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Microsoft and Open AI

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Image result for openAI

The Verge has an article titled  Microsoft is partnering with Elon Musk’s OpenAI to protect humanity’s best interests from evil AI.    Nick Statt’s Verge sums this up as  “OpenAI will get access to Microsoft’s latest virtual machine technology for running large-scale AI training and simulation exercises, while Microsoft will have cutting-edge research conducted on its Azure cloud platform.”

Statt highlights how this is two of the leaders in innovation teaming up with a focus on open source, but also how Microsoft is using this as a way to showcase the power and computational capacity of the Azure platform.  There is a discussion of how this democratizes AI and makes it less evil.   Statt sums it up as “the company (Microsoft) would very much like to have high-level AI research being conducted on Azure, to prove its efficacy and to attract other AI companies to do the same.

Here is the conversation with Microsoft and OpenAI.

https://youtu.be/J7_RDJtkBZ0

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 16 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Lack of Infrastructure…What came first the car or the gas station?

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October 2016 is a month where we hit 400 ppm and emissions free hydrogen cars turned 50.  Why don’t we drive hydrogen cars?  There is no fuel station.

Scientific American discusses this in an article who’s sub title hits the point: Fuel cells are better than ever but refueling infrastructure lags.

It highlights some of the big things that have happened in 2016 and shows a cool hydrogen Toyota.

In September, the HY4, the first hydrogen fuel-cell-powered passenger aircraft, took flight in Germany. French industrial giant Alstom also unveiled a fuel-cell-powered train.

 

 

Umair Irfan also highlights that the tech has been around since 1970 and that there are 20 hydrogen gas stations in California.  More important than the lack of infrastructure, 20 stations in California technically means that I might not be able to get from one end of California to the other in my hydrogen car, is that similar to electric cars…who run on coal powered electricity.  Hydrogen runs on methane.  As Irfan points out:

But there are some caveats: Like a battery-powered car, fuel cells are only as clean as the fuel that powers them. Hydrogen can be generated from splitting water molecule, but the most common and cheapest way to make hydrogen is steam reforming methane, the major component of natural gas. This process produces greenhouse gases.

Satyapal said researchers are now developing ways to produce hydrogen cheaply from renewable sources. “Our target is $4 per gallon of gasoline-equivalent cost,” she said. Current retail prices for hydrogen fueling stations are between $13 and $16.

The good news is that Japan may make the leap, but there is no guarantee they will make the leap to clean fuel and not through steam reforming methane.

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

400 Parts per million

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Ralph Keeling wrote a blog post called  NOTE ON REACHING THE ANNUAL LOW POINT.    In it he wrote.

We are now approaching the annual low point in the Mauna Loa CO2 curve, which typically happens around the last week of September but varies slightly from year to year. Recent daily and weekly values have remained above 400 parts per million. From this it’s already clear that the monthly value for September will be above 400 ppm, probably around 401 ppm. September is typically but not always the lowest month of the year.

Later he notes:

Concentrations will probably hover around 401 ppm over the next month as we sit near the annual low point.  Brief excursions towards lower values are still possible but it already seems safe to conclude that we won’t be seeing a monthly value below 400 ppm this year –  or ever again for the indefinite future.

co2_data_mlo

According to an article in Science, 1) 15 million years ago, was the last time the world was three to six degrees warmer, and sea levels were between 75 and 120 feet higher.

Even more important the number 400 and the date of September 2016, was the article Robert Monroe published in May 23rd 2016.  The article titled WHY HAS A DROP IN GLOBAL CO2 EMISSIONS NOT CAUSED CO2 LEVELS IN THE ATMOSPHERE TO STABILIZE?

The article is important since it points out that

There’s a pretty simple reason why the recent stabilization in global emissions hasn’t caused CO2 levels to stabilize. The ocean and land sinks for CO2 currently offset only about 50 percent of the emissions. So the equivalent of 50 percent of the emissions is still accumulating in the atmosphere, even with stable emissions. To stabilize CO2 levels would require roughly an immediate roughly 50 percent cut in emissions, at which point the remaining emissions would be fully offset by the sinks, at least for a while.

The bottom line, the only way to reduce the increase in CO2 pts per million to a sustainable level is for a more than 50% reduction in emissions.  So if we were to be really ambitious and have the level stabailize and maybe even go down.  According to the www.co2.earth

Fossil fuel emissions (including cement production) accounted for about 91% of total CO2 emissions from human sources in 2014. This portion of emissions originates from coal (42%), oil (33%), gas (19%), cement (6%) and gas flaring (1%).

To get to the 50% reduction or more it means cutting almost all of the coal and oil usages.  That means, based on the EPA report below it will impact Electricity, Transportation, which in turn will impact the other three sectors agriculture, commercial and industrial.

Pie chart of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by economic sector in 2014. 30 percent is from electricity, 26 percent is from transportation, 21 percent is from industry, 12 percent is from commercial and residential, and 9 percent is from agriculture.

