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Tech for Good

Logo of telegram channel technologyforgood — Tech for Good T
Logo of telegram channel technologyforgood — Tech for Good
Channel address: @technologyforgood
Categories: Technologies
Language: English
Subscribers: 10.79K
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Technologies & Innovations that provide humanity with the opportunity not only to survive, but to create a happier society and a stable ecosystem
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The latest Messages 9

2022-01-25 17:11:12 Autonomous railways?

It is tough to break into the railway business. A few giants are sitting on their railroad rights and making minimal investments to maximize profits. They often close smaller railroads, not finding a way to make money out of them, and focus on the most profitable routes with longer trains – often as long as 3 miles (7.8 km).

Long trains are profitable for the train companies, but they're not efficient for anyone else. We have to use semi-trucks to deliver goods to all sorts of places as soon as a long train reaches a depot. Not to mention that parking a 3-mile-long caravan vastly limits where it can go. Furthermore, train cars are often parked for days while they wait for other cars to be loaded and unloaded so that they can move, as this giant caterpillar, to their next destination.

Matt Soule, a former long-time SpaceX engineer, has partnered with former colleagues at Elon Musk's space company to launch Parallel Systems startup, transforming individual freight train cars into autonomous electric vehicles.

Parallel Systems' invention is a modular, motorized set of train wheels. A crane places cargo containers on the wheels that can drive this train car up to 500 miles (1300 km) to anywhere on the track.

Such autonomous car has no limitations traditional long trains have:

Once it is loaded, it can simply drive to its destination;
With shorter lengths, train yards themselves can be re-architected to have smaller footprints and fit more places in our infrastructure;
Parallel's platoons can also split themselves in half and let road vehicles pass through their middle;
They can drive right into a city or even a factory, using previously abandoned rail lines.
You can take a container from a port to a warehouse without putting it on a truck. And that means you can load more weight (Parallel's cars can carry almost three times more than a semi-truck)
The cars recharge in one hour to drive another 500 miles.

The technology sounds too good to be true, and it is not ready for market yet. However, building and managing autonomous electric trains is far simpler than building autonomous EVs for highways. Rails are simpler. Trains stay on a track without a steering wheel. They don't need to worry about responding to random traffic. Unlike roads, where pretty much anyone can drive anywhere, railways are tightly controlled and scheduled. Truthfully, some passenger trains have moved autonomously since the 1960s. Parallel Systems is simply pushing that autonomy to the individual car level.

Article on FastCompany

#railroads #EV #autonomous
2.7K viewsDmitrii Blium, 14:11
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2022-01-24 15:18:42 Let us continue keeping the content organized. You may use the #weeksummary hashtag to quickly navigate the channel. Here is the summary of the last week posts:

Volkswagen's legend Microbus is back - an electric reincarnation of the legendary Volkswagen Minibus
Let the doctor do the doctor's job - an AI-powered medical transcription platform to help doctors cope with their time-eating medical notes
The right to see the Earth - a space hyperspectral imaging startup to help farmers and others to see what is going on on the Earth in the same way that we understand what is going on in our bodies.
A chart showing where the US unicorn founders were born
"iPhone's moment" in the recreational vehicle industry - a travel trailer, making all other travel trailers, well, "other travel trailers"

Your Tech for Good
771 viewsDmitrii Blium, 12:18
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2022-01-20 16:24:44 "iPhone's moment" in the recreational vehicle industry

American Thor Industries has just revealed its new electric Airstream travel trailer concept. It is so good that every other recreational vehicle (RV) now looks like any other phone looked when Apple unveiled the iPhone in 2007 - a relic of the past.

The trailer has two electric motors and can power itself, moving in harmony with the tow vehicle and reducing the pulling effect required from it. That means a dramatic travel range improvement. If the tow vehicle has an internal combustion engine, it will enjoy significant fuel economy.

