Goto

Collaborating Authors

 lightning rod


NTT develops world's first 'flying lightning rod' using drones

The Japan Times

Telecom giant NTT has developed what it describes as the world's first "flying lightning rod," or drones that will trigger lightning and redirect it safