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Jun 10, 2018
India Increases Its Massive 2022 Renewable Energy Target
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: solar power, sustainability
For the last several years, CleanTechnica has covered renewable energy development in India quite closely. Several years ago, India set what seemed like a lofty target of 175 gigawatts of wind and solar energy by March 2022. Few believed that was a practical target, but then India plowed forward and happily impressed the world. This week that goal was increased to 227 gigawatts!
Currently, India has added a little more than 70 gigawatts of that goal. Assessing the progress to date on a linear scale, the trend would seem to indicate the country is behind. However, renewable energy growth is not linear.
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Jun 10, 2018
‘Til Deletion Do Us Part’: Discovering Love in a Virtual Future
Posted by B.J. Murphy in categories: biological, robotics/AI, virtual reality
What does it mean to fall in love in the 21st century? Originally, the number of people you could fall in love with were limited to the amount that lived within relative close proximity of you (a few miles, at best). In today’s world, however, it isn’t that uncommon for people to fall in love online.
As we move forward into a future of VR and AI, how might our abilities to fall in love change in a world where non-biological life is teeming just as much as biological life?
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Jun 10, 2018
Tesla’s version 9 software update is coming in August with first ‘full self-driving features’, says Elon Musk
Posted by Bill Kemp in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI, transportation
Tesla’s next major software update ‘version 9.0’ is now set for a release in August and it will include the first ‘full self-driving features’ for Autopilot 2.0 vehicles, says CEO Elon Musk.
Jun 10, 2018
Scientists Discovered a New Part of Your Sperm — and It Could Explain Infertility
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
Scientists have discovered that sperm contain two centrioles, as opposed to one — and that additional centriole could explain infertility.
Jun 10, 2018
Berkeley’s desert water extractor is taking us one step closer to harvesting water out of thin air
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: energy, sustainability
Right now, there are roughly 16 sextillion liters of water suspended in the atmosphere. The air around you is a river, you just can’t see it.
Harvesting water from air would be a game-changing solution to tackling freshwater scarcity, which is increasing as the world warms. It would be especially vital in places with very little humidity in the air, like the desert. But while it’s technically possible—you just need to get the water content in the air to condense around something—doing so efficiently has been difficult, until now.
The challenge with this technology is cooling. Water vapor will only condense into a liquid if the material it condenses on is cooler than the surrounding air. That’s why droplets of condensation will appear on a soda can the moment you take it out of the fridge. But how do you leave a piece of machinery in the desert sun all day and keep it cooler than the surrounding air? One way would be to install a cooling system. But it takes a a lot of energy to perpetually cool an object in a hot place, and isn’t feasible in places where energy is expensive. We also don’t want to increase the amount of energy demand in a world already struggling to reduce emissions.
Jun 10, 2018
Ethical Artificial Intelligence is the need of the hour
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: robotics/AI
At a time when governments and organisations across the world are trying to harness the powerful technology, the need for an ethical AI has never been more important.
Jun 10, 2018
Cancer hasn’t got a chance with this new immunotherapy technique
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
Researchers now have an antibody that specifically targets cancer cells, while leaving healthy ones alone.
Jun 10, 2018
Priests and scientists talk neuroscience, cosmology, and philosophy
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: cosmology, neuroscience
The typical contemporary view assumes that there is going to be some deep tension between faith and science. From our perspective that’s an illusion.
Washington D.C., Jun 10, 2018 / 05:00 am (CNA).- A Thomistic philosopher, an evolutionary biologist, and a Harvard astronomy professor walk into a bar. Well, not a bar.
But they did walk into a Washington, D.C. symposium this week, at which graduate students, professors, religious sisters, and other curious Catholics discussed highly technical scientific questions over bourbon and pecan pie, late into the night.
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