Monthly Archives: November 2021

Paradise Studio Artist Collective tour set for this weekend

Paradise Studio Artist Collective tour set for this weekend

Explore artist studios in Hawaiian Paradise Park and help bring art to the students of local high schools. The Paradise Studio Tour Artist Collective is having their 15th anniversary tour allowing the public into the studios where their art is created. Original art treasures and quality crafted gifts will be on display for sale from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. In keeping with their mission of not only bringing artists and patrons together, but also supporting, encouraging and inspiring young artists, 10% of all sales are donated to Puna district public high schools specifically for art supplies. There have been donations of over $20,000 to date divided between Pahoa High, Keaau High and Hawaii Academy for Arts and Sciences. Another supportive… Source link

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Letter: Hydrogen Fusion | Letters to the Editor

Letter: Hydrogen Fusion | Letters to the Editor

There was an op- ed in Tuesday, November 16th star that painted a rosy picture of a brave new world using hydrogen fusion power. He mentioned a company that raised $500 million dollars to research and develop hydrogen fusion. The only problem is that hydrogen fusion only occurs at temperatures above 20 million degrees Fahrenheit (100 million degrees centigrade).An atom bomb is the only thing capable of achieving this temperature. Theoretically, there is no way to cold fusion hydrogen. Disclaimer: As submitted to the Arizona Daily Star. Get opinion pieces, letters and editorials sent directly to your inbox weekly! Source link

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Everything you need to know about the potential method to achieving carbon-neutral energy production 

Everything you need to know about the potential method to achieving carbon-neutral energy production 

What is it? Fusion energy is the result of a nuclear fusion, where atoms are fused together through immense pressure and heat to generate energy. The process used to achieve fusion is the same one at play on the sun, but, obviously, on a considerably smaller scale.  Very simply, two light nuclei, the central core of an atom, are merge to form a single, heavier nucleus. This then releases energy.  Don’t confuse fusion with fission, where atoms are split to create energy.  Why should I care? Fusion is vitally important to the planet and all its inhabitants. It offers a carbon-free solution to creating energy that is much more sustainable, with the major by-product of fusion being helium, a non-toxic gas.  It also possesses endless potential. Atom fusing, when done… Source link

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Why two Yale profs returned from the U.N. climate summit with optimism

Why two Yale profs returned from the U.N. climate summit with optimism

Two days after the end of the United Nations climate conference in Scotland, with a new global agreement in hand and thousands of pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions by governments, corporations and big institutions such as Yale, you’d have to figure the people who played a key role would suffer a bit of a comedown. Let’s say they’re influential professors at Yale, named Daniel Esty and Anthony Leiserowitz. They’ve returned to the real world from a gathering of 40,000 people who, for all their disagreements, flew to Glasgow (yeah, burning a lot of fuel) to find a way out of the environmental meltdown that will happen in a few decades if we don’t take dramatic action. They realize the 26th U.N. Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) didn’t go far… Source link

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Why two Yale profs returned from the U.N. climate summit with optimism

Why two Yale profs returned from the U.N. climate summit with optimism

Two days after the end of the United Nations climate conference in Scotland, with a new global agreement in hand and thousands of pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions by governments, corporations and big institutions such as Yale, you’d have to figure the people who played a key role would suffer a bit of a comedown. Let’s say they’re influential professors at Yale, named Daniel Esty and Anthony Leiserowitz. They’ve returned to the real world from a gathering of 40,000 people who, for all their disagreements, flew to Glasgow (yeah, burning a lot of fuel) to find a way out of the environmental meltdown that will happen in a few decades if we don’t take dramatic action. They realize the 26th U.N. Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) didn’t go far… Source link

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Why two Yale profs returned from the U.N. climate summit with optimism

Why two Yale profs returned from the U.N. climate summit with optimism

Two days after the end of the United Nations climate conference in Scotland, with a new global agreement in hand and thousands of pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions by governments, corporations and big institutions such as Yale, you’d have to figure the people who played a key role would suffer a bit of a comedown. Let’s say they’re influential professors at Yale, named Daniel Esty and Anthony Leiserowitz. They’ve returned to the real world from a gathering of 40,000 people who, for all their disagreements, flew to Glasgow (yeah, burning a lot of fuel) to find a way out of the environmental meltdown that will happen in a few decades if we don’t take dramatic action. They realize the 26th U.N. Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) didn’t go far… Source link

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SEVIS Coordinator job with Loyola Marymount University

SEVIS Coordinator job with Loyola Marymount University

Job Summary The SEVIS coordinator is responsible for the administration of the MyStatus (Sunapsis) system, ensuring SEVIS compliance with U.S. Government Agencies. Position serves as Alternate Responsible Officer and Designated School Official for Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. This role also coordinates assessment efforts in the Office for International Students and Scholars.  Job Description Responsibility for overall administration of MyStatus, under the oversight of Associate Director of OISS. Develop processes to ensure integrity in data entry, SEVIS-reporting obligations and compliance requirements occur within established regulatory time frames. Responsible for monitoring alerts and errors in SEVIS and Sunapsis. This requires ensuring resolution and liaising… Source link

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SEVIS Coordinator job with Loyola Marymount University

SEVIS Coordinator job with Loyola Marymount University

Job Summary The SEVIS coordinator is responsible for the administration of the MyStatus (Sunapsis) system, ensuring SEVIS compliance with U.S. Government Agencies. Position serves as Alternate Responsible Officer and Designated School Official for Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. This role also coordinates assessment efforts in the Office for International Students and Scholars.  Job Description Responsibility for overall administration of MyStatus, under the oversight of Associate Director of OISS. Develop processes to ensure integrity in data entry, SEVIS-reporting obligations and compliance requirements occur within established regulatory time frames. Responsible for monitoring alerts and errors in SEVIS and Sunapsis. This requires ensuring resolution and liaising… Source link

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Ransomware attacks are getting more complex and even harder to prevent

Hear from CIOs, CTOs, and other C-level and senior execs on data and AI strategies at the Future of Work Summit this January 12, 2022. Learn more Ransomware attackers are probing known common vulnerabilities and exposures (CVEs) for weaknesses and quickly capitalizing on them, launching attacks faster than vendor teams can patch them. Unfortunately, ransomware attackers are also making attacks more complex, costly, and challenging to identify and stop, acting on potential targets’ weaknesses faster than enterprises can react. Two recent research studies — Ivanti’s latest ransomware report, conducted with Cyber Security Works and Cyware, and a second study by Forrester Consulting on behalf of Cyware — show there’s a widening gap between how quickly enterprises… Source link

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The week’s offbeat news :

The week’s offbeat news :

From a perfume that promises world peace to a miracle food that could remove the fragrance from cat poo. Your weekly roundup of offbeat stories from around the world. Litter-al genius   The world’s cat lovers — and those who have to live with them — can finally breathe easy. Taiwanese researchers have cracked the feline equivalent of cold fusion — cat poo that doesn’t stink. While it doesn’t exactly smell of roses, they discovered that the litter of cats fed with silkworm pupae is nowhere near as noxious. As well as the whiff, a natural byproduct of silk production also eliminates harmful intestinal bacteria. Whether eight of out 10 cats prefer pupae to pollock is another matter, but in tests they eagerly ate up the deliciously gloopy insects flavoured with tuna,… Source link

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