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Capturing CO2 from Generators to Produce Sustainable Fertilizers

Image Credit: ronstik/Shutterstock.com Award-winning cleantech company, CCm Technologies, has developed an innovative method of producing sustainable fertilizers from captured carbon dioxide. The technology is set to significantly reduce the volume of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere from industrial power generators, while at the same time limiting the negative impact of unsustainable fertilizers. The company’s first full-scale fertilizer manufacturing plant has been created and is ready for deployment to Viridor The Need to Reduce Carbon Emissions from Industrial Power Generators Greenhouse gas emissions are warming our planet and causing a multitude of negative consequences that are harming our planet, human and animal health, and our chance of a prosperous future.

Samsung s Bengaluru R&D centre to explore multi-device | Business Standard News

Samsung Electronics said on Wednesday it will explore multi-device intelligence, beyond 5G, blockchain and data science areas over the next five years at its research and development (R&D) facility here. Samsung R&D Institute, Bangalore (SRI-B), Samsungs largest R&D facility outside Korea, is celebrating its 25 years in India. Over the years, it has grown into an advanced R&D centre for Samsung globally, with excellence in wireless communications, multimedia and image processing, artificial intelligence in vision, voice and text technologies and Internet of Things (IoT), a company statement said on Wednesday. Over the next five years, SRI-B to exploreMulti-Device Intelligence, beyond 5G, Blockchain and Data Scienceareas even as it continues to create strong differentiation for Samsung through innovations in camera technologies, artificial intelligence and 5G , it said.

NGA Faces Tech, Policy Hurdles To AI For Target Recognition

By   Theresa Hitchens on January 21, 2021 at 5:32 PM WASHINGTON: The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) has developed AI algorithms that could be deployed for ‘target recognition’ but only if you define “target” recognition in the narrowest manner possible, says Joe Victor, the spy agency’s guru for artificial intelligence and machine learning. “Can I deploy AI for target recognition? Yes. I can’t get into too much details, but what does that mean though? … If we’re talking about how we’re going to use something to identify something to go action on something, and go tell my DoD partners that they can go off and do the thing that they need to … not yet,” Victor told the Genius Machines forum sponsored by

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