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Europe’s first ‘lightning hunter’ releases striking footage of severe storms

By: Thomas Macaulay — July 4th 2023 at 11:03

Europe’s first “lightning hunter” has generated striking animations of severe storms hitting the Earth.  Built by Italian firm Leonardo, the system is the first satellite instrument that can continuously detect lightning across Europe and Africa. The imager is comprised of four powerful cameras. Each of them can capture 1,000 images per second, day and night, and detect a single lightning bolt faster than the blink of an eye. Algorithms then send the data back to Earth, for use in weather forecasts, climate research, and air transport safety. According to Eumetsat, the European weather agency, severe storms have caused an estimated €500bn…

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European companies hate the EU’s new AI rules — here’s why

By: Thomas Macaulay — June 30th 2023 at 15:01

Artificial intelligence sure is keeping the post office busy. After a recent flurry of open letters about runaway AI, unregulated AI, and apocalyptic AI, another missive arrived on the EU’s doorstep today. In this case, however, the signatories have raised a contrary concern. Rather than call for more rules, they fear there will soon be too many. Their target is the impending AI Act. Billed as the world’s first comprehensive legislation for the tech, the new rules are trying to walk the fine line between ensuring safety and supporting innovation. The new letter, signed by executives at some of Europe’s biggest companies,…

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Euclid telescope set to embark on dark universe exploration mission

By: Ioanna Lykiardopoulou — June 30th 2023 at 13:51

ESA’s mission to unravel the mysteries of the dark universe is set for launch. Following a one-year delay caused by the Ukraine invasion, the Euclid space telescope is scheduled for takeoff on July 1 at 5:11PM CEST time from Cape Canaveral in Florida, US. Named after the famous Greek mathematician, the telescope will embark on a month-long journey to reach its destination at a position in space known as the second Lagrange point (L2) — located 1.5 million kilometres away from our planet. There, it will be able to observe deep space, with the sun, the Earth, and the moon…

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Opinion: We can’t engineer ourselves out of the climate crisis

By: Siôn Geschwindt — June 30th 2023 at 05:09

Let’s face it — climate change is humanity’s greatest screw-up. We’ve known about it for almost a century. The science is clear. And yet, we’ve done nothing. It’s a f**king embarrassment.  Now, finally, global leaders are scrambling to clean up the mess. But, even though most of the climate solutions we need already exist, we can’t seem to get our arses in gear to deploy them at the pace and scale required.  In short, the world is heating up, and we are failing to cool it down. Humans emitted more CO2 into the atmosphere last year than ever before (uh…WTF?).…

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☐ ☆ ✇ The Scholarly Kitchen

Guest Post — Making Research Accessible: The arXiv Accessibility Forum Moved the Action Upstream

By: Shamsi Brinn · Bill Kasdorf — June 28th 2023 at 09:30

Shamsi Brinn (UX Manager at arXiv) and Bill Kasdorf (Principal of Kasdorf & Associates, LLC) discuss the recent Accessibility Forum hosted by arXiv. Over 2,000 people registered for the Forum; over 350 attended the live event; and hundreds more are accessing the recently published videos.

The post Guest Post — Making Research Accessible: The arXiv Accessibility Forum Moved the Action Upstream appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

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SSP Conference Debate: AI and the Integrity of Scholarly Publishing

By: Rick Anderson · Tim Vines · Jessica Miles — June 27th 2023 at 09:30

Will artificial intelligence fatally undermine the integrity of scholarly publishing? A formal debate from the annual meeting of the Society for Scholarly Publishing.

The post SSP Conference Debate: AI and the Integrity of Scholarly Publishing appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

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Guest Post — Towards Global Equity for Open Access Books 

By: Niels Stern · Ronald Snijder — June 14th 2023 at 09:30

The Directory of Open Access Books (DOAB) is celebrating its 10-year anniversary, a great opportunity to reflect on how far we have come with open infrastructures for the distribution and discoverability of open access books (monographs, edited collections, and other long-form publications).

The post Guest Post — Towards Global Equity for Open Access Books  appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

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Guest Post — Why Interoperability Matters for Open Research – And More than Ever

By: Rebecca Lawrence — April 6th 2023 at 09:30

Rebecca Lawrence discusses how connections across all aspects of the system are needed for open research to flourish and deliver upon its promise.

