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Archive for the ‘transportation’ category: Page 450

Dec 29, 2018

Scientists Are Sending A Tiny Satellite Propelled By Water To Orbit The Moon

Posted by in categories: space, transportation

A team from Cornell is out to prove that water is all you need to send an aircraft flying in space. They will attempt to send a CubeSat, a tiny satellite no bigger than a cereal box, to orbit the moon.


Dec 28, 2018

Australian Autonomous Train Is The “World’s Largest Robot”

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Automation is on the right track.


The bot is helping automate mining operations Down Under.

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Dec 28, 2018

Musk: Tesla’s Fully Autonomous Capabilities “About to Accelerate”

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

The evidence that self-driving vehicle manufacturers aren’t always upfront with the public hasn’t helped either. An excoriating October New Yorker investigation into the early years of the Google self-driving research project that eventually became Waymo found that the company had performed reckless road tests early in its work — and hadn’t always reported accidents.

Road Ahead

Musk’s promise to accelerate fully autonomous research, along with a call for more internal Tesla testers for the program, run precisely counter to that narrative. That’s not surprising: the eccentric Musk is known for imagining futures that are still years away — and using his wealth and influence to attempt to steer history toward or away from them.

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Dec 28, 2018

Proximity testing complete, Jetpack Aviation prepares to launch the world’s first jetpack race series

Posted by in category: transportation

The team at Jetpack Aviation (JPA) has just completed test flights in which two pilots flew close enough together to playfully boop each other on the nose. Next step: the world’s first jetpack race series, starting in 2019, and yes, the jetboards and jet suits of the world are invited to participate!

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Dec 26, 2018

How Cargo Ships Can Go Green

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, sustainability, transportation

New rules will require investing in solar, biofuels and maybe even nuclear power.

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Dec 24, 2018

Authorities close airport as Italy’s Mount Etna erupts

Posted by in category: transportation

Italy’s Mount Etna, Europe’s highest and most active volcano, erupted on Monday, sending a huge column of ash into the sky and causing the closure of Catania airport on Sicily’s eastern coast.

A chain of around 130 earth tremors have rocked the volcano since around 0800 GMT on Monday, Italy’s National Institute for Geophysics and Volcanology said, with the strongest posting a magnitude of 4.0.

There were no reports of any injuries.

Continue reading “Authorities close airport as Italy’s Mount Etna erupts” »

Dec 23, 2018

2019: the year of moon missions, marijuana and mega-hub airports | The Economist

Posted by in categories: law, space, transportation

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nkyql8ZyPL4

From groundbreaking moon missions to growth in the legal-cannabis market, 2019 will be year of new highs. Here’s what to watch out for in the year ahead.

Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: https://econ.st/2xvTKdy

Continue reading “2019: the year of moon missions, marijuana and mega-hub airports | The Economist” »

Dec 22, 2018

To the Moon and Back: Apollo 8 and the Future of Lunar Exploration

Posted by in categories: space, transportation

Muscle cars. Film cameras. Bell-bottoms. 8-tracks. It’s 1968. Astronauts Borman, Lovell and Anders get a call to cancel their holiday plans. By December, the three were suddenly farther away than any human had ever been from our home planet. Start your flashback here: https://go.nasa.gov/2Ey19dY

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Dec 22, 2018

A long-awaited battery that would cut electric-vehicle costs may finally be close

Posted by in categories: materials, transportation

24M is reducing manufacturing costs by stripping out extraneous materials—and just got $22 million to begin building its first commercial factory.

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Dec 22, 2018

This 195-gigapixel photo of Shanghai is so huge you can zoom in from miles away and see people’s faces

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, transportation

Smartphone cameras have gotten so good that we struggle to find a reason to invest in a point-and-shoot, but there are still major advancements being made in camera tech that are light years ahead of anything you can fit in your pocket. A new panorama shot by China’s Jingkun Technology (calling themselves “Big Pixel”) is a great example of that, and its size is so jaw-dropping you could spend days staring at it.

The photo, taken from high on the Oriental Pearl Tower in Shanghai, shows the surrounding landscape in stunning detail. From your virtual perch many stories above the ground, you can zoom in so far that you can read the license plates on cars and spot smiling faces greeting each other on the sidewalk.

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