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Archive for the ‘innovation’ category: Page 181

Apr 19, 2016

Student Innovation Project Fair (SIP Fair)

Posted by in categories: education, innovation

The Student Innovation Project, or SIP, gives students a chance to develop an innovative idea and put their creativity to work.

As soon as their sophomore year, students are asked to begin brainstorming for their SIP, and also have two classes that help students prepare for their project. Students take PRO211, taught by Professor Vita-Moore, and PRO 483, taught by Professor Belanger.

During senior year, students use most of the time to work on the SIP, constructing a working model that will later be judged at the SIP Fair by UAT Faculty and local industry leaders for feedback.

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Apr 14, 2016

Light-Speed Computers? Discovery of a New Platinum-Tin Metal Could Make Them So

Posted by in categories: computing, innovation

The breakthrough could change gadgets for good.

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Apr 12, 2016

Watch Stephen Hawking Deliver a Mysterious Announcement on Space Exploration

Posted by in categories: innovation, space travel

Stephen Hawking will be making a big announcement today about space exploration. What will it be? Find out at noon, EST.

Hawking and Yuri Milner of the Breakthrough Prize have been building up to an announcement on Project Starshot. So far, the only thing known about the new project is that it has to do with space exploration.

But what’s Hawking’s big reveal about the project? No one knows yet—but it’ll be streaming live right here at noon, EST. Watch along with us.

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Apr 12, 2016

$100-Million Plan Will Send Probes to the Nearest Star

Posted by in category: innovation

Funded by Russian entrepreneur Yuri Milner and with the blessing of Stephen Hawking, Breakthrough Starshot aims to send probes to Alpha Centauri in a generation.

By Lee Billings on April 12, 2016.

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Apr 6, 2016

Canadians to develop space mining tool

Posted by in categories: innovation, space

Could benefit China and their own efforts in 2017.


Deltion Innovations aims to design a drill that would prospect for water, ice and resources on the moon and beyond.

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Apr 5, 2016

Taiwanese research institute is wrapped in an undulating skin of 4,000 aluminum fins

Posted by in categories: energy, innovation

Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI) is located at Central Taiwan Innovation and Research Park in Nantou, Taiwan. It is expected to become the central facility of the Science Park to be built in this region. Noiz Architects and Bio Architecture Formosana won the competition to design the building in 2010. During the development phase, the project site had to be relocated once during the design development phase, and the construction finally completed in September 2014.

Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI), research institute, Taiwan, Science Park, Central Taiwan Innovation and Research Park, green research facility, Noiz Architects, Bio Architecture Formosana, ARUP, kinetic facade, shade fins, aluminium fins, curtain walls

Related: Japanese research center fuses natural design elements with energy efficiency.

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Apr 5, 2016

Will this breakthrough see an electric car in every driveway?

Posted by in categories: innovation, transportation

Electric car batteries are getting cheaper.


Will we all drive electric cars one day? http://wef.ch/1MaNk4I

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Apr 3, 2016

Tesla Unveils Model 3 | Tesla Motors

Posted by in categories: automation, business, Elon Musk, energy, innovation, robotics/AI, science, sustainability, transportation

Apr 2, 2016

Mind-boggling Fungi Mutuarium turns plastic waste into edible mushrooms | Inhabitat — Green Design, Innovation, Architecture, Green Building

Posted by in categories: food, innovation

Researchers have created an edible treat from plastic waste. For real.

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Mar 30, 2016

Reaching for the stars: How lasers could propel spacecraft to relativistic speeds

Posted by in categories: innovation, space travel

In a bold but scientifically sound proposal, NASA-funded research has laid out a roadmap toward spacecraft with relativistic speeds for the exploration of nearby stars (Credit: NASA). View gallery (8 images)

How do you send man-made probes to a nearby star? According to NASA-funded research at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), the answer is simple: assemble a laser array the size of Manhattan in low Earth orbit, and use it to push tiny probes to 26 percent the speed of light. Though the endeavour may raise a few eyebrows, it relies on well-established science – and recent technological breakthroughs have put it within our reach.

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