Tag: Space

  • Cri8Hub Heavy Stainless Steel Kitchen Rack, Kitchen Organizer and Space Saver, Counter top Stand 2-Tier Trolley Basket for Boxes Utensils Dishes Plates for Home.

    Cri8Hub Heavy Stainless Steel Kitchen Rack, Kitchen Organizer and Space Saver, Counter top Stand 2-Tier Trolley Basket for Boxes Utensils Dishes Plates for Home.

    51s+DH6kiFL513ua3gOXNL41LRlU2r6LL41uhQV KOoL
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]

    Heavy 100% Stainless steel 2-Tier Kitchen Rack
    MATERIAL: Constructed of durable steel with a gleaming chrome finish, the stylish two-shelf shelving unit offers the best of both rugged reliability and modern appeal!
    SMART STORAGE: Use anywhere you need to keep food, pantry and kitchen items organized; Perfect for organizing pasta, packets, extra supplies of salt, dressing and vinegar, macaroni and cheese boxes, baking supplies, condiments and more; These bins also work in any room of your home!
    FUNCTIONAL & VERSATILE: The perfect solution for organizing a multitude of items – such as video games, bath soaps, shampoos, conditioners, linens, towels, laundry needs, craft supplies and more; Use in bathroom, bedroom, closet, laundry room, utility room, garage, hobby and craft room, home office, mudroom and entryways; Perfect for homes, apartments, condos, college dorm rooms, RVs and campers
    2 SHELVES : This trolley has 2 shelves, which makes it large enough to store many things at a time!

    [ad_2]
    #Cri8Hub #Heavy #Stainless #Steel #Kitchen #Rack #Kitchen #Organizer #Space #Saver #Counter #top #Stand #2Tier #Trolley #Basket #Boxes #Utensils #Dishes #Plates #Home

  • Union Cabinet gives nod to Indian Space Policy, 2023

    Union Cabinet gives nod to Indian Space Policy, 2023

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: The Union Cabinet on Thursday approved the Indian Space Policy, 2023 under which roles and responsibilities of organisations such as ISRO, NewSpace India Limited and private sector entities have been laid down.

    The government had earlier opened up the space sector for the private sector to help boost the development of the segment.

    “In brief, it will offer clarity in the role of the components set up (in the recent past),” Union Minister Jitendra Singh told reporters here.

    MS Education Academy

    He said the policy would aim to enhance the role of the Department of Space, boost activities of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) missions and give a larger participation of research, academia, startups and industry.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Union #Cabinet #nod #Indian #Space #Policy

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Total office space occupied in Hyderabad reaches 1.4 mil sq.ft in Q1

    Total office space occupied in Hyderabad reaches 1.4 mil sq.ft in Q1

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: Coldwell Banker Richard Ellis (CBRE), a commercial real estate services and investment firm’s latest report stated that in the first quarter (Q1) of 2023, the total office space occupied in the city reached 1.4 million square feet.

    Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI) sector, technology and flexible office space operators drove the absorption of office spaces in the city, the report said.

    The report reveals that the office leasing activity has increased by 9 per cent Year-over-Year (YoY) and reached 12.6 million square feet in India.

    MS Education Academy

    Bangalore, Delhi- NCR and Chennai account for 62 per cent of the activity.

    Managing director, of Advisory and Transaction Services, CBRE, Ram Chandnani said that Hyderabad is expected to continue to drive absorption in the office space sector keeping in line with past trends.

    The report also informed that domestic firms overtook American firms accounting for nearly 50 per cent of the leasing activity in the last quarter.

    The key sectors that took the office space absorption in Hyderabad in Q1 2023, are BFSI with 42 per cent, technology with 28 per cent and flexible space operators with 13 per cent.

    According to the report, office space by small-sized deals, less than 50,000 square feet drove the absorption.

    A BSFI first leased 3,40,000 square feet in Salarpuria Knowledge City, Warner Bros. Discovery leased 120,000 square feet in International Tech Park and flexible space operators leased 97,000 square feet in Mindspace in the city from January – March, 2023.

    [ad_2]
    #Total #office #space #occupied #Hyderabad #reaches #mil #sq.ft

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • India moves one step closer to its own reusable rocket or ‘space shuttle’

    India moves one step closer to its own reusable rocket or ‘space shuttle’

    [ad_1]

    Chennai: India on Sunday moved a step ahead in getting its own reusable launch vehicle or reusable rocket (simply put similar to space shuttle) with the country’s space agency successfully completing the Reusable Launch Vehicle Autonomous Landing Mission (RLV LEX).

    The test was conducted at the Aeronautical Test Range (ATR), Chitradurga, Karnataka in the early hours on April 2, 2023.

    The Indian space agency said the adaptation of contemporary technologies developed for RLV LEX makes other operational rockets more cost-effective.

    MS Education Academy

    In a first in the world, a winged body has been carried to an altitude of 4.5 km by a helicopter and released for carrying out an autonomous landing on a runway.

    According to Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), the RLV took off at 7:10 a.m. IST by a Chinook Helicopter of the Indian Air Force as an underslung load and flew to a height of 4.5 km (above the mean seal level-MSL).

    Once the predetermined pillbox parameters were attained, based on the RLV’s Mission Management Computer command, the RLV was released in mid-air, at a down range of 4.6 km.

    The Indian space agency said the release conditions included 10 parameters covering position, velocity, altitude and body rates and others.

    The release of RLV was autonomous. RLV then performed approach and landing maneuvers using the integrated navigation, guidance & control system and completed an autonomous landing on the ATR air strip at 7:40 a.m. IST. With that, ISRO successfully achieved the autonomous landing of a space vehicle.

    The autonomous landing was carried out under the exact conditions of a Space Re-entry vehicle’s landing – high speed, unmanned, precise landing from the same return path – as if the vehicle arrives from space. Landing parameters such as ground relative velocity, the sink rate of landing gears, and precise body rates, as might be experienced by an orbital re-entry space vehicle in its return path, were achieved, ISRO said.

    The RLV LEX demanded several state-of-the-art technologies including accurate navigation hardware and software, pseudolite system, Ka-band Radar Altimeter, NavIC receiver, indigenous landing gear, aerofoil honey-comb fins and brake parachute system.

    RLV is essentially a space plane with a low lift to drag ratio requiring an approach at high glide angles that necessitated a landing at high velocities of 350 kmph.

    According to ISRO, the LEX had used several indigenous systems like the navigation systems based on pseudolite systems, instrumentation, and sensor systems and others developed by it.

    Digital Elevation Model (DEM) of the landing site with a Ka-band Radar Altimeter provided accurate altitude information.

    Extensive wind tunnel tests and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations enabled aerodynamic characterisation of RLV prior to the flight.

    ISRO had demonstrated the re-entry of its winged vehicle RLV-TD in the HEX mission in May 2016. The re-entry of a hypersonic sub-orbital vehicle marked a major accomplishment in developing reusable rockets.

    In HEX, the vehicle landed on a hypothetical runway over the Bay of Bengal. Precise landing on a runway was an aspect not included in the HEX mission.

    On Sunday, the LEX mission achieved the final approach phase that coincided with the re-entry return flight path exhibiting an autonomous, high speed (350 kmph) landing. The LEX began with an Integrated Navigation test in 2019 and followed multiple Engineering Model Trials and Captive Phase tests in subsequent years.

    [ad_2]
    #India #moves #step #closer #reusable #rocket #space #shuttle

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Tech layoffs, economic slowdown hamper office space demand in India

    Tech layoffs, economic slowdown hamper office space demand in India

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: Global economic slowdown, tech layoffs and hybrid work have impacted gross leasing of office space in India, as flexible office space providers share reached almost at par with traditional tech companies in the first quarter of 2023, a report has shown.

    Leasing by flex space operators in Q1 2023 inched closer to that of technology companies for the first time ever, according to the report by Colliers India.

    Flex space occupiers leased 2.1 million square feet of space, accounting for 20 per cent, a little behind the technology sector’s share at 22 per cent.

    MS Education Academy

    Together, both the sectors accounted for nearly 42 per cent of the total leasing across top six cities.

    “Share of technology sector has declined steadily from 34 per cent in Q1 2022 to 22 per cent in Q1 2023, as corporates continue to focus on building in operational efficiencies through a hybrid model,” said Peush Jain, Managing Director, Office services, India, Colliers.

    While Hybrid working has impacted demand for conventional office spaces, it has also fuelled demand for flex spaces across top markets.

    “As long-term growth drivers for the tech sector remain strong in India, the technology sector will continue to drive office leasing activity through a mix of conventional and flex spaces,” Jain added.

    Bengaluru and Delhi-NCR were the most preferred locations for top flex operators for their portfolio expansion.

    Bengaluru accounted for nearly half of the total flex leasing during the quarter, followed by Delhi-NCR at 30 per cent share.

    Occupiers’ interest in flex spaces remain unabated as they continue to blend their conventional real estate portfolio in a bid to control costs while providing convenient ways to work for their employees.

    Large technology occupiers have also been leasing spaces in flex spaces due to their added benefits such as flexible lease terms, lower capex and modern workplace designs, said the report.

    This coupled with ongoing recessionary conditions and layoffs in the technology sector has led to a relative pushback in conventional leasing by these occupiers.

    The year 2023 has begun on a cautious note registering a 19 per cent YoY decline in leasing activity across top 6 cities at 10.1 million square feet during the first quarter.

    “Although office absorption is currently facing temporary downward pressures, leasing activity will likely pick up especially towards the latter part of the year, driven by strong growth fundamentals,” said Vimal Nadar, Senior Director and Head of Research, Colliers India.

    [ad_2]
    #Tech #layoffs #economic #slowdown #hamper #office #space #demand #India

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Brussels to Berlin: We’ll find a way to save the car engine

    Brussels to Berlin: We’ll find a way to save the car engine

    [ad_1]

    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    On the future of the internal combustion engine, Germany has gotten its own way, again.

    The European Commission and Germany’s Transport Ministry announced a deal Saturday morning that commits the EU executive to figuring out a legal way to allow the sale of new engine-installed cars running exclusively on synthetic e-fuels even after a mandate comes into force requiring sales of only zero-emission vehicles from 2035.

    “We have found an agreement with Germany on the future use of e-fuels in cars,” the Commission’s Green Deal chief Frans Timmermans said on Twitter. “We will work now on getting the CO2 standards for cars regulation adopted as soon as possible.”

    The deal heads off a row over car legislation that was all-but-agreed until Germany, along with a small club of allies, slammed on the brakes just days before formal final approval on a law that is the centerpiece of the EU’s green agenda.

    Timmermans said the Commission would “follow up swiftly” with “legal steps” to turn a non-binding annex to the law, introduced originally at the insistence of Europe’s car-making titan Germany, into a concrete workaround allowing new vehicles running on e-fuels, which do emit some CO2, to be sold post-2035.

    As a first step, the Commission has agreed to carve out a new category of e-fuel-only vehicles inside the existing Euro 6 automotive rulebook and then integrate that classification into the contentious CO2 standards legislation that mandates the 2035 phase-out date for sales of new combustion-engine vehicles.

    The terms of the final deal from Timmermans’ cabinet chief Diederik Samsom, seen by POLITICO, say the Commission will reopen the text of the engine-ban law if EU lawmakers manage to stop the introduction of a technical annex that would make space for e-fuels alongside the agreed CO2 standards. Reopening the proposed law’s text is a move that is fundamentally opposed by the European Parliament and green-minded countries.

    The crux of the standoff was that Germany demanded binding legal language that would ensure the Commission would find a way to satisfy Berlin’s demands even if the European Parliament, or the courts, moved to block any tweaks or legal annexes to the 2035 zero-emissions legislation covering cars and vans.

    In the statement, Samsom promised the Commission will publish its full e-fuels proposal as a so-called delegated act this fall. In practice, that means the original 2035 legislation will pass at first — offering the European Commission a critical win — but it sets up a future fight over the technical additions needed to satisfy Berlin.

    “The law that 100 percent of cars sold after 2035 must be zero emissions will be voted unchanged by next Tuesday,” said Pascal Canfin, the French liberal lawmaker spearheading the file in the assembly. “Parliament will decide in due course on the Commission’s future proposals on e-fuels.”

    Engine endgame

    The deal means energy ministers can sign off on the original 2035 proposal during a meeting on Tuesday given that Berlin now has assurances that its demands will be met. In advance, EU ambassadors will review the bilateral deal between Brussels and Berlin on Monday, an EU diplomat said.

    The agreement caps a decade of German pushback on EU automotive emissions rule-making.

    In 2013, then-Chancellor Angela Merkel intervened late to water down previous iterations of car emission standards legislation, securing tweaks critical to the country’s hulking automotive industry.

    GettyImages 80231232
    The deal means Germany has effectively dropped its last-minute opposition to the car engine ban law | Sean Gallup/Getty Images

    Since the Volkswagen Dieselgate scandal, most carmakers have shifted their investments toward electric vehicles, but some industry interests, notably high-end carmakers such as Porsche and Germany’s web of combustion engine component makers, have sought to save traditional gas guzzlers from the clutches of a de facto EU sales ban.

    Figuring out a final workaround on e-fuels in the 2035 legislation will still take some months, given that technical standards haven’t yet been clarified for setting out a “robust and evasion-proof” system for selling cars that can only be fuelled on synthetic alternatives to petrol and diesel, according to Samsom’s statement.

    The timeline is already clear in Berlin’s perspective. “We want the process to be completed by autumn 2024,” said the German Transport Ministry, which is run by the country’s Free Democratic Party. The FDP, the most junior in Germany’s three-way governing coalition, had wanted fixed legal language to guarantee a loophole for e-fuels, which can theoretically be CO2-neutral but which wouldn’t normally comply with the emissions legislation since they do still emit tailpipe pollutants.

    With the FDP’s popularity tumbling, the car policy row with Brussels has been a popular talking point in German media over recent weeks. One survey reports that 67 percent of respondents are against the engine ban legislation. Ahead of national elections in late 2025, the FDP is betting on driver-friendly policies such as e-fuels, new road construction initiatives and a block on the implementation of a national highway speed limit, to raise its profile.

    Market watchers don’t anticipate e-fuels to offer much in the way of a mass-market alternative to electric vehicles, given that they are costly to produce and don’t exist in commercial volumes today. A study by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Research reports that even if all global e-fuel production was allocated to German consumers, the output would only meet a tenth of national demand in the aviation, maritime and chemical sectors by 2035.

    “E-fuels are an expensive and massively inefficient diversion from the transformation to electric facing Europe’s carmakers,” said Julia Poliscanova from the green group Transport & Environment.

    Auto politics

    Despite not being on the formal agenda, the issue dominated discussions on the sidelines of this week’s summit of EU leaders in Brussels. A deal between Brussels and Berlin was only struck at 9 p.m. on Friday, hours after leaders left the EU capital, before being formally announced on social media early Saturday.

    “The way is clear,” said German Transport Minister Volker Wissing in announcing the agreement. “We have secured opportunities for Europe by keeping important options open for climate-neutral and affordable mobility.”

    The deal means Germany has effectively dropped its last-minute opposition to the car engine ban law, collapsing a blocking minority of Italy, Poland, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic that had put a roadblock in front of final ratification by ministers of the deal reached last October between the three EU institutions. 

    It remains unclear whether Italy’s attempts to find a separate workaround for biofuels — promoted personally by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni at the summit — also succeeded. However, without Berlin’s support, Rome doesn’t have a way to block the legislation.

    GettyImages 1475247169
    German Transport Minister Volker Wissing | Maja Hitij/Getty Images

    Responses to the Commission working up a bespoke fix for its biggest member country on otherwise agreed legislation were generally negative, with many arguing the e-fuels issue is a diversion.

    “The opening for e-fuels does not mean a significant change for the transformation to electric cars,” said Ferdinand Dudenhöffer, a professor at the Center for Automotive Research in Duisburg. He said the Commission’s dealmaking raised “new investment uncertainties” that undermined the bloc’s efforts to catch up with China, the world’s leading producer of electric vehicles.

    Still, most are just happy that the combustion engine row is ended, for now.

    “It is good that this impasse is over,” said German Environment Minister Steffi Lemke, who backed the original 2035 deal without a reference to e-fuels. “Anything else would have severely damaged both confidence in European procedures and in Germany’s reliability inside European politics,” the minister said in a statement.



    [ad_2]
    #Brussels #Berlin #find #save #car #engine
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Artsio Craft Store Pan and Pot Lid Organizer Rack Holder Multifunctional Kitchen Cabinet Pantry Multifunctional Kitchen Cookware Chopping Board Organizer Space SavingStorage Rack,Black Color (Classic)

    Artsio Craft Store Pan and Pot Lid Organizer Rack Holder Multifunctional Kitchen Cabinet Pantry Multifunctional Kitchen Cookware Chopping Board Organizer Space SavingStorage Rack,Black Color (Classic)

    518Gd8HXgDL51s08NiLV9L513UsbmRpQL41kdsAPkgjL41N30QsHo+L41mWhjihyWL41POgLmLntS
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]

    [ad_2]
    #Artsio #Craft #Store #Pan #Pot #Lid #Organizer #Rack #Holder #Multifunctional #Kitchen #Cabinet #Pantry #Multifunctional #Kitchen #Cookware #Chopping #Board #Organizer #Space #SavingStorage #RackBlack #Color #Classic

  • AEXONIZ Kitchen Storage 6 Grid Container – Wall Mounted Cereal Food Dispenser For Kitchen 6 Grid Dry Food Dispenser Space Saving Food Storage Containers for Cereal,Rice,Nuts,Coffee Bean,Snack,Grain

    AEXONIZ Kitchen Storage 6 Grid Container – Wall Mounted Cereal Food Dispenser For Kitchen 6 Grid Dry Food Dispenser Space Saving Food Storage Containers for Cereal,Rice,Nuts,Coffee Bean,Snack,Grain

    41jO5anOrFL41H 6IYLDmL4142esBINAL5109SXHn29L51B7dE75BBL51oKuYgVLLL319g55KnIBL61wnQZ4UUHL
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]

    6 Grid Food Dispenser
    GOOD SEALING PERFORMANCE: The upper part of the rice barrel is covered with a transparent square box, and the lower part is a drawer-type grain picking device. Each time the food is taken, the button is pressed, then the pulses fall into the drawer, and then the rice is taken from the drawer. The rice barrel is sealed throughout the process.
    CAN BE WALL-MOUNTED: The grain dispenser can be hung on the wall without taking up space and keeping the kitchen clean and tidy. The transparent body is convenient for observing the remaining food.
    Best Quality: Made of Food-Grade Plastic, the Durable Plastic Containers Can Be Used for a Long Time, Are Good for You, and are Safe for Your Family. these Clear Containers Are Also Easy to Clean, Extremely User Friendly, and Ready to Use
    BEAUTIFUL AND PRACTICAL: It is a functional, yet aesthetically effective product, resembling a sculpture to add flair to your kitchen Classic transparent shell design allows you to see the contents at a glance, and you can always know the remaining grains.

    [ad_2]
    #AEXONIZ #Kitchen #Storage #Grid #Container #Wall #Mounted #Cereal #Food #Dispenser #Kitchen #Grid #Dry #Food #Dispenser #Space #Saving #Food #Storage #Containers #CerealRiceNutsCoffee #BeanSnackGrain

  • Amazon to D.C.: Can you please clean up all the space junk?

    Amazon to D.C.: Can you please clean up all the space junk?

    [ad_1]

    Amazon expects to offer its broadband service by late next year, and have half its full constellation of 3,200 satellites up by mid-2026.

    While Amazon says it doesn’t need — but would likely accept — government aid, Washington policymakers are looking for ways to help the nascent industry as a whole grow into a new vehicle for American innovation. But U.S. leaders are still debating how best to help foster the industry that’s facing a mess of regulatory questions. Lawmakers and federal officials are actively discussing ways to streamline the licensing for such satellite systems, while agencies debate the terms of when broadband subsidy grants should be granted.

    And tied within all of that is how to compete with China as it expands into low-Earth orbit.

    Although the prospect of space-based high-speed internet excites many for its potential to provide connectivity to far-flung parts of the globe, Amazon and SpaceX face hurdles, like dealing with orbital debris and keeping the skies clear for astronomers down on Earth. The Federal Communications Commission recently approved Amazon’s latest plans for mitigating space junk from its own satellites, helping pave the way for these launches.

    Limp spoke to POLITICO about how the government should help the industry, how artificial intelligence can help Amazon’s broadband program, and who its first prospective customers are likely to be.

    Limp’s conversation with POLITICO has been edited for length and clarity.

    Amazon announced it expects to start offering broadband service by the end of 2024. Who might those initial customers be?

    We start with a more sparse constellation with fewer satellites and with southern latitudes and northern latitudes — think Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, and down in Argentina and Australia. Our first service will likely be in those kinds of latitudes. My guess is we’ll be able to turn things on with hundreds of satellites in 2024, and my guess is the early customers are probably enterprise customers to start. Imagine somebody that has a pipeline where they want to give connectivity to an offshore oil well.

    Amazon is proposing three types of customer terminals, including a “standard” model that costs $400 or less to make. How much does it cost to make the other two, the bigger high-bandwidth and ultra-compact versions?

    The bigger antenna is more expensive — it’s meant for enterprise use. It’s a gigabit performance, it has more of the Merlin chips in it. Verizon would use something like that for a remote 5G tower. The smaller one is materially lower in terms of build and materials.

    What are the technical constraints when it comes to scaling up broadband speeds over time? The U.S. government has really embraced fiber broadband networks due to their status as “future-proof” investments.

    We tried to get to a sweet spot here at 400 megabits. Are there some customers that are going to want more? No question. But you can have multiple real-time 4K streams in a home and have plenty of room for telehealth with that much bandwidth.

    I certainly think it’d be hard to argue that it doesn’t meet today’s needs, and at least the foreseeable future broadband needs for customers.

    If I’m a congressperson from West Virginia, or North Dakota, or Montana, I have communities where fiber is never going to get out there. It would be irresponsible for taxpayers because digging a trench that far is crazy. I’d rather give a customer two of those satellite antennas. Our infrastructure dollars should go to getting fiber in cities and maybe even dense suburbs. But once you get out to sparse suburbs to communities that are rural, low Earth orbit satellites make so much sense.

    We’re seeing the U.S. spend tens of billions of dollars to subsidize the buildout of broadband infrastructure to these unserved and underserved parts of the country. Would Amazon have interest in bidding for these types of grants?

    Our business model is not predicated on that. But if we can help, and the taxpayer dollars can help those underserved, we’d like to help. But we don’t need it to make it a great business. We built Kuiper to be a good standalone business that doesn’t require governments, but I do applaud governments for trying to help this happen faster.

    And are there any specific asks of the government when it comes to Kuiper?

    Space safety. Space is big, but it’s increasingly crowded. We want to keep space safe and reduce orbital debris. We will continue to be vocal around that agenda.

    The second place that we’ve been vocal is using spectrum in a responsible way. By the way, that’s true of us as it would be true of anybody else. If they’re not using it, give it back. If they are using it, depending on where they are in the order of when their license was applied, agree to coordinate with others, so that you’re not interfering.

