A new report claims the market for humanoid robots will expand tenfold by 2023. Current estimates put its value at $320.3 million, but it’s projected to reach $3.9 billion within the next six years. Read more here.
An Erupting Solar Prominence from SOHO
Credit: SOHO-EIT Consortium, ESA, NASA
January is national Braille literacy month. Did you know that Braille actually started out as military code developed so the French soldiers could read important messages without light? In fact, the code was known as night writing. It was the schoolboy Louis Braille who developed the more streamlined version of the alphabet used today. #WorldBrailleDay
Will your job still exist tomorrow, or will it be automated? Here are some of the top “at risk” jobs.
January 4th is the birthday of the scientist Sir Isaac Newton, widely known for developing the laws of gravity and planter relations. Newton first began to think about these concepts when he witnessed an apple falling from a tree – though the apple did not hit him on the head as many believe. #ThursdayThoughts #NationalTriviaDay
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This month in space
November 1st: Moon at Aphelion; Jupiter conjunct Haumea
November 2nd: Saturn square Chiron; Moon conjunct Eris
November 3rd: Jupiter quintile Pluto
November 4th: Full Moon in Taurus; Taurids Meteor Shower
November 5th: Mercury enters Sagittarius; Moon at Perigee; Taurids Meteor Shower
November 7th: Venus enters Scorpio
November 10th: Moon conjunct Ceres; Last Quarter Moon in Leo
November 11th: Saturn trine Uranus; Venus conjunct Haumea
November 13th: Venus conjunct Jupiter
November 14th: Close approach of the Moon and Mars; Moon conjunct Makemake
November 16th: Moon conjunct Haumea and Venus
November 17th: Leonids Meteor Shower
November 18th: New Moon in Scorpio; Mars conjunct Makemake; Leonids Meteor Shower
November 20th: Moon conjunct Mercury; Moon at Perihelion
November 21st: Sun enters Sagittarius; Moon at Apogee
November 22nd: Neptune Direct; Jupiter sesquiquadrate Chiron; Moon conjunct Pluto; Mercury at Greatest Brightness
November 24th: Mercury at Greatest Eastern Elongation
November 26th: First Quarter Moon in Aquarius
November 28th: Mercury at Dichotomy; Mercury conjunct Saturn
November 30th: Moon conjunct Eris
NASA’s Kepler space telescope team has released a mission catalog of planet candidates that introduces 219 new planet candidates, 10 of which are near-Earth size and orbiting in their star’s habitable zone, which is the range of distance from a star where liquid water could pool on the surface of a rocky planet.
This is the most comprehensive and detailed catalog release of candidate exoplanets, which are planets outside our solar system, from Kepler’s first four years of data. It’s also the final catalog from the spacecraft’s view of the patch of sky in the Cygnus constellation.
With the release of this catalog, derived from data publicly available on the NASA Exoplanet Archive, there are now 4,034 planet candidates identified by Kepler. Of which, 2,335 have been verified as exoplanets. Of roughly 50 near-Earth size habitable zone candidates detected by Kepler, more than 30 have been verified.
Keep reading
What Jobs Will the Robots Take?
It is an invisible force that goes by many names. Computerization. Automation. Artificial intelligence. Technology. Innovation. And, everyone’s favorite, ROBOTS.
Whatever name you prefer, some form of it has been stoking progress and killing jobs—from seamstresses to paralegals—for centuries. But this time is different: Nearly half of American jobs today could be automated in “a decade or two," according to a new paper by Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael A. Osborne, discussed recently in The Economist. The question is: Which half?
Another way of posing the same question is: Where do machines work better than people? Tractors are more powerful than farmers. Robotic arms are stronger and more tireless than assembly-line workers. But in the past 30 years, software and robots have thrived at replacing a particular kind of occupation: the average-wage, middle-skill, routine-heavy worker, especially in manufacturing and office admin.
Read more. [Image: Reuters]
"Develop a passion for learning. If you do, you will never cease to grow." Anthony J. D'Angelo. Visit our website at https://knowledgeiskey.co.uk
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