English: Description: Social Networking Source: own work Author: koreshky Date: 12/10/2007 (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
Tuesday, September 09, 2014
The Blockchain: More Than About Money
Agricultural Drones
Manufacturing need not fear information technology. This is solid proof. I mean, if agriculture can do it. I think this is cowboy technology. Sheep farmers in Australia could put this to good use.
Agricultural Drones
Agricultural Drones
Easy-to-use agricultural drones equipped with cameras, for less than $1,000. ..... using sensors and robotics to bring big data to precision agriculture. ..... a low-cost aerial camera platform ..... This low-altitude view (from a few meters above the plants to around 120 meters, which is the regulatory ceiling in the United States for unmanned aircraft operating without special clearance from the Federal Aviation Administration) gives a perspective that farmers have rarely had before. Compared with satellite imagery, it’s much cheaper and offers higher resolution. Because it’s taken under the clouds, it’s unobstructed ...... due largely to remarkable advances in technology: tiny MEMS sensors (accelerometers, gyros, magnetometers, and often pressure sensors), small GPS modules, incredibly powerful processors, and a range of digital radios. ..... Drones can provide farmers with three types of detailed views. First, seeing a crop from the air can reveal patterns that expose everything from irrigation problems to soil variation and even pest and fungal infestations that aren’t apparent at eye level. Second, airborne cameras can take multispectral images, capturing data from the infrared as well as the visual spectrum, which can be combined to create a view of the crop that highlights differences between healthy and distressed plants in a way that can’t be seen with the naked eye. Finally, a drone can survey a crop every week, every day, or even every hour. Combined to create a time-series animation, that imagery can show changes in the crop, revealing trouble spots or opportunities for better crop management. ......... a trend toward increasingly data-driven agriculture. ..... We expect 9.6 billion people to call Earth home by 2050. All of them need to be fed. ...... More and better data can reduce water use and lower the chemical load in our environment and our food. Seen this way, what started as a military technology may end up better known as a green-tech tool, and our kids will grow up used to flying robots buzzing over farms like tiny crop dusters.
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- Ag Drones - Future and Present
Don't Push Me, I Am On The Edge
Agricultural Drones Relatively cheap drones with advanced sensors and imaging capabilities are giving farmers new ways to increase yields and reduce crop damage.
Ultraprivate Smartphones New models built with security and privacy in mind reflect the Zeitgeist of the Snowden era.
Brain Mapping A new map, a decade in the works, shows structures of the brain in far greater detail than ever before, providing neuroscientists with a guide to its immense complexity.
Neuromorphic Chips Microprocessors configured more like brains than traditional chips could soon make computers far more astute about what’s going on around them.
Genome Editing The ability to create primates with intentional mutations could provide powerful new ways to study complex and genetically baffling brain disorders.
Microscale 3-D Printing Inks made from different types of materials, precisely applied, are greatly expanding the kinds of things that can be printed.
Mobile Collaboration The smartphone era is finally getting the productivity software it needs.
Oculus Rift Thirty years after virtual-reality goggles and immersive virtual worlds made their debut, the technology finally seems poised for widespread use.
Agile Robots Computer scientists have created machines that have the balance and agility to walk and run across rough and uneven terrain, making them far more useful in navigating human environments.
Smart Wind and Solar Power Big data and artificial intelligence are producing ultra-accurate forecasts that will make it feasible to integrate much more renewable energy into the grid.
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- MIT ranking of 10 New Breakthrough Technologies in 2014
- MIT Lists its 10 Breakthrough Technologies for 2014 - Part 1
- New Computer Chip Works Like Brain...
- Powerful and Efficient 'Neuromorphic' Chip Works Like a Brain
- IBM cracks open a new era of computing with brain-like chip: 4096 cores, 1 million neurons, 5.4 billion transistors
- IBM reveals "brain-like" chip with 4,096 cores
- 404 - IBM Develops a New Chip That Functions Like a Brain
- IBM has integrated the TrueNorth chips into 16 million neuron system and are targeting a 4 billion neuron system in a rack and DARPA plans robots with neuromorphic chips
- IBM Unveils a 'Brain-Like' Chip With 4,000 Processor Cores
- New human brain-like computer chip to power drones
Robotic Farming
This robot blends in. It looks like a small tractor.
A Nimble-Wheeled Farm Robot Goes to Work in Minnesota
A Nimble-Wheeled Farm Robot Goes to Work in Minnesota
Corn is planted on 100 million acres in the United States, and nitrogen fertilizer runoff is a major pollution problem. .... GPS-guided tractors routinely apply seed and fertilizer across large areas, and new airborne drones are providing farmers with high-resolution sensing ability ..... the ability to apply fertilizer at precise times and locations is “very critical.” ..... The next step is to deploy multiple Rowbots on industrial-scale farms, and to add more sensing capacity to the machines. The company is also testing using them for planting seed on cornfields for fall crops, called cover crops, while the mature corn is still standing.Agricultural Drones
the vanguard of farmers who are using what was once military aviation technology to grow better grapes using pictures from the air, part of a broader trend of using sensors and robotics to bring big data to precision agriculture.
Related articles
- Can Big Ag Put the Cloud in the Crops Before Someone Else Does?
- Crop dusters battle stereotypes as they thrive with expanded roles in agriculture
- Agricultural UAV's and crop analysis
- Akron company builds drones for farm use
- The Roomba of the Cornfield
- Robot tractors and drones seen in futurist's vision of farming
- Farmers Navigate Privacy Concerns Of Monsanto's Data Program
- An Akron startup, Event 38, is bringing drone technology down on the farm
- How flying robots can increase your yields?
Sapphire Screens
I believe that 11% figure. It is probably an underestimate. A phone case is also a solution, the one I use.
Sapphire Screens Would Test Apple’s Manufacturing and Design Skills
Sapphire Screens Would Test Apple’s Manufacturing and Design Skills
According to one estimate, 11 percent of all iPhones have cracked screens. ..... virtually unscratchable, unbreakable screens could make for a compelling marketing campaign. .... The company’s decision to invest about $700 million in an industrial sapphire plant in Arizona starting last year has added considerable weight to the theory. ..... Sapphire is already used in small amounts to make scratch-resistant screens for luxury watches, and Apple uses small pieces of sapphire to protect the camera and the home button on the iPhone 5S. .... sapphire’s high cost has limited its applications; although new ways of growing sapphire crystals have made it cheaper to produce in recent years, it’s still roughly five times more expensive than toughened glass. ..... second only to diamond on a standard scale of hardness ..... Some types of cutting and polishing can introduce defects into the material that make it easier to break than glass.
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- The Truth About Sapphire, The Insanely Hard Material Apple May Use For The iPhone 6 Screen
- Sapphire vs Corning's Gorilla Glass: what is sapphire and is it really tougher?
- Glass warfare: Why unscratchable sapphire screens have Corning beating its chest
- Unbreakable, Unscratchable: Sapphire Glass to Replace Gorilla
- Corning's Gorilla Glass Might Have Gotten a Big Win Versus Sapphire
- iPhone 6 Sapphire Display Confirmed? Expert Who Spoke To Apple Claims Rumors Are True
Thursday, September 04, 2014
Wednesday, September 03, 2014
Tuesday, September 02, 2014
Big Data On The Way
By 2020, about 1.7 megabytes of new information will be created every second for every human being on the planet, according to the annual IDC Digital Universe study. At that point, the world will be looking at digital knowledge in the neighborhood of 44 zettabytes, or 44 trillion gigabytes, up from just 4.4 zettabytes today. (While the sheer scale of this expanding universe is impressive, it’s worth recalling that we sent astronauts to the moon and back using computers with only 2 kilobytes of RAM.)
Source
Sunday, August 31, 2014
Saturday, August 30, 2014
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