Along with telling children to be kind to others, part of raising kids involves cautioning them to avoid being lured into a van to see or search for a puppy and to avoid being touched in areas covered by their swimsuits. James Bond's dictum to trust no one is a bit too much, but healthy skepticism about ulterior motives is a useful life lesson. If playmates tap them on their left shoulders, while others on the right steal their bags of chips, they get the message.
Even adults can be duped. Wisconsin's Republican Governor, Scott Walker, and President Trump received splashy news coverage, when they announced the Chinese Foxconn company would bring new jobs to Wisconsin. The State soon learned its taxpayers were expected to contribute $3 billion to the project. The amount grew to a little over $4 billion which required borrowing from the State's transportation budget to build new roads to the plant. Foxconn's environmental plans and ideas about water usage from Lake Michigan required negotiation. The promised 1300 jobs were reduced to an initial 300, and, since the plant site is on the border with Illinois, there was no guarantee that all these jobs would go to employees from Wisconsin.
The Foxconn deal began looking like an albatross Democrats could hang around Governor Walker's neck. So, the Chinese offered to bring more jobs to Wisconsin to help bail the Governor out from the unfulfilled promise he made to bring 250,000 jobs to Wisconsin during his first campaign in 2010. Foxconn announced additional innovation centers were in the works for Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Green Bay, and Eau Claire. According to Foxconn, these job-creating centers are designed to inspire local companies and entrepreneurs to create new solutions.
Here's where skepticism comes in. Why would China seem eager to help a Republican Governor in a fly-over State not uppermost in many minds? The innovation centers and investments China already has in Silicon Valley provide some clues. With the U.S. preoccupied with Russian interference, Chinese tech companies associated with Beijing's government have been taking advantage of opportunities to pour venture capital billions into U.S. startups in fields, such as virtual reality, AI, financial software, cyber security, quantum computing, robotics, 3D printing, and biotechnology. Since the U.S. military does not purchase technologies from startups with foreign investors, Chinese investments can not only buy up technological advances from Wisconsin's startups, but they also prevent these innovations from improving U.S. defenses.
Delayed skepticism about the technological advantages the Chinese government can gain from U.S. startup innovations and increased concern about the national security implications involved caused Congress to pass the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act (FIREMA) to enhance the oversight provided by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States.
Already, China is thinking about how to get around the crack down by making a move to Canada a condition for a venture capital investment or by hiring a team of employees from an innovative startup, the way the Chinese online giant, Alibaba, does this in China.
Showing posts with label robotics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label robotics. Show all posts
Saturday, August 18, 2018
Tuesday, March 27, 2018
Necessity: Introduce Students to New Technologies
Bill Gates at age 13 in 1969 got his start using a computer for the first time at General Electric, reports Malcolm Gladwell in his book, Outliers.
The New Story a non-profit organization, with the help of Icon construction, was using 3D printers to create the houses rolling off an assembly line in 2018. Designers on the "Project Runway" TV show used 3D printers to create their own fabric designs the previous year.
To get a head start in life, students need access, not only to 3D printers, but also to virtual reality, holography, robotics, green screens, solar panels, and every other new technology. Whether one advanced technology teacher and a sample are allocated to each school or a teacher and sample travel around a school district, the objective is to give students hands-on exposure to the fields of the future.
The school that wins a contest to name a robot could get the first one. You can imagine how excited students would be about coming to school every day, if a robot greeted them saying, "Good morning, I have a riddle for you...." Pick the toughest kid in the school to escort the robot and make sure no one harms it. The kid might transform into a new Bill Gates.
Kids will devise all sorts of ways to use virtual reality to illustrate original fantasy stories and to view wonders of the world and rare animals. There must be ways to use holography to resurrect historical characters and to use green screens to produce special effects for the school play.
What might kids heat or power with solar panels?
The New Story a non-profit organization, with the help of Icon construction, was using 3D printers to create the houses rolling off an assembly line in 2018. Designers on the "Project Runway" TV show used 3D printers to create their own fabric designs the previous year.
To get a head start in life, students need access, not only to 3D printers, but also to virtual reality, holography, robotics, green screens, solar panels, and every other new technology. Whether one advanced technology teacher and a sample are allocated to each school or a teacher and sample travel around a school district, the objective is to give students hands-on exposure to the fields of the future.
