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#techologies
aaxisnano · 2 years
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Aaxis Nano Technologies Pvt. Ltd. Provides a data logger of the RQ-30 ADMS and offers wireless data transmission to FTP and HTTP servers, and notifications by E-mail and SMS. The RQ-30 ADMS provides a complete and immediately available discharge measurement system. It is suitable for long-term measurements with solar power supply as well as autonomous temporary measurement campaigns. 𝐊𝐧𝐨𝐰 𝐌𝐨𝐫𝐞 : https://lnkd.in/dvVaSCRm 𝐆𝐞𝐭 𝐐𝐮𝐨𝐭𝐞 : Aaxisnano.com/contact
𝐌𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐚𝐠𝐞 𝐮𝐬 𝐭𝐨 𝐫𝐞𝐪𝐮𝐞𝐬𝐭 𝐚 𝐛𝐫𝐨𝐜𝐡𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐨𝐫 𝐰𝐫𝐢𝐭𝐞 𝐭𝐨 𝐮𝐬 𝐚𝐭 [email protected].
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cybernetiktech · 2 years
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News Feed of Cybernetik Technologies
Cybernetik Technologies is a leading Indian industrial automation & robotics manufacturing company. They offer innovative designs, and easy to install customized automation solutions for all types of industries. For more details visit their website today!
https://www.cybernetik.com/feed/
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artruby · 2 years
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Yunchul Kim, Chroma V, Venice Biennale 2022, Korea Pavillion.
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notyourtoday · 2 months
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tropicalnuoyi · 3 months
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Touch the soft grass 🌎🥰🏄‍♀️
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apocalyp-tech-a · 7 months
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While we're on the subject of similarities between Tech and Huyang. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Now I'm certain they're teasing us. 😏
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eurotrashbaby · 9 months
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jojou2 · 6 months
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روبوت كيوت من ديزني. يعمل عليه الباحثون لتطويره. تعلم كيف يعمل في عالم محاكاة قبل أن يخرج للعالم الواقعي
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officialkendallroy · 3 months
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my professor doesnt give a shit that we cant understand a single thing hes saying in his little online meeting rn i hate this university so much it's unreal
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mit · 6 months
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Ms. Nuclear Energy is winning over nuclear skeptics
Kaylee Cunningham recognizes that her training as a PhD student in nuclear science and engineering could be for naught if myths continue to plague the industry. The activist is committed to helping — one TikTok at a time.
Poornima Apte | Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
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First-year MIT nuclear science and engineering (NSE) doctoral student Kaylee Cunningham is not the first person to notice that nuclear energy has a public relations problem. But her commitment to dispel myths about the alternative power source has earned her the moniker “Ms. Nuclear Energy” on TikTok and a devoted fan base on the social media platform.
Cunningham’s activism kicked into place shortly after a week-long trip to Iceland to study geothermal energy. During a discussion about how the country was going to achieve its net zero energy goals, a representative from the University of Reykjavik balked at Cunnigham’s suggestion of including a nuclear option in the alternative energy mix. “The response I got was that we’re a peace-loving nation, we don’t do that,” Cunningham remembers. “I was appalled by the reaction, I mean we’re talking energy not weapons here, right?” she asks. Incredulous, Cunningham made a TikTok that targeted misinformation. Overnight she garnered 10,000 followers and “Ms. Nuclear Energy” was off to the races. Ms. Nuclear Energy is now Cunningham’s TikTok handle.
A theater and science nerd
TikTok is a fitting platform for a theater nerd like Cunningham. Born in Melrose, Massachusetts, Cunningham’s childhood was punctuated by moves to places where her roofer father’s work took the family. She moved to North Carolina shortly after fifth grade and fell in love with theater. “I was doing theater classes, the spring musical, it was my entire world,” Cunningham remembers. When she moved again, this time to Florida halfway through her first year of high school, she found the spring musical had already been cast. But she could help behind the scenes. Through that work, Cunningham gained her first real exposure to hands-on tech. She was hooked.
Soon Cunningham was part of a team that represented her high school at the student Astronaut Challenge, an aerospace competition run by Florida State University. Statewide winners got to fly a space shuttle simulator at the Kennedy Space Center and participate in additional engineering challenges. Cunningham’s team was involved in creating a proposal to help NASA’s Asteroid Redirect Mission, designed to help the agency gather a large boulder from a near-earth asteroid. The task was Cunningham’s induction into an understanding of radiation and “anything nuclear.” Her high school engineering teacher, Nirmala Arunachalam, encouraged Cunningham’s interest in the subject.
The Astronaut Challenge might just have been the end of Cunningham’s path in nuclear engineering had it not been for her mother. In high school, Cunningham had also enrolled in computer science classes and her love of the subject earned her a scholarship at Norwich University in Vermont where she had pursued a camp in cybersecurity. Cunningham had already laid down the college deposit for Norwich.
But Cunningham’s mother persuaded her daughter to pay another visit to the University of Florida, where she had expressed interest in pursuing nuclear engineering. To her pleasant surprise, the department chair, Professor James Baciak, pulled out all the stops, bringing mother and daughter on a tour of the on-campus nuclear reactor and promising Cunningham a paid research position. Cunningham was sold and Backiak has been a mentor throughout her research career.
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brb-on-a-quest · 9 days
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I love not having social media on my phone because it helps me personally with intentionality/time management and building connections/hobbies that matter to me.
But
if anyone tells me yet again that my internet friends are less valuable than my real-life ones? I will go on my hot villain arc.
My Internet Peoples Matter To Me.
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fika-drw · 10 months
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Sugar Baby
For Coco and the ‘Sugar Baby’ prompt. For WordWizard and the ‘Snape decides to finally learn how to use a computer, so he signs up to take a class at the muggle library. Harry turns out to be the volunteer teacher’ prompt. And of course, for The Spring Garden Game in @houseofsnarry that will be closed in a few hours 😭
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f1mike28 · 9 months
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Mercedes-AMG ONE „F1 Technology for the Road“.
Affalterbach. Mercedes-AMG ONE (combined weighted fuel consumption: 8.7 l/100 km; combined weighted CO2 emissions: 198 g/km; combined weighted electrical consumption: 32 kWh/100 km)[1].
Exceptional E PERFORMANCE hybrid drive with 1.6-litre V6 engine and four electric motors.
The E PERFORMANCE hybrid drive of the Mercedes-AMG ONE comes directly from Formula 1 and has been realised in close cooperation with the experts at Mercedes-AMG High Performance Powertrains in Brixworth. It consists of a highly integrated and intelligently networked unit comprising one hybrid, turbocharged combustion engine with a total of four electric motors.
One has been integrated into the turbocharger, another has been installed directly on the combustion engine with a link to the crankcase and the two remaining motors drive the front wheels.
The high-revving power unit is boosted by a high-tech turbocharger. The exhaust gas turbine and compressor turbine are positioned at a distance from each other and connected by a shaft. This allows a lower installation position for the turbocharger. On the shaft is an approx. 90 kW electric motor.
Electronically controlled, this drives the turbocharger shaft directly, accelerating the compressor wheel up to 100,000 rpm before the exhaust gas flow takes over. The Formula 1 designation for this unit is MGU-H (Motor Generator Unit Heat).
Mercedes-AMG One man, one engine Handcrafted by Michael Kübler @f1mike28 in Germany Affalterbach. Driving Performance is our Passion! Mercedes-AMG the Performance and Sports Car Brand from Mercedes-Benz and Exclusive Partner for Pagani Automobili. Mercedes-AMG Handcrafted by Racers.
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ebookporn · 1 year
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We’ve always been distracted
Worried that technology is ‘breaking your brain’? Fears about attention spans and focus are as old as writing itself
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by Joe Stadolniki
If you suspect that 21st-century technology has broken your brain, it will be reassuring to know that attention spans have never been what they used to be. Even the ancient Roman philosopher Seneca the Younger was worried about new technologies degrading his ability to focus. Sometime during the 1st century CE, he complained that ‘The multitude of books is a distraction’. This concern reappeared again and again over the next millennia. By the 12th century, the Chinese philosopher Zhu Xi saw himself living in a new age of distraction thanks to the technology of print: ‘The reason people today read sloppily is that there are a great many printed texts.’ And in 14th-century Italy, the scholar and poet Petrarch made even stronger claims about the effects of accumulating books:
Believe me, this is not nourishing the mind with literature, but killing and burying it with the weight of things or, perhaps, tormenting it until, frenzied by so many matters, this mind can no longer taste anything, but stares longingly at everything, like Tantalus thirsting in the midst of water.
Technological advances would make things only worse. A torrent of printed texts inspired the Renaissance scholar Erasmus to complain of feeling mobbed by ‘swarms of new books’, while the French theologian Jean Calvin wrote of readers wandering into a ‘confused forest’ of print. That easy and constant redirection from one book to another was feared to be fundamentally changing how the mind worked. Apparently, the modern mind – whether metaphorically undernourished, harassed or disoriented –­ has been in no position to do any serious thinking for a long time.
In the 21st century, digital technologies are inflaming the same old anxieties about attention and memory – and inspiring some new metaphors. We can now worry that the cognitive circuitry of the brain has been ‘rewired’ through interactions with Google Search, smartphones and social media. The rewired mind now delegates tasks previously handled by its in-built memory to external devices. Thoughts dart from idea to idea; hands drift unwittingly toward pockets and phones. It may seem that constant access to the internet has degraded our capacity for sustained attention. This apparent rewiring has been noticed with general uneasiness, sometimes with alarm, and very often with advice about how to return to a better, more supposedly ‘natural’ way of thinking. 
READ MORE
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notyourtoday · 3 months
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tropicalnuoyi · 2 days
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Can you post like those frutiger aero phones please!
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Here you go! Have a nice day/night!
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