacturing, and a professor of aeronautics and astronautics. "We need new sensors, new software, new ways of architecting systems." Credit: Len Rubenstein
Science and technology are essential tools for innovation, and to reap their full potential, we also need to articulate and solve the many aspects of today's global issues that are rooted in the political, cultural, and economic realities of the human world. With that mission in mind, MIT's School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences has launched The Human Factoran ongoing series of stories and interviews that highlight research on the human dimensions of global challenges. Contributors to this series also share ideas for cultivating the multidisciplinary collaborations needed to solve the major civilizational issues of our time.
David Mindell, the Frances and David Dibner Professor of the History of Engineering and Manufacturing and Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT, researches the intersections of human behavior, technological innovation, and automation. Mindell is the author of five acclaimed books, most recently "Our Robots, Ourselves: Robotics and the Myths of Autonomy" (Viking, 2015). He is also the co-founder of Humatics Corporation, which develops technologies for human-centered automation. SHASS Communications recently asked him to share his thoughts on the relationship of robotics to human activities, and the role of multidisciplinary research in solving complex global issues.
Q: A major theme in recent political discourse has been the perceived impact of robots and automation on the United States labor economy. In your research into the relationship between human activity and robotics, what insights have you gained that inform the future of human jobs, and the direction of technological innovation?
A: In looking at how people have designed, used, and adopted robotics in extreme environments like the deep ocean, aviation, or space, my most recent work shows how robotics and automation carry with them human assumptions about how work gets done, and how technology alters those assumptions. For example, the U.S. Air Force's Predator drones were originally envisioned as fully autonomousable to fly without any human assistance. In the end, these drones require hundreds of people to operate.
The new success of robots will depend on how well they situate into human environments. As in chess, the strongest players are often the combinations of human and machine. I increasingly see that the three critical elements are people, robots, and infrastructureall interdependent.
Q: In your recent book "Our Robots, Ourselves," you describe the success of a human-centered robotics, and explain why it is the more promising research directionrather than research that aims for total robotic autonomy. How is your perspective being received by robotic engineers and other technologists, and do you see examples of research projects that are aiming at human-centered robotics?
A: One still hears researchers describe full autonom as the only way to go; often they overlook the multitude of human intentions built into even the most autonomous systems, and the infrastructure that surrounds them. My work describes situated autonomy, where autonomous systems can be highly functional within human environments such as factories or cities. Autonomy as a means of moving through physical environments has made enormous strides in the past ten years. As a means of moving through human environments, we are only just beginning. The new frontier is learning how to design the relationships between people, robots, and infrastructure. We need new sensors, new software, new ways of architecting systems.
Q: What can the study of the history of technology teach us about the future of robotics?
A: The history of technology does not predict the future, but it does offer rich examples of how people build and interact with technology, and how it evolves over time. Some problems just keep coming up over and over again, in new forms in each generation. When the historian notices such patterns, he can begin to ask: Is there some fundamental phenomenon here? If it is fundamental, how is it likely to appear in the next generation? Might the dynamics be altered in unexpected ways by human or technical innovations?
One such pattern is how autonomous systems have been rendered less autonomous when they make their way into real world human environments. Like the Predator drone, future military robots will likely be linked to human commanders and analysts in some ways as well. Rather than eliding those links, designing them to be as robust and effective as possible is a worthy focus for researchers' attention.
Q: MIT President L. Rafael Reif has said that the solutions to today's challenges depend on marrying advanced technical and scientific capabilities with a deep understanding of the world's political, cultural, and economic realities. What barriers do you see to multidisciplinary, sociotechnical collaborations, and how can we overcome them?
A: I fear that as our technical education and research continues to excel, we are building human perspectives into technologies in ways not visible to our students. All data, for example, is socially inflected, and we are building systems that learn from those data and act in the world. As a colleague from Stanford recently observed, go to Google image search and type in "Grandma" and you'll see the social bias that can leak into data setsthe top results all appear white and middle class.
Now think of those data sets as bases of decision making for vehicles like cars or trucks, and we become aware of the social and political dimensions that we need to build into systems to serve human needs. For example, should driverless cars adjust their expectations for pedestrian behavior according to the neighborhoods they're in?
Meanwhile, too much of the humanities has developed islands of specialized discourse that is inaccessible to outsiders. I used to be more optimistic about multidisciplinary collaborations to address these problems. Departments and schools are great for organizing undergraduate majors and graduate education, but the old two-cultures divides remain deeply embedded in the daily practices of how we do our work. I've long believed MIT needs a new school to address these synthetic, far-reaching questions and train students to think in entirely new ways.
Explore further: Should cars be fully driverless? No, says an engineer and historian
This story is republished courtesy of MIT News (web.mit.edu/newsoffice/), a popular site that covers news about MIT research, innovation and teaching.
