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Smartphone data to map the outer atmosphere and monitor urban wildlife

• A study undertaken by Google Research, in collaboration with leading universities, shows how smartphones equipped with GPS chips can measure the state of the ionosphere, offering unprecedented accuracy in areas with few monitoring stations.
• Studies are also using smartphones to track animals, among them a recent project in Australia, which used low-energy Bluetooth beacons and a crowd-sourced network to monitor the movements of yellow-crested cockatoos.
• The new approach, which respects the privacy of users, only makes use of strictly necessary data. With help from artificial intelligence, it could enable researchers to better understand animal behaviour.
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Crowdsourcing cacatoès

Machine learning for intuitive robots that are aware of their environment

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Rob Wood (Harvard / CETI), deploying a drone in Dominica 

An AI to predict where sperm whales will surface

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Researchers have developed a kirigami-inspired mechanical computer with no electronic components.

IoT and soft robotics: is mechanical computing making a comeback?

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Collective self-consumption of energy: Building renewable, local, and shared energy

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Institutional funding and interpersonal solidarity in Senegal

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Mobile money: an alternative to a bank account for small businesses in Senegal?

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