    We’ve been very pleased with what we’ve seen around the world — certainly here in the U.S. with the FCC — on their willingness to listen to that.

    SpaceX is a big player here that’s already launched its Starlink satellite service. What are the competitive strengths Amazon may bring in launching Kuiper?

    I don’t believe this is going to be a sporting race where there’s only one winner. There’s going to be multiple winners here. I don’t think there’s going to be a huge number of constellations — they’re just too expensive. There’s probably a couple commercial constellations, and then a couple nation-state constellations, probably, over time.

    That being said, I think there’s way more consumer demand, enterprise demand and governmental demand than the small number of constellations that we’ll be able to provide.

    We do believe that Kuiper can be differentiated compared to any other constellation. Otherwise, we wouldn’t want to do it. First of all, customer service — you can call Amazon 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year and get a human being on the phone and ask where your box is or ask why your Kindle isn’t working. You just don’t see that as much in the networking industry.

    We run a very large network every day in AWS, and we think we can bring that expertise over to this.

    Lastly is the AWS connection. We run a lot of these workloads in the cloud, and when you’re running your streaming media service on the same cloud as Kuiper’s running, you’ll have lower latency and higher reliability because those things can be more tightly coupled from a network and regionality point of view.

    How might artificial intelligence dovetail? There’s so much attention in Washington on recent AI innovations.

    I’ve been saying for a decade that we are in this golden age of AI. The fact that we’re at a new point of AI is a progression of this golden age.

    You’re seeing another step function change with the rise of these generative AI algorithms, probably most notably by large language models. And they, too, are doing remarkable things. And you see it in DALL-E and ChatGPT. We also use these inside of Amazon — Alexa’s teacher model, which is a tens of billion parameter model, large language model, has basically taken most of the work out of moving from one language to another. When we wrote an Alexa feature in German, and then had to port it to Spanish, a huge amount of work had to be done: tagging and language and linguists had to get involved and computer science had to get involved. Now, this large language model has figured out how to build a generic language — it can translate side by side, all these different things.

    As it relates to something like Kuiper, the application layer, obviously, people will be doing all sorts of things over the network. The place that AI will help a lot is the intelligent management of the network, when you’re running huge amounts of traffic over a constrained resource. And every time you can figure out how to route that traffic in a better way, or how you can compress that traffic in a better way and make decisions around that, you offer a better customer experience. And there’s no question that the latest generation of AI techniques will help.

    Washington policymakers often frame these debates as global tech competition between the U.S. and China and express a desire for fostering U.S.-based champions. How do you think about that lens?

    There is a huge opportunity for the public and private sectors to work more closely together. AWS has a very close working relationship with the U.S. government across many different groups. Not exclusively, but we run data centers for the U.S. government.

    It’s never been more true that truthful information is a conduit to freedom. And increasingly, in a world that’s much more complicated than it was maybe 10-15 years ago, there are tools that you can use to not get the truth out. One of those tools is to restrict connectivity. And so Kuiper has an opportunity to be able to help the public sector to make sure that there is connectivity.

    What are the biggest challenges to moving Kuiper forward? You’ve alluded to supply chain constraints in the past.

    The vast majority of our supply chain issues are behind us. If you’d have asked me that question a year ago or 18 months ago, I would have given you a very different answer because we’re in a very different time.

    Space is hard. Space is a harsh environment — radiation, thermal, the risk to orbit, so there’s so much to learn. We’re up to the challenge. But it’s like the early days of when Amazon decided to get into consumer electronics and build its first Kindle. They had to build that muscle.

    We’re building a similar muscle around space, but we don’t know everything we don’t know yet.

    [ad_2]
    #Amazon #D.C #clean #space #junk
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Nations sign UN High Seas Treaty for Ocean; Is one needed for space debris?

    Nations sign UN High Seas Treaty for Ocean; Is one needed for space debris?

