You should apply a steep hype discount to any article by Peter Diamandis. But his pieces do point in interesting directions, even if they fail to mention any of the many problems involved. In this case, there are doubtless numerous problems involved in setting up these systems (and paying for them), and many issues, as well as opportunities, that will inevitably arise when several billion internet n00bs from impoverished countries are suddenly among us.
But there, at the intersection of opportunity and problem, is where the stories live.
created by lazzarini, it successfully combines a retro aesthetic with futuristic technology to create a vision of what a future with flying automobiles may be.
SF becomes fact: sprayable sensors. “Using tiny 2-D materials, researchers have built microscopic chemical sensors that can be sprayed in an aerosol mist. Spritzes of such minuscule electronic chips, described online July 23 in Nature Nanotechnology, could one day help monitor environmental pollution or diagnose diseases.
Each sensor comprises a polymer chip about 1 micrometer thick and 100 micrometers across (about as wide as a human hair) overlaid with a circuit made with atomically thin semiconducting materials (SN Online: 2/13/18). This superflat circuit includes a photodiode, which converts ambient light into electric current, and a chemical detector. This chemical detector is composed of a 2-D material that conducts electric current more easily if the material binds with a specific chemical in its environment.
[…]
Right now, researchers can determine whether their sensors have come in contact with certain particles only after the fact — by collecting the chips and hooking them up to electrodes. These electrodes test how easily electric current flows through a chip’s chemical detector, which reveals whether it touched a particular chemical after it was sprayed. But future sensors could emit light signals when in contact with target particles, says study coauthor Michael Strano, a chemical engineer at MIT.”
I am a New Zealander married to an American, living in New Zealand. By complete and total coincidence, my brother-in-law (my wife’s sister’s husband) is a New Zealander married to an American, living in the US. There’s a family story about how he claimed, while they were playing the game Therapy, to be the most emotionally stable person in the family – pretty much because his standard of “emotionally stable” was based on New Zealand, not California.
What emotional expression is within acceptable ranges, how it’s expressed, how it’s evaluated, under what circumstances it can be expressed, what it’s considered reasonable to expect out of life – all of these things are highly culture-dependent. So what happens when multinational corporations (mostly, though not entirely, based in the US) start creating emotional management applications that are used around the world?
If you fancy trying your luck with the Random Penguin House…
Be aware: I have seen books from them with bad copy editing. There are probably badly promoted books, too, but by the nature of things I haven’t seen those.
Just because they’re big doesn’t mean you’ll get more help. It does mean you’ll get a smaller proportion of the money than you would from self-pub or from many small presses. But it might… might… get you more visibility.
These women are tough, dedicated, skilled, and “not corruptible”.
Originally shared by Kam-Yung Soh
Woah. Don’t mess with these rangers. “Mander said Akashinga is a departure from the male-centric military and special-ops world in which he has long operated — what he calls “one of the ultimate boys’ clubs” — and his newer realm of conservation rangers, where the male-to-female ratio is 100 to 1.
To build his Akashinga team Mander, who had not previously trained women, sought applicants from among the most vulnerable females in rural areas. He recruited abuse survivors, abandoned wives, orphans, sex workers and single mothers — women who, he said, “weren’t victims of circumstance; they were victims of men.” Also joining the team this past December was Vimbai Kumire, the youngest daughter of Zimbabwe’s president Emmerson Mnangagwa, reportedly as a show of her support for the women and their role in rebuilding the country.
[…]
The Akashinga recruits initially “went through 72 hours of hell,” said Mander, but only three of 37 women who entered the program dropped off after those first three days. They continued through the same paces as male rangers who train for anti-poaching work and completed an extensive program that covers camouflage and concealment, conservation ethics, crime scene preservation and crisis management. In Akashinga, they also learn how to deal with dangerous wildlife, democratic policing, firearm safety and proper use, first aid, human rights, information gathering techniques, leadership, patrolling, search and arrest, and unarmed combat.
The discipline the women displayed every day of training, and since, is also seen in their diet. All are vegans — a commitment they made to themselves and to the terms of Akashinga.
[…]
What matters, Mander said, are results, and so far their efforts are paying off. As of this writing, the Akashinga team has about 60 arrests, which have resulted in more than 41 years of jail sentences. Recent actions resulted in arrests for serious crimes related to ivory smuggling, zebra poaching and sable antelope snaring.
Mander said Akashinga has been “more effective than anything I’ve seen.” He noted too that the women have an uncanny ability to “de-escalate everything.””