The school that wins a contest to name a robot could get the first one. You can imagine how excited students would be about coming to school every day, if a robot greeted them saying, "Good morning, I have a riddle for you...." Pick the toughest kid in the school to escort the robot and make sure no one harms it. The kid might transform into a new Bill Gates.
Kids will devise all sorts of ways to use virtual reality to illustrate original fantasy stories and to view wonders of the world and rare animals. There must be ways to use holography to resurrect historical characters and to use green screens to produce special effects for the school play.
What might kids heat or power with solar panels?
Tuesday, January 23, 2018
Flying Can Be Fun Again
Some airline passengers in the Caribbean, Singapore, and the United Arab Emirates, according to trendwatching.com, can begin to anticipate the glamorous experience flying was in years gone by. In Turkey, they'll also meet a new friend, Nely.
Vacationers touring in Barbados with Virgin Holidays will be able to put their casual flying clothes over their bathing suits and check out of their resort hotels early, because Virgin will pick them up, check their luggage, and take them to the beach. At oceanside, Virgin will provide boarding passes, a locker, beach towels, a showering facility, unlimited refreshments, and an air conditioned lounge area, while every last vacation moment merits a "Wish You Were Here" selfie home.
Visitors to Singapore's Changi Airport have walked among animatronic, remote-controlled butterflies designed to resemble the Diaethria Anna species. For kids, the airport's five-story playground offers climbing nets, a pole to slide down, and more for use for 50 at a time.
Before heading into the wild blue yonder from Dubai International Airport, passengers will be exploring the virtual blue aquarium surrounding them as they walk through a security tunnel to their flights in Terminal 3. To use the tunnel instead of traditional procedures, passengers pre-register at 3D face-scanning kiosks located throughout the airport. Watching the fish is expected to relax and entertain passengers as 80 hidden tunnel cameras scan visitors' faces from different angles. At the end of the tunnel, cleared travelers are sent on their way with a "Have a nice trip" message or a red sign alerts security. Dubai's airports process 80 million passengers now. The tunnel was developed to handle the increased volume of passengers, 124 million, expected by 2020. It should be mentioned that Dubai's virtual aquarium receives the same legal challenges that other facial recognition systems face.
At Turkey's Istanbul New Airport, a robot named Nely notes the expressions, ages, and genders of passengers before greeting them and making (or not making) small talk. Nely is, of course, travel-functional: booking flights for passengers, relaying information, and providing weather updates. Using AI, facial recognition, emotional analysis based on input from sociologists, voice capability, and a bar code reader, Nely even remembers passengers from previous interactions.
Vacationers touring in Barbados with Virgin Holidays will be able to put their casual flying clothes over their bathing suits and check out of their resort hotels early, because Virgin will pick them up, check their luggage, and take them to the beach. At oceanside, Virgin will provide boarding passes, a locker, beach towels, a showering facility, unlimited refreshments, and an air conditioned lounge area, while every last vacation moment merits a "Wish You Were Here" selfie home.
Visitors to Singapore's Changi Airport have walked among animatronic, remote-controlled butterflies designed to resemble the Diaethria Anna species. For kids, the airport's five-story playground offers climbing nets, a pole to slide down, and more for use for 50 at a time.
Before heading into the wild blue yonder from Dubai International Airport, passengers will be exploring the virtual blue aquarium surrounding them as they walk through a security tunnel to their flights in Terminal 3. To use the tunnel instead of traditional procedures, passengers pre-register at 3D face-scanning kiosks located throughout the airport. Watching the fish is expected to relax and entertain passengers as 80 hidden tunnel cameras scan visitors' faces from different angles. At the end of the tunnel, cleared travelers are sent on their way with a "Have a nice trip" message or a red sign alerts security. Dubai's airports process 80 million passengers now. The tunnel was developed to handle the increased volume of passengers, 124 million, expected by 2020. It should be mentioned that Dubai's virtual aquarium receives the same legal challenges that other facial recognition systems face.
At Turkey's Istanbul New Airport, a robot named Nely notes the expressions, ages, and genders of passengers before greeting them and making (or not making) small talk. Nely is, of course, travel-functional: booking flights for passengers, relaying information, and providing weather updates. Using AI, facial recognition, emotional analysis based on input from sociologists, voice capability, and a bar code reader, Nely even remembers passengers from previous interactions.
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