    [ad_1]

    Vast stretches of open ocean cover two-thirds of the globe and the entire space surrounding our earth is virtually no man’s land. There are hardly any rules or regulations applying to the over-exploitation of the sea for fish and other animal and plant resources besides mining the seafloor for oil, gas, and other elements. Similarly, countries keep sending satellites to space and space debris mostly consisting of defunct satellite parts keeps revolving around the earth without check.

    Caution the environmentalists, one must not forget that sea as also space is not limitless resource, and we must use it sustainably so that it lasts for generations to come.

    A step in that direction has been taken for the first time after years with nearly two hundred nations signing a treaty under the aegis of the United Nations for the protection of the ocean and its biodiversity.

    Each nation has jurisdiction over a little bit of ocean near its coast, its EEZ( Exclusive Economic Zone), for which the country was responsible. But the high seas being under no single country’s control were free for all, open for anyone to go for deep-sea drilling, overfishing, and bioprospecting, not caring at all for any environmental repercussions or any law  because rules of no country applied here.

    However, all that is to change now.

    The new Treaty is all set to provide legal protection to the marine life of the seas.

    The developed industrialized nations though preferring freedom of the high seas where “might is right” eventually succumbed to the demand of large number of other nations that high seas were  a “common heritage of mankind” and if we have to create a sustainable long lasting ocean for the whole world for years to come, we should all agree on certain basic rules and regulations for the sea. However, the high seas belonging to no one, certain freedoms of the high seas would have to be maintained including the freedom of marine scientific research.

    One of the most important aspects of the  U.N. High Seas Treaty is that it agreed that certain areas of the ocean will be declared as Marine Protected areas to help preserve and conserve the enormous amount of biodiversity found in the seas.

    The Treaty guarantees that profits from any commercialized products derived from the high seas will be shared.

    It also says that programs to strengthen marine research in developing countries will be strengthened by providing access and facilities for deep sea research so that such research is not confined to rich industrialized nations creating a level playing field.

    Importantly, the Treaty is not just platitudes but has binding agreements thus making it legally tenable.

    Once the High Seas Treaty is implemented it would not be possible to carry out commercial activities in the sea without proper Environmental Assessment studies. The treaty is rightfully detailing the rules which must be followed if anyone wants to carry out commercial activity even in the High seas.

    Secondly, the enforcement of the Treaty guidelines would mean that all those who are carrying out commercial activities in the sea will have to see to it that the biodiversity in the sea is not endangered.

    The environment of the seas has been ruined by its over exploitation by large scale fishing, mining, and pollution from chemicals and plastics.

    The comprehensive treaty will help not only guard the concerns of the different marine species but also see to it that the coastal community’s livelihood and economy dependent on marine resources is not hampered.

    UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres has appreciated the “breakthrough” leading to the agreement on the Treaty, called it a “victory for multilateralism and for global efforts to counter the destructive trends facing ocean health, now and for generations to come”.

    This kind of coming together of rich and poor countries as one human family can help us successfully challenge any insurmountable global crisis.

    Even while the UN members sign the High Seas Treaty came a demand by scientists of a similar treaty for Space – the ultimate frontier.

    The growing clutter and debris in space of innumerable satellites cannot be left alone anymore without any kind of a regulatory system to check the mess.

    Space junk orbiting the Earth is increasing manifold over the years.

    According to an estimate, 48,000 human-made objects are orbiting the earth with nearly 90 percent being just junk or parts of broken satellites. Some estimate satellite fragments floating around in trillions.

    With growing satellite launches, working satellites in orbit are likely to become more than 60,000 by the year 2030.

    The fear is that the “space garbage” left in the orbit, circling at speeds more than 17,000 miles per hour could become very dangerous if they strike any working satellite or new satellite launched. Such incidents have happened leading to huge amounts of debris.

    The answer to this would be a Treaty by all nations agreeing to minimizing single use satellites, besides using recyclable and multi-use satellites. Will the nations accept to keep the space above us clean, another common heritage of all mankind.

    [ad_2]
    #Nations #sign #High #Seas #Treaty #Ocean #needed #space #debris

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )