Aug 11

I love the idea of vertical forests (and vertical farms).

I love the idea of vertical forests (and vertical farms). My short story “Vegetation” is the only place I’ve explored it so far, but I plan to return to the idea.

Originally shared by Greg Batmarx

Air pollution is the single biggest environmental health risk the world faces today, with outdoor pollution linked to 3 million deaths every year.

It’s no wonder designers and engineers are racing to come up with all kinds of air-purifying solutions, from smog-sucking towers and bikes to moss-covered walls. But one of the most impressive ideas so far can be found in Milan, Italy, the design capital of the world and one of the most polluted cities in Europe.

The brainchild of Italian architect *Stefano Boeri, Bosco Verticale (meaning “Vertical Forest”) is the concept of residential high-rises packed with greenery, which can help cities build for density while improving air quality.

The first “vertical forests” were realized in 2014 in the Porta Nuova Isola area of Milan, where two towers, with over 100 apartments between them, together host nearly 500 medium and large trees, 300 small trees, 5,000 shrubs, and 11,000 plants.

The science is simple: trees are the cheapest and most efficient way to absorb carbon dioxide. The 20,000 trees and plants across this pair of towers can transform approximately 44,000 pounds of carbon dioxide into oxygen each year.

Trees, a perennial gift from nature, can also keep temperatures cool indoors and filter out fine dust particles and noise pollution from traffic below.

The logistics of making it all happen, however, were a lot more complex. The process began with bringing together experts in structural engineering and botany to answer all the essential questions.

For example: how can a tree resist extremely windy conditions at 400 feet in the air? Engineers then had to devise a way to secure the roots of the plants in their containers while making sure they could be properly watered and fertilized.

Laura Gatti an architectural botanist on the project, also conducted a three-year study about local plants to determine which species would survive the conditions of the towers. And, of course, even after they’ve been planted, the trees need regular maintenance.

That’s done by a team of aerial arborists, who, like the familiar skyscraper window washers, make their way up and down the buildings, inspecting and grooming the vegetation.

As cities continue to grapple with air pollution, housing shortages, and climate change, these vertical forests could very well be the residential typology we need for the future. And you can certainly expect to see more of them.

I really hope many other architects, many other urban planners, many politicians will be in condition to replicate and improve what we have done Boeri tells us.

His firm itself is currently working on new vertical forests across Europe and in China, including an ambitious “Forest City” in the city of Nanjing.

Meanwhile, similar projects are being proposed and developed all the time, from a spiraling high-rise in Taiwan that is expected to contain 23,000 trees when complete to new tree-tower variations in Toronto and Bogota, to name a few.

https://www.theverge.com/2017/8/9/16112758/milan-vertical-forest-stefano-boeri-video

Aug 11

Manufacturing productivity, measured as value added per worker, has increased immensely in recent years thanks to a…

Manufacturing productivity, measured as value added per worker, has increased immensely in recent years thanks to a number of key technologies all improving at once. This article explains how.

Not in the article: This is good news primarily for the people who own the means of production, since they have positioned themselves to keep the benefits of the increased productivity largely to themselves. Ironically, they defend this by claiming to be “job creators”.

It does mean that manufactured goods are rapidly dropping in price, though. Which is a mixed blessing; lots more stuff isn’t necessarily a good thing, but some of it is genuinely useful.

It reminds me of The Economy of Machinery and Manufactures by Charles Babbage (the Difference Engine guy), which is a book I recommend reading if you’re interested in industrialism. Writing in the 1830s, he demonstrated with tables of figures how rapidly the price of manufactured goods had dropped recently, and provided an insightful analysis into why that was. It’s on Project Gutenburg.

Originally shared by Singularity Hub

Exponential technologies have helped manufacturing productivity double over construction productivity.

http://suhub.co/2vVsKTb

Aug 02

now that’s geoengineering: There is a proposal to use about 9% of the oceans surface for massive kelp farms.