If you follow technology newsor even if you don'tyou have probably heard that numerous companies have been trying to develop driverless cars for a decade or more. These fully automated vehicles could potentially be ...
The workplace is going to look drastically different ten years from now. The coming of the Second Machine Age is quickly bringing massive changes along with it. Manual jobs, such as lorry driving or house building are being ...
When science fiction author Isaac Asimov devised his Three Laws of Robotics he was thinking about androids. He envisioned a world where these human-like robots would act like servants and would need a set of programming rules ...
Automakers and their tech partners may be looking toward a future when they can offer fully autonomous cars, but Mica Endsley, the author of the recently released Human Factors paper, "From Here to Autonomy," contends that ...
NASA announced today that MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) is one of two university research groups nationwide that will receive a 6-foot, 290-pound humanoid robot to test and develop ...
The University of Manchester is to lead a consortium to build the next generation of robots that are more durable and perceptive for use in nuclear sites.
Engineers at the University of California San Diego have developed the first soft robot that is capable of walking on rough surfaces, such as sand and pebbles. The 3D-printed, four-legged robot can climb over obstacles and ...
As a vast "ransomware" attack raced from computer to computer, infecting tens of thousands around the world, a young tech expert worked from his bedroom in England to bring the rampage to a halt.
The research, led by the International Council on Clean Transportation and Environmental Health Analytics, LLC., in collaboration with scientists at the University of York's Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI); University ...
The cyberattack that spread malicious software around the world, shutting down networks at hospitals, banks and government agencies, was stemmed by a young British researcher and an inexpensive domain registration, with help ...
An unprecedented "ransomware" cyberattack that has already hit tens of thousands of victims in 150 countries could wreak even more havoc Monday as people return to their desks and power up their computers at the start of ...
Teams of technicians worked "round the clock" Saturday to restore hospital computer systems in Britain and check bank or transport services in other nations after a global cyberattack hit dozens of countries and crippled ...
Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more
Read the original post:
Expert discusses the future of human-centered robotics - Phys.Org
Posted in Robotics
Comments Off on Expert discusses the future of human-centered robotics – Phys.Org
Robotics and AML: Enhancing, Not Replacing, Your Analysts – Finextra (blog)
Posted: at 1:54 am
The robots are coming, the robots are coming! Everywhere you look, you see whitepapers and discussions about robotics and its use in AML and compliance generally. And rightfully so, this is definitely going to be a boon to the industry in allowing for more efficiency, consistency, and effectiveness. The problem with all the content and hype is that Robotics has been blown out of proportion. Promises are being made that cant be kept I left one presentation wondering if compliance departments would just become rooms full of servers. Compliance requirements are only increasing, creating more work for AML compliance departments. At the same time, banks are becoming leaner and less likely to throw more headcount to solve issues. Instead, AML Compliance Departments need to start finding ways to make their employees more efficient and effective, essentially take on more work with the same amount of people. This is where Robotics can help.
Especially if you are not a technology person, Robotics can be very daunting. You either avoid it because you dont understand it or you avoid it because you are overwhelmed by the volume of information in the market. Ignoring the obvious hypocrisy of this post adding to that volume, the goal here is to clarify what Robotics is and filter out the noise of how it can be used in your AML program.
RPA or RDA?
Robotics is a general term that can refer to a few different uses of digital robots to automate work. For the most part, when discussing Robotics most people refer to Robotic Process Automation (RPA). This is using Robotics to automate an entire process, from start to finish. This is the T-1000 Terminator, completing replacing a person in a process. The other type of Robotics, which is discussed less often, is Robotic Desktop Automation (RDA). This is the Robocop, combining human and robot. This involves automating parts of an overall process, to allow for the human to focus on the more complex and value add tasks.
At first glance, RPA sounds like the way to go its like adding more headcount, but in robot form. Great! The truth is, this is extremely hard to do. There are few processes, especially in the AML world that will not require some level of human review and decisioning think transaction monitoring and sanctions screening investigations or even due diligence reviews.
In comes RDA. Augment your analysts with robots, to help them work faster. Those robots can take on the manual and repetitive tasks like logging into multiple mainframe systems, collect information from the same internal systems repeatedly, running the same searches on external websites or data providers over and over again. While you arent adding headcount, you are enhancing your analysts and allowing them to focus on synthesizing information and making decisions making them more efficient.
You want Robocops, not Terminators.