Another jaw-dropping feature is that the trailer's electric motors can move it around without a tow vehicle, using the Airstream's developed app. That makes previously tricky (if not impossible) trailer parking maneuvers as easy as parking your car.

Thor also showed their new trip planning app to help travelers find high-speed charging stations and points of interest along a route to their destination.

You may ask what good this vehicle does to humanity, and you will be correct. But I don't care - the tech is fantastic and deserves our attention.

1.5-minute video with the trailer
Another 1.5-minute video
Article on Electrek

#EV #RV
1.8K viewsDmitrii Blium, edited  13:24
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2022-01-19 17:04:47
Interesting chart showing us the top countries where US unicorn founders were born.

According to Investopedia, startup companies get a unicorn status if they are privately held and have a value of over $1 billion

#startups
1.7K viewsDmitrii Blium, 14:04
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2022-01-18 15:31:13 The right to see the Earth

The space industry is seeing a revolution driven by cube satellites. Those are miniaturized satellites made of multiple cubic modules of 10x10x10 cm size. They are much more accessible than traditional satellites to design, build and launch. Companies may access space with their cube satellites by hitching a ride on a rocket launch alongside other clients.

One of such companies is a Canadian-based Wyvern. They provide a specific service of hyperspectral imaging taken from low-Earth orbit. Hyperspectral imaging is a method for capturing image data of Earth across many more bands than we can see with our eyes or traditional optics.

Wyvern's first target market is agriculture. Farmers can log in to the system and see up-to-date hyperspectral imaging data of their fields. Previously hidden info like the chemical makeup of soil or invasive species becomes visible, helping farmers to make decisions and increase efficiency.

Hyperspectral imaging is a proven technology already, but the primary way to capture is via drone airplanes. Wyvern says they can provide it for ten times less than many of these drones currently in use.

The company has just raised $4.5 million and is ready to launch its first satellites to orbit this year. Christopher Robson, co-founder and CEO of Wyvern, says the company wants to allow people to see what is going on on the Earth in the same way that we understand what is going on in our bodies. "You have the right to see how other humans are treating the Earth, and to see how you're treating the Earth and how your country is behaving."

These are the right words. However, any coin has a flip side. And I would be surprised if the military forces are still not using similar tech for their "special" purposes. However, making such data available for a wider audience should help mitigate the risks associated with a limited number of people controlling it.

Article on TechCrunch

#space #startups #imagery
2.4K viewsDmitrii Blium, 12:31
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2022-01-17 14:36:27 Let the doctor do the doctor's job

We have all been to a doctor, right? And I am sure everybody had the experience of seeing the doctor care about the patient for 5 minutes and then write his medical notes for 15 minutes out of a 20-minutes session.

The burden of clinical documentation makes a lot of bad things. Spending half of the day writing medical notes negatively impacts the doctors' work/life balance and our perception of medical care. But the main issue is that patient does not receive enough attention to his problems, and the quality of medical help suffers as a result.

DeepScribe, an AI-powered medical transcription platform, has raised $30 million in Series A funding to solve the issue. Their software listens to a natural doctor-patient conversation, records, summarizes and integrates it into the physician's health record system of choice.

For example, the application records patient exams while listening and preparing clinical notes. DeepScribe then uploads the notes directly into Electronic Health Records (EHR) fields. That enables physicians to review and sign their fully equipped notes in the appropriate EHR fields.

DeepScribe says its platform saves physicians an average of three hours a day and costs around one-sixth the cost of human medical scribes. The company has saved physicians over 2.5 million minutes of documentation to date. In terms of reliability, DeepScribe says physicians encounter less than one correction per note on average after 20 days of usage.

As for the future of its tech, the company hopes to go beyond providing efficiencies for the physician. Their ultimate goal is to improve outcomes for patients.