Originally shared by Gregor J. Rothfuss

now that’s geoengineering: There is a proposal to use about 9% of the oceans surface for massive kelp farms. The Ocean surface area is about 36 billion hectares. This would offset all CO2 production and provide 0.5 kg of fish and sea vegetables per person per day for 10 billion people as an “incidental” by-product. Nine per cent of the world’s oceans would be equivalent to about four and a half times the area of Australia.

https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2017/07/so-long-global-warming-and-thanks-for-all-of-the-fish.html

Jul 31

Lots and lots of story fodder here.

Lots and lots of story fodder here. Genetic haves and have-nots, the debate over modifying people who have already been born versus modifying embryos, whether the modifications should be heritable…

I have a story (not currently on submission; the story part needs more work) based on a world in which “gene Amish” refuse genetic treatments, making them vulnerable to bioterrorism.

Originally shared by Singularity Hub

The Era of Human Gene Editing Is Here—What Happens Next Is Critical http://suhub.co/2vYb4D7

Jul 31

If you understand nutrition at all, there’s an obvious flaw here: because it’s producing only hydrocarbons, this…

If you understand nutrition at all, there’s an obvious flaw here: because it’s producing only hydrocarbons, this process – if it really works – produces only macronutrients (fats, proteins, and carbohydrates). In order to be healthy, organisms also require micronutrients like vitamins, minerals, and various phytochemicals.

Still, this would make a big difference in, for example, space, where shipping food is extremely expensive. If it works, that is.

Originally shared by Tom Eigelsbach

The method releases food production from restrictions related to the environment. The protein can be produced anywhere renewable energy, such as solar energy, is available. The entire process requires only electricity, water, carbon dioxide, and microbes. Only the required amount of fertilizer-like nutrients is used in the closed process. After exposing the raw materials to electrolysis in a bioreactor, the mixture is very nutritious, with more than 50% protein and 25% carbohydrates. The rest is fats and nucleic acids.

According to estimates by the researchers, the process of creating food from electricity can be nearly 10 times as energy-efficient as common photosynthesis, which is used for cultivation of soy and other products. For the product to be competitive, the production process must become even more efficient. Currently, the production of one gram of protein takes around two weeks, using laboratory equipment that is about the size of a coffee cup.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/07/170719090025.htm

Jul 31

“The end point is predictably an entirely nonhuman – though very efficient – technological entity derived from…

“The end point is predictably an entirely nonhuman – though very efficient – technological entity derived from humanity that doesn’t necessarily serve a purpose that a modern-day human would value in any way.”

A much-needed cautionary piece.

Originally shared by CM Stewart

“There is unlikely to be a clear moment when we emerge as transhuman. Rather technologies will become more intrusive and integrate seamlessly with the human body. Technology has long been thought of as an extension of the self. Many aspects of our social world, not least our financial systems, are already largely machine-based. There is much to learn from these evolving human/machine hybrid systems.”

#transhumanism

http://theconversation.com/super-intelligence-and-eternal-life-transhumanisms-faithful-follow-it-blindly-into-a-future-for-the-elite-78538

Jul 31

This is potentially huge.

This is potentially huge. Imagine being able to implant an artificial pancreas in a diabetic, or a new organ that helped to balance neurochemistry or hormones. Also, spit on a piece of paper to be diagnosed, or (after recovering from cancer) have an implanted monitor to alert you to the first signs of its return.

Originally shared by CM Stewart

“…living programmable ‘ribocomputing’ device based on networks of precisely designed, self-assembling synthetic RNAs (ribonucleic acid). The RNAs can sense multiple biosignals and make logical decisions to control protein production with high precision…the synthetic biological circuits could be used to produce drugs, fine chemicals, and biofuels or detect disease-causing agents and release therapeutic molecules inside the body.”

http://www.kurzweilai.net/a-living-programmable-biocomputing-device-based-on-rna