Transaction Monitoring and Sanctions Screening Investigations
What are the tasks that take the most time for your investigators? From my days managing investigators, the tasks that took up most of their time were repeatedly logging into the various databases, mainframes, applications, and websites that they needed to use for their investigations; pulling customer and account information from various systems; and running negative news searches and internet searches on parties of interest. In essence, they spent most of their time collecting information. Instead, imagine them starting their investigation with all of the initial information at their fingertips? They could then start their investigation by using their brains, not mindlessly collecting data. Not only does this make them more efficient, it makes them happier. Happier investigators are better investigators and better investigators can work more cases.
Customer Due Diligence (CDD)
Collecting CDD for your Know Your Customer (KYC) information is no easy task. The regulations continue to increase the requirements, and with regulatory scrutiny increasing, internal policies are becoming more onerous as well. To make things worse, most banks dont have unified databases for customer information internally, rely on legacy systems, and use a multitude of external sources to collect information. As a result, analysts have to search multiple systems, have difficulty finding information, and conduct repetitive searches over and over.
Robotics can address these issues by creating strategic integrations between internal and legacy systems, collect information from websites where an API integration does not exist, and take over the repeated searches on external sites. Similar to the assistance provided in financial crime investigations, Robotics can help centralize and collect all the necessary information for due diligence, allowing the analysts to focus on reviewing/assessing customer information and conducting enhanced due diligence.
Robotics is a great tool to gain efficiency, but dont think of it as the silver bullet to save all your problems. It should be one of the tools in your automation tool bag, not the only one. Just like any tool, you need to understand the problems that it is meant to solve so it can be used correctly.
Read the rest here:
Robotics and AML: Enhancing, Not Replacing, Your Analysts - Finextra (blog)
Posted in Robotics
Comments Off on Robotics and AML: Enhancing, Not Replacing, Your Analysts – Finextra (blog)
Decor as dystopia at a Singapore robotics training center – Engadget
Posted: at 1:54 am
Ministry of Design told Engadget that the lab's primary function is "to train and inspire more people to use robotics automation in their everyday work." The experience starts in the minimalist, all-black lobby that features just the lab signage (also created by the firm) and LEDs running at various crazy angles. A door leads to the highly unusual lab's black interior that's clad with a "second skin" of aluminum tubes and custom LED strips, also set at random, rakish angles.
There is a method to the madness, beyond just wowing potential clients. The lab required a continuous interior with small hands-on training clusters, so the open-space plan is divided into smaller, multi-faceted interiors.
At the same time, the panels "cloak the necessary but unsightly mechanical and electrical services while allowing ease of access for operation," says Ministry of Design. As such, each work cluster has separate hatches, allowing easy access to the services hidden behind.
RACE Robotics is a collaboration between Nanyang Technical University (NTU) and PBA Group, a Singapore-based firm specializing in contract manufacturing. The lab started running in January, offering novice and advanced training sessions in robotics and automation. It's working with industrial robotics giants, including Delta Electronics, Universal Robots and Kawasaki.
We're not sure what it's like to work and learn in such a dizzying interior, but if there's any place that justifies such a design, it's a robotics lab. "Overall, the space provides a suitable future-forward backdrop to usher in an age of automation and robotics," says Ministry of Design.
More:
Decor as dystopia at a Singapore robotics training center - Engadget
Posted in Robotics
Comments Off on Decor as dystopia at a Singapore robotics training center – Engadget
Amazon’s Tye Brady and ABB’s Sami Atiya to Speak at TC Sessions: Robotics July 17 at MIT – TechCrunch
Posted: at 1:54 am
TechCrunch | Amazon's Tye Brady and ABB's Sami Atiya to Speak at TC Sessions: Robotics July 17 at MIT TechCrunch We first developed the idea for TC Sessions: Robotics because we wanted to bridge the gap between startups and investment in the robotics world namely research, academia, government and industry. On July 17 at MIT's Kresge auditorium in Cambridge, ... |
See the article here:
Posted in Robotics
Comments Off on Amazon’s Tye Brady and ABB’s Sami Atiya to Speak at TC Sessions: Robotics July 17 at MIT – TechCrunch
Robotics team concludes successful season – The Gazette
Posted: at 1:54 am
Cane Bay High Schools FIRST Robotics Team 3490 Viper Drive, the first in the schools history, has ended another productive season.
Following a regional competition in Myrtle Beach, the 40-member group contended at the Rocket City Regional Competition in Huntsville, Alabama on Mar. 22.
Team spokesperson Ogugua Nwaezeigwe said the group learned from past errors and made modifications to their robot, enabling them to place seventh out of about 50 teams. The team did not place high enough to qualify for the national championships, but Nwaezeigwe said Cane Bays engineering-group remained strong.
We had to really stick together when we lost, Nwaezeigwe said. That mentality made our robotics team a family and more tightly-knit than we were before.
Despite the setback, the group clinched an entrepreneurship award for their thorough business plan that outlines their funding resources and intentions to continue inspiring youth with STEM initiatives. And while they didnt qualify through the regional competition for a championship bid, patience on the FIRST championship waiting list and donations from generous sponsors afforded them a trip to the national competition in Houston.
There, they snagged $5,000 in a social media FedEx Innovation Challenge to cap off a successful season.
I accomplished my dream of holding a big check, Nwaezeigwe joked.
Perhaps one of the teams most notable achievements this season, though, was its very own spokeswoman capping the Deans List award at the earlier Palmetto Regional competition. The FIRST robotics founder, Dean Kamen, developed the award to celebrate students whose passion, leadership and dedication to FIRST proves exemplary.
Nwaezigwe was quite modest about the accomplishment.
[Deans List] students try to make a change in their communities, she said. Thats all I try to do nowadays.
She added that the group placed 46 out of about 60 teams in Houston in the midst of fierce competition on a rigorous robotics course.
FIRST is a nationwide initiative that challenges students to create a robot with a six-week time frame to accomplish a specific task. Students are also simultaneously raising funds for their organization, as well as obtaining teamwork and leadership skills.
Cane Bays robotics group is led by Nikki Stancampiano, who teaches introduction to engineering and design at the high school, and a host of volunteer mentors.
Read the original here:
Posted in Robotics
Comments Off on Robotics team concludes successful season – The Gazette
The Moment An Angry Otter Hunts Down And Attacks A Scotsman – Huffington Post Australia
Posted: at 1:54 am
A 24-year-old Scotsman has experienced first-hand that otters aren't as cute and cuddly as they make themselves out to be.
Rory MacPherson, a forestry worker from Lockerbie, captured the moment he was chased down by an angry otter along a deserted road south of Glasgow.
In a video uploaded to Facebook, the wild animal can be seen trying to bite MacPherson's feet before running at him at full speed as he tries to make an escape to his nearby car.
"I'm being chased by an otter!" he shouts in the video.
"What're you doing pal?"
Since uploading the footage, which has received over 300,000 views, MacPherson told the BBC that he had nearly hit the animal with his car, "so I pulled to a stop, got out and it was still there and I tried to get closer".
"I don't know what made it go a little bit crazy," he said.
"It's not often you see an otter, never mind get the chance to photograph it".
MacPherson also told the BBC that his attacker had used its "huge" teeth and refused to leave his feet alone.
"I thought I'll run away and hopefully it won't catch up with me. It's made for a funny video."
ALSO ON HUFFPOST AUSTRALIA
The rest is here:
The Moment An Angry Otter Hunts Down And Attacks A Scotsman - Huffington Post Australia
Posted in Mind Uploading
Comments Off on The Moment An Angry Otter Hunts Down And Attacks A Scotsman – Huffington Post Australia
Emily VanCamp on Her Engagement to Josh Bowman: ‘It’s Amazing I’m Really Happy!’ – PEOPLE.com
Posted: at 1:54 am
Emily VanCamp is over the moon about her engagement to Josh Bowman.
PEOPLE caught up with the Captain Americaactressat the PEOPLE andEntertainment Weekly VIP Upfronts party on Monday evening in New York City, and the star revealedshes been in a whirlwind since announcing the news last week.
Its literally only been a couple of days, but its amazing, she said. Im really happy!
VanCamp, 31, revealed her engagement to Bowman, 29, on Instagram last Thursday, uploading a photo of herself covering her face with her hands, putting her sparkly diamond engagement ring on full display.
A post shared by Emily VanCamp (@emilyvancamp) on May 11, 2017 at 12:54pm PDT
FROM PEN:EWs Top Ten Rom-Com Movie Moments
Romance rumors first linkedthe two actors as a couple in January 2012. The two alsopreviously costarred as on-screen husband and wife onRevenge.
VanCamp also opened up about the happy newsat the Fox Upfronts on Monday.
Its been a crazy week, VanCamp, whose medical drama The Residenthas just been picked up as a pilot, toldEntertainment Tonight. I found out about the show two hours after we got engaged so it was, like I dont think I slept for three nights. Its been good, its been really positive.
As for the proposal? It took place in a forest, and VanCamp gushed thatBowman did good.
We were in nature on a hike kind of doing what we do, she said. It was very, sort of, us. Itwas great beautiful.
And for now, wedding planning isnt even on her mind.
I never was the girl who knew what she wanted to do for a wedding, she said. [Im] just enjoying this moment. Its really nice, you know?
Link:
Emily VanCamp on Her Engagement to Josh Bowman: 'It's Amazing I'm Really Happy!' - PEOPLE.com
Posted in Mind Uploading
Comments Off on Emily VanCamp on Her Engagement to Josh Bowman: ‘It’s Amazing I’m Really Happy!’ – PEOPLE.com