Article on TechCrunch

#AI #medtech #startups
4.0K viewsDmitrii Blium, 11:36
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2022-01-16 16:02:23 Volkswagen's legend Microbus is back

The Verge reports that VW is production-ready with its reincarnation of the iconic Microbus. The company CEO Herbert Diess tweeted that the "legend returns" on March 9th, along with a gif of the long-awaited vehicle.

VW revealed the concept of ID Buzz (a strange name for a vehicle) 5 years ago. The legendary Microbus returns fully electric. And I am afraid we do not know any other tech details about the new EV.

Another interesting point is that VW plans to use the autonomous ID Buzz as a platform for the automaker's full-scale commercial ride-hailing and delivery operation in Germany in 2025. For that purpose, the carmaker partnered with and invested a staggering $2.6 billion in Argo AI - a Pittsburgh-based startup that Ford also backs.

Argo has been testing its vehicles in the US with Ford for the last few years, and now it provides hardware and software for VW's autonomous EVs.

Photos of ID Buzz outfitted with a high-tech suit of sensors and computing smarts.

#EV #AI #autonomouscars
2.5K viewsDmitrii Blium, 13:02
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2022-01-11 17:11:21 Need for Speed in Nevada

This year's CES (one of the main tech events globally) featured the Indy Autonomous Challenge (IAC). They were organized just like Formula 1. Only instead of the phrase "Turn on your engines", it sounded "Start your software."

The cars rode along the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, where NASCAR races, among others, take place. Nine teams from different countries competed in the qualifying round. Five cars took part in the races; two reached the final. The joined team from Milan Polytech University and the University of Alabama won.

Their PoliMOVE racing car set a speed record of 278 km/h (173 mph), and guys took the main prize of $150,000. The second was the car of the Munich Technical University team, which received $50,000.

This kind of competition is good for many reasons. They motivate students and young scientists to develop autonomous driving technologies. Demonstrate to the general public the level of progress in this area. They also provide a lot of useful data for improving unmanned vehicles, applicable in ordinary situations of life and business.

It is for this purpose that Energy Systems Network organized these races. The company's CEO hopes the initiative will "catapult the industry far ahead."

In Las Vegas, the IAC races were held for the second time. The very first took place in Indianapolis last October.


You can watch the final here:



#autonomouscars
1.8K viewsDmitrii Blium, edited  14:11
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2022-01-09 13:33:01 Here is the Sunday's #weeksummary:

Autonomous trucks on the rise - TuSimple has completed its first fully-autonomous truck run on open public roads without a human in the vehicle
3D printing of rockets - the world's largest 3D metal printer to print an entire space rocket
Assistance for elderly people - a purpose-built robot to assist the elderly

Hope you're all doing well

Your Tech for Good
3.0K viewsDmitrii Blium, 10:33
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2022-01-07 09:14:06 Assistance for elderly people

Eldercare has been a big robotics business in Japan due to an aging population. Now the American companies are starting to follow suit. Retriever is one of the best examples of an American company purpose-building a robot to assist people in this way.

Their system looks like a small wardrobe with shelves. It can carry up to 25 pounds (11 kg) and can be used to deliver laundry, meals, and other payloads around the house. It features a retractable tray system that can move objects onto the cart from counters, shelves, and a bespoke refrigerator the company says it’s planning to offer. Underneath that is an additional storage space for things like food and medication and a port for charging phones. Users can voice-control via Alexa.

The product aims to help those living independently who could still benefit from an added robotic hand. Labrador Systems co-founder/CEO Mike Dooley told Techcrunch, "When pain or other health issues start interfering with your ability to move yourself or other things, even short distances can have a major impact on your independence, quality of life and overall health. The Retriever is meant to help physically bridge some of that gap and empower individuals to be more active and do more on their own."

Early adopters can secure a Retriever unit for $1,500 upfront, plus a monthly services fee of between $99 and $149 a month, depending on financing.

Here is the 4-minute video about the device

Article on TechCrunch

#robotics #AI #medtech #startups
4.2K viewsDmitrii Blium, 06:14
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