The post Guest Post — Why Interoperability Matters for Open Research – And More than Ever appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

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Chefs de Cuisine: Perspectives from Publishing’s Top Table — Annie Callanan

By: Robert Harington — April 3rd 2023 at 09:30

Robert Harington talks to Annie Callanan, Chief Executive of Taylor & Francis, in this new series of perspectives from some of Publishing’s leaders across the non-profit and profit sectors of our industry.

The post Chefs de Cuisine: Perspectives from Publishing’s Top Table — Annie Callanan appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

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Chefs de Cuisine: Perspectives from Publishing’s Top Table — Ziyad Marar

By: Robert Harington — March 27th 2023 at 09:30

Robert Harington talks to Ziyad Marar, President of Global Publishing at SAGE, and author of "Happiness Paradox" and "Intimacy", and most recently “Judged: The Value of Being Misunderstood"

The post Chefs de Cuisine: Perspectives from Publishing’s Top Table — Ziyad Marar appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

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7 unmissable highlights of TNW València

By: Thomas Macaulay — March 25th 2023 at 02:14

Ladies and gentlemen, the moment has almost arrived: TNW València is next week!  In case you’ve been living under a rock (or frequenting another tech site, you traitor), we’re taking our cherished festival on the road. After 16 glorious years in Amsterdam, we’re bringing the show to Spain’s Mediterranean coast — and you’re all invited. We’re not only there for the sun, sea, and sand — far from it, in fact. València has the fastest-growing innovation ecosystem in Spain, and the most startups per capita in the country. On March 30th and 31st, we’ll showcase the best tech in the region…

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Why a European mobile operating system can’t challenge Android and iOS

By: Callum Booth — March 24th 2023 at 12:34

Recently, we asked if it was possible for Europe to have a dominant smartphone again. The answer was simple: no, not unless there’s some sort of miracle. The reason behind this is multifaceted, but the core point is that because Asia hosts the majority of the world’s mobile manufacturing facilities, it’s borderline impossible for European companies to create a good enough phone at a low enough price to succeed. But, here at TNW, we had another question: could Europe launch its own mobile operating system? Why do we need a European mobile OS? On first inspection, it’s an excellent idea.…

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Or just read more coverage about: Android

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BMW backs German startup to deliver ‘next generation’ of EV motors

By: Siôn Geschwindt — March 24th 2023 at 12:17

BMW has invested in DeepDrive, the German startup behind a new type of “ultra-efficient” motor for electric vehicles.  The €15m Series A funding round also saw participation from the likes of UVC Partners, the Continental Corporate Venture Capital Unit, and former board member and CTO of Audi and Volvo, Peter Mertens.   Founded in 2021, the Munich-based startup has developed a radial flux dual-rotor motor that boasts the highest torque and power density of any EV motor available today, the startup claims. It also has low noise emissions, and is built using far fewer rare earth materials.   All of this translates…

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☐ ☆ ✇ Inside Higher Ed | Blog U

Are Universities ‘How the World Became Rich’?

By: Joshua Kim — March 24th 2023 at 01:00

A higher education–centric theory of economic development.

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These are the new jobs generative AI could create in the future

By: Kirstie McDermott — March 22nd 2023 at 13:28

Search interest in ChatGPT has reached a 2,633% boost in interest since last December, shortly after its launch. For the artificial intelligence and machine learning industry, and for those working in tech as a whole, OpenAI’s chatbot represents a true crossing of the Rubicon. A generative form of AI, it uses prompts to produce content and conversations, whereas traditional AI looks at things such as pattern detection, decision making, or classifying data. We already benefit from artificial intelligence, whether we realise it or not—from Siri in our Apple phones to the choices Netflix or Amazon Prime make for us to…

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SXSW Interactive: Slow Down To Speed Up

By: Ann Michael — March 22nd 2023 at 09:30

Back to SXSW this year! Hear about the conference, the speakers, and the themes. Tell us what resonates with you the most!

The post SXSW Interactive: Slow Down To Speed Up appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

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Chefs de Cuisine: Perspectives from Publishing’s Top Table – – Alison Mudditt

By: Robert Harington · Alison Mudditt — March 20th 2023 at 09:30

Robert Harington and Alison Mudditt, CEO of PLOS, in conversation in this series of perspectives from some of Publishing’s leaders across the non-profit and profit sectors of our industry.

The post Chefs de Cuisine: Perspectives from Publishing’s Top Table – – Alison Mudditt appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.

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