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Sep 16, 2023

The SolarEV City Concept: Key to net zero emissions by 2050

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

Baranozdemir / iStock.

In recent developments, a team of researchers explored the possibility of combining rooftop photovoltaics (PVs) with electric vehicles (EVs) as a viable and scalable strategy to provide clean, cost-effective, and dependable electricity in urban settings, with particular attention to Paris and its surrounding regions.

Sep 16, 2023

Scientists trace objects behind a wall using WiFi signals

Posted by in category: internet

Scientists develop an approach which uses WiFi signals to trace still objects.

WiFi can read through the walls. A team of researchers has developed a new method that can replicate the image of a still object from behind a wall using WiFi. Does this mean we can spy on our neighbors next door? Quite unlikely.

Continue reading “Scientists trace objects behind a wall using WiFi signals” »

Sep 16, 2023

AI model speeds up high-resolution computer vision

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

An autonomous vehicle must rapidly and accurately recognize objects that it encounters, from an idling delivery truck parked at the corner to a cyclist whizzing toward an approaching intersection.

To do this, the vehicle might use a powerful computer vision model to categorize every pixel in a high-resolution image of this scene, so it doesn’t lose sight of objects that might be obscured in a lower-quality image. But this task, known as semantic segmentation, is complex and requires a huge amount of computation when the image has high resolution.

Continue reading “AI model speeds up high-resolution computer vision” »

Sep 16, 2023

These farmers want to salt the earth — and grow crops in it

Posted by in categories: food, genetics

As salt encroaches on productive agricultural land, a handful of startups are finding ways to make crops grow in seawater with genetic modification and transforming solar saltwork.

Sep 16, 2023

Coca-Cola Uses AI to Create a Futuristic Coke Flavor

Posted by in categories: food, robotics/AI

Artificial intelligence experiments with artificial sweeteners.

Sep 16, 2023

Boeing flight testing Red 6 augmented reality dogfight training system

Posted by in category: augmented reality

Recent sorties by a Boeing TA-4J Skyhawk trainer incorporated an augmented reality pilot helmet produced by start-up Red 6, which Boeing hopes to eventually incorporate into its latest T-7A Red Hawk jet trainer.

Sep 16, 2023

World first: 3D-printed vegan salmon now in supermarkets

Posted by in category: food

Revo Foods.

This is according to a press release acquired by Interesting Engineering on Tuesday.

Sep 16, 2023

Bike tires made from NASA’s bizarre shape-shifting metal are now available to buy

Posted by in category: transportation

No more bicycle flats, forever.

Sep 16, 2023

Sustainable Development Impact Meetings 2023

Posted by in categories: business, sustainability

Sustainable Development Impact Meetings 2023 are being held in NYC from Sep 18 to 22. This event by the World Economic Forum will bring together business leaders, policymakers and innovators to accelerate progress on UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Sep 16, 2023

This insect-sized robot can carry 22 times its own weight

Posted by in categories: materials, robotics/AI

An insect-sized robot powered by tiny explosions can crawl, leap and carry a load many times its own weight.

The robot, developed by materials engineer Robert Shepherd at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, his PhD student Cameron Aubin and their colleagues, is powered by tiny actuators. “The actuator kind of looks like a drum. It’s a hollow cylinder with an elastomeric silicone rubber on the top,” says Aubin.

The researchers used four actuators to drive the robot’s feet. To make the robot jump or crawl, a stream of methane and oxygen is fed into each foot and sparked with electricity from a battery. The resulting reaction between the gases to form water and carbon dioxide releases energy as a small explosion, causing the rubber layer to deform. “That acts sort of like a piston,” Aubin says.