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Nina Nadine Ridder

Smart grids - The IET - 0 views

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    talk about European Technology Platform SmartGrids in Paris on the 7th Sep, 19h
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    in case somebody is in Paris on the 7th Sep. - sounds quite interesting
Joris _

NASA Developing Tech to Reach and Colonize Other Worlds | Gadget Lab | Wired.com - 4 views

  • The most important near-term development is electric propulsion.
  • using high-density batteries powered off ground-based solar grids
  • microwave thermal propulsion
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    "Within a few years we will see the first true prototype of a spaceship that will take us between worlds," Worden said. this sounds to me a bit too much like Pete Worden :-) but I really like this one :-) One of those billionaires might be Google's Larry Page, who is keenly interested in space travel and NASA Ames's research. "Larry asked me a couple weeks ago how much it would cost to send people one way to Mars and I told him $10 billion, and his response was, 'Can you get it down to 1 or 2 billion?,'" Worden told the Long Now audience. "So now we're starting to get a little argument over the price."
nikolas smyrlakis

Europe's Ambitious 'Green Grid' Plan - BusinessWeek - 2 views

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    The cables would link existing and new windmills off the German and British coasts with Belgian and Danish tidal power stations and Norwegian hydroelectric plants. The €30-billion project would compensate for the irregular nature of renewable energy and provide a steady flow to the countries involved.
Tobias Seidl

Evidence for grid cells in a human memory network : Article : Nature - 2 views

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    This is the community that states mammals have cognitive maps. Good work, especially by the Moser-couple.
Juxi Leitner

Networked Networks Are Prone to Epic Failure | Wired Science | Wired.com - 1 views

  • The interconnections fueled a cascading effect, with the failures coursing back and forth. A damaged node in the first network would pull down nodes in the second, which crashed nodes in the first, which brought down more in the second, and so on. And when they looked at data from a 2003 Italian power blackout, in which the electrical grid was linked to the computer network that controlled it, the patterns matched their models’ math.
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    that would be an interesting "Systems of Systems" study for once ...
Nicholas Lan

Betting on Green - 5 views

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    breakthroughs vs. accelerated deployment in climate change mitigation technologies.
  • ...2 more comments...
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    interesting guy indeed ... "Forget today's green technologies like electric cars, wind turbines, solar cells and smart grids, in other words. None meets what Mr Khosla calls the "Chindia price"-the price at which people in China and India will buy them without a subsidy. "Everything's a toy until it reaches that point," he says. I also like this one since its a bit like ACT topic selection: ""I am only interested in technologies that have a 90% chance of failure but, if they do succeed, would change the infrastructure of society in some radical way," he says." should we propose SPS to him ? :-)
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    one more: ""I never compute returns. If you start forecasting cash flows, you lose innovation, you lose instinct. You average yourself down to mediocrity." "I've had many more failures than successes in my life," admits Mr Khosla. "My willingness to fail gives me the ability to succeed."
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    indeed. puts me in mind of the often reinvented private ACT idea. actually there's a bunch of interesting looking articles on his website. http://www.khoslaventures.com/khosla/papers.html . No sps in the solar one as far as i can tell :) found this bit intriguing too in that, albeit presumably out of context, it doesn't make sense ""The solution to our energy problems is almost the exact opposite of what Khosla says," declares Joseph Romm, who is the editor of Climate Progress, an influential climate blog, and a senior fellow at the Centre for American Progress Action Fund, a think-tank. "Technology breakthroughs are unlikely to be the answer. Accelerated deployment of existing technologies will get you down the cost curve much more rapidly than a breakthrough."" found this seemingly not very well considered piece (to be fair a blog post) by the guy http://climateprogress.org/2010/07/02/is-anyone-more-incoherent-than-vinod-khosla/ . maybe he's written some more convincing stuff in this vein somewhere.
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    "Mr Khosla (...) is investing over $1 billion of his clients' money in black swans" Well, with his own money his approach might be a little different :-)
ESA ACT

IBM puts its talents to green use - 29 Oct 2007 - BusinessGreen - 0 views

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    interview with the head of the "big greed innovations" - nothing spectacularly new though ...
pacome delva

Smart Grid archive at From Edison's Desk - GE Global Research Blog - 0 views

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    Cool blog
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ESA ACT

Grid computing to combat global warming - ZDNet UK - 0 views

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    distributed computing of distributed electricity sources...
ESA ACT

Solar Company Says Its Tech Can Power 90 Percent of Grid and Cars | Wired Science from ... - 0 views

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    interesting energy/SPS paper
Thijs Versloot

Cheap materials could make grid battery storage feasible @techreview @nature - 0 views

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    The new battery, which is described in the journal Nature, is based on an organic molecule-called a quinone-that's found in plants such as rhubarb and can be cheaply synthesized from crude oil.
Marcus Maertens

The Grid - 1 views

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    Let an AI build up your web page for just 96$ per year!
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    Amazing! Not even coding jobs are safe from AI anymore! AI programming will be the last bastion in the struggle against automation. Get ready :)
jaihobah

Artificial Neural Nets Grow Brainlike Navigation Cells - 0 views

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    Faced with a navigational challenge, neural networks spontaneously evolved units resembling the grid cells that help living animals find their way.
pablo_gomez

Penrose Tiling Remixed - Penrose-Voronoi Tiling by Jessica In and Max Cooper - 0 views

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    I wonder if this could be used for irregular adaptive grids? From the description: "One application of the diagram is the idea of Voronoi entropy - a mathematical tool for quantitative characterisation of the orderliness of points distributed on a surface - i.e. how visually 'ordered' the tessellation is. I found this idea particularly fascinating especially when thinking about the aperiodicity and the infinite structure of the Penrose tiling. In these visuals, the Voronoi diagram is created using the vertices of the Penrose as its seed points. This creates a new type of Penrose Tiling, clearly different from the classical Penrose, however still exhibiting the fivefold structure of the original, while 'defects' begin to appear at the peripheries."
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