tricity effect of gravity that Dr. Daniel Keown has proposed as ...
THE SPARK in the MACHINE
[IT] IS TIME to STAY time•LESS [in4D] as Freespace CitiZENs
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In this RSA Animate, renowned academic David Harvey asks if it is time to look beyond capitalism towards a new social order that would allow us to live withi...
une as recorded by our radars and air traffic management systems. An early prototype version of this system, was the one which I utilised many moons ago during my discussions with American Express, about the possibility of utilising such a system as an adjunct to their Departure/Arrival Systems at Heathrow and Gatwick airports. During one of my meetings with them in Brighton, I was given access to their hyper-security centre where, as part and parcel of showing me the extent of their systems processes • they asked if I would like a demonstration of the very basic process which took place during authorisation of an AMEX CARD purchase • which they then proceeded to demonstrate to me in real-time so to speak. Surprise, surprise however, that several screens of columns of AMEX CARD holders named Michael Grove appeared, which certainly provided a very thought provoking yet humbling experience.
The camera has been fixed in one position and activity is shown at 800 times faster than real time. The time runs from midnight to midnight and shows the arrival of early morning traffic coming across the Atlantic in the early hours, the build up through the day and then the calming of flows into the night before the pattern repeats.NATS provides air traffic control services in UK Airspace 24x7x365.
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fungi – the “circulatory system of the planet” – are to be mapped for the first time, in an attempt to protect them from damage and improve their ability to absorb and store carbon dioxide. Fungi use carbon to build networks in the soil, which connect to plant roots and act as nutrient “highways”, exchanging carbon from plant roots for nutrients. For instance, some fungi are known to supply 80% of phosphorus to their host plants. Underground fungal networks can extend for many miles but are rarely noticed, though trillions of miles of them are thought to exist around the world. These fungi are vital to the biodiversity of soils and soil fertility, but little is known about them.
Many hotspots of mycorrhizal fungi are thought to be under threat, from the expansion of agriculture, urbanisation, pollution, water scarcity and changes to the climate.
The new project, from the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks (SPUN), will involve the collection of 10,000 samples around the world, from hotspots that are being identified through artificial intelligence technology.
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Added by Michael Grove at 13:52 on November 30, 2021