Unfortunately no one is going to agree to eliminate electricity and transportation.  Even worse is trying to create a solution where the China, USA and the EU-27 and Other can equitably reduce expenditures in the near and immediate term without causing a global collapse.   Pie chart that shows country share of greenhouse gas emissions. 23 percent comes from China; 19 percent from the United States; 13 percent from the EU-27 (excluding Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania); 6 percent from India; 6 percent from the Russian Federation; 4 percent from Japan; 2 percent from Canada; and 28 percent from other countries.

The only solution is to rapidly deploy and implement non CO2 emitting energy sources which can maintain an energy output at our current levels or beyond.  That should be our national and global focus.  Using technology and innovation to get ahead of the problem.

  1. Coupling of CO2 and Ice Sheet Stability Over Major Climate Transitions of the Last 20 Million Years
    Aradhna K. Tripati1,2,*, Christopher D. Roberts2, Robert A. Eagle3

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Partnership converting plastics to thread

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I wanted to highlight an exciting articled written by Leon Kaye and published in Triple Pundit called Clinton Global Initiative and Thread Bring Dignity to Haiti’s Plastic Bottle Collectors.

Kaye highlights that Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) is in partnership with Thread, Timberland, HP and an NGO named Team Tassy.  This is very exciting since it supports the poorest of the poor in collecting the trash, recycles the plastic into a usable material which then can be brought back into the supply chain.  Its a perfect mix of manufacturing, innovation and productivity which leads to improving the lives of Hatians.

According to Kay Thread plans on investing $300,000 in funds for health care services for the bottle collectors.

Thread says it hopes to repeat this model in regions across the world. Scale would depend on whether the company can score more corporate buyers for the recycled plastic, especially firms seeking a more closed-loop system in the drive to eliminate waste.

So far, Timberland committed this project by buying fabric made from collected bottles for use in some of its shoes and bags. HP will use some of the recycled material to manufacture its ink jet printer cartridges.

 

The above picture and below video are taken from Rain Noe’s article on Core 77.com

 

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Solar City and U.S. Treasury Grants

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On 8-28-15 in Market Realist Saania Malik showed how SolarCity used Treasury grants to offset the costs of revenue.   Its an interesting article on how a company uses the tax credits and how those business choices impact the long term sustainability of the company.

SCTY-Gross-Margin

http://marketrealist.com/2015/08/solarcitys-revenue-streams-cost-revenues/

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Boltr Service Robot Rolls Out in Aloft Hotels

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Aloft Hotels, owned by Starwoord Hotels and Resorts  https://www.nyse.com/quote/XNYS:HOT, has rolled out Boltr or SaviOne by Savioke.   Savioke is a venture start up with $2 million in capital, one of the funders  is Google.  The SaviOne complements Aloft’s model which they brand as contemporary and innovative hotel chain.

I can see a lot of options for robots like this in hospitals, offices and in warehouses.  Not sure about the R2D2 sounds and the anthropomorphic dots for eyes.  I wonder if their VOC list as a high priority those features or if they are just traits of over processing.

 

https://youtu.be/F70He3mVrUQ

http://www.savioke.com/

A  5 minute video about Boltr by Savioke with CEO Steve Cousins.  Aloft hotels is rolling this out.   Aloft is

 

http://www.starwoodhotels.com/alofthotels/index.html?&language=en_US&localeCode=en_US

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Manufacturing as a Service

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Andrew Zaleski write in Fortune on 8-25-18 how Dassault Systems are able to push “Manufacturing as a Service.”  Using advanced modeling and simulation, 3D printing and a focus on prototype  “at the very least, let software begin to shift the manufacturing industry from one focused solely on a final product to one that equally emphasizes quick design and prototyping services.”

http://fortune.com/2015/08/28/dassault-manufacturing-service/

This is something that I worked with in the Council on Competitiveness Public Private Partnership to support HPC and Modeling and Simulation.

http://ndemc.org/index.php/tag/council-on-competitiveness/

The picture is from ProtoDesign

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Compact Fusion

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Lockheed has a very nice website devoted to compact fusion.    Follow the link and they have some articles discussing it.

http://www.lockheedmartin.co.in/us/products/compact-fusion.html

Helion Energy is a competitor to Lockheed.   they have a nice graphic on how it works

http://www.helionenergy.com/

 

About me: Sean McClure is currently a Federal Employee with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State.  He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.

New law permits North Dakota cop drones to use less than lethal force

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On 8-26-15, in Daily Beast, Justin Glawe explains how ND police can now use drones equipped with tasers, mace, beanbag rounds etc.  It also goes into depth on how the lobbying industry re-wrote the bill .

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/26/first-state-legalizes-armed-drones-for-cops-thanks-to-a-lobbyist.html

About me: Sean McClure is currently a Federal Employee with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State.  He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.

$100,000 Competition for Clean Tech

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An interesting article on 8/15/15 by Robert Sanders in the Berkeley News  on a $100,000 investment “infusion” in clean tech for student teams.

“Berkeley Cleantech University Prize (CUP), which will fund the teams during the fall semester as they take advantage of the campus’s incubators and accelerators, which are now primarily helping UC Berkeley students launch start-ups.”

http://news.berkeley.edu/2015/08/17/100000-competition-to-stimulate-innovative-clean-technology/

This is part of a DOE $2.5M grant to fund clean tech.

About me: Sean McClure is currently a Federal Employee with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State.  He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.

 

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