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Ruth Howard

HP Invents a Central Nervous System for the Earth | Inhabitat - 4 views

  • HP has just unveiled an incredibly ambitious project to create a “Central Nervous System for the Earth” (CeNSE) composed of billions of super sensitive, cheap, and tough sensors. The project involves distributing these sensors throughout the world and using them to gather data that could be used to detect everything from infrastructure collapse to environmental pollutants to climate change and impending earthquakes. From there, the “Internet of Things” and smarter cities are right around the corner.HP is currently developing its first sensor to be deployed, which is an accelerometer 1,000 times more sensitive than those used in the Wii or the iPhone – it’s capable of detecting motion and vibrations as subtle as a heartbeat. The company also has plans to use nanomaterials to create chemical and biological sensors that are 100 million times more sensitive than current models. Their overall goal is to use advances in sensitivity and nanotech to shrink the size of these devices so that they are small enough to clip onto a mobile telephone.Once HP has created an array of sensors, the next step is distributing them and making sense of all the data they generate. That’s no easy task, granted that a network of one million sensors running 24 hours a day would create 20 petabytes of data in just six months. HP is taking all that number crunching to task however, and will be harnessing its in-house networking expertise, consulting, and data storage technologies for the project.The creation of a global sensor system would be an incredible breakthrough – it could make our cities more efficient, save lives, and enable us to better understand, track, and combat climate change. As HP Labs senior researcher Peter Hartwell has stated, “If we’re going to save the planet, we’ve got to monitor it“.+ CeNSEVia Fast CompanyLead photo by Margie Wylie Comments RSS Comments RSS digg_url = 'http://www.inhabitat.com/2010/02/18/hp-invents-a-central-nervous-system-for-the-earth/'; digg_title = 'HP Invents a Central Nervous System for the Earth'; digg_skin = 'compact'; email this tweetmeme_url = "http://www.inhabitat.com/2010/02/18/hp-invents-a-central-nervous-system-for-the-earth/"; tweetmeme_style = "compact"; facebook this Related Posts
David Wetzel

Little Know Ways to Support Earth Day - 5 views

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    Earth Day is around the corner - April 22nd - and every year teachers and students try to come up with new and innovative activities. Recycling is a popular activity to keep the idea recycling going strong. Classrooms often come up with ideas to recycle paper, ink cartridges, plastic bottles, metal cans, and newspapers. However, there are other recycling activities that students can get involved in to support Earth Day.
Vicki Davis

Earth Day - Resources - TES - 4 views

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    Earth Day is April 22. Here are lesson plans for Earth Day that you can then use to tie into Arbor Day the next week. Environment, sustainability are both important topics that should be discussed in every school.
David Wetzel

Earth Day Activities: Environmental Uses of Phone Books - 9 views

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    Earth day activities designed to use phone books for a variety of purposes around the home to keep them out of the land fill.
Carla Arena

Earth Day 08 - 0 views

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    Tomorrow is Worldbridges Webcastathon http://worldbridges.net/ to celebrate earth day. Get Inspired by Sasha's post and join the team to share your earthly or dream views!
Pam Shoemaker

enviroscims » Earth Day - 0 views

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    Tune in on April 22, 2008! View the guests of the 24-hour Earth Day Webcastathon!
Martin Burrett

Michael, Michael, Go Recycle! - 11 views

Ben W

evolution - what next? - 0 views

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    A flash-based timeline going from the big bang up to the present day. Details life on Earth and more recent eras. Very visual and informative
Vicki Davis

Hangout With Explorers of Land, Sea, and Sky on Earth Day - News Watch - 7 views

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    Science and elementary teachers CAN'TMISS THIS. Every hour on earthday will mark another hangout by National Geographic with scientists and all kidsof amazing people. Get in on this! This is one of those things to forward!! 'This year National Geographic celebrates its 125th anniversary and a long legacy of exploration, conservation, and research. Every hour of every day, National Geographic explorers take to land, sea, and sky (each frontier represented by a colored band on National Geographic's historic flag) trying to uncover, understand, or help care for the world around us.
Jennifer Garcia

The Children's University of Manchester - 2 views

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    Manchester science Earth and beyond. a great interactive site for studying the solar system, shadows, day and night and more
Martin Burrett

The Earth and Beyond - 7 views

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    A great set of interactive space resources. Learn about day and night, orbits, phases of the moon and more. Choose a topic from the menu and explore with your class. http://ictmagic.wikispaces.com/Science
Claude Almansi

The Last Man on Earth (with Audio Description) - YouTube - 0 views

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    "Uploaded by moviesfortheblind1 on Aug 16, 2011 Audio description added for people who are vision-impaired or learning English: Vincent Price stars as a survivor of a worldwide plague, spending his days trying to protect himself against victims who have risen from the grave. Contains violence. 1964. Edited audio version in Movies For the Blind episodes 26 and 27. Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 moviesfortheblind.com"
Ted Sakshaug

The Sundial Primer - Sunny Day U - Make a Horizontal Sundial - Graphical Method - 0 views

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    making a horizontal sundial. Need protractor, drawing compass and magnetic compass
Vicki Davis

Earth Day - 22nd April - Blogging4Educators - 0 views

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    What some teachers are doing for earthday - April 22nd -- some good ideas.
Dean Mantz

earthbridges - home - 2 views

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    Earth Day resources and collaborative projects via Earthbridges wiki.
yc c

MODIS Rapid Response System - 5 views

  • The MODIS Rapid Response System generates complete mosaic images of the Arctic every day at 4km, 2km, 1km resolutions. The mosaic is composed of smaller image tiles, which are available individually at 250 m, 500 m, 1 km, 2 km, and 4 km resolutions.
  • A large collection of MODIS Rapid response imagery can be found in the Earth Observatory's Natural Hazards section, with captions that provide pertinent information about each image.
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    The MODIS Rapid Response System was developed to provide daily satellite images of the Earth's landmasses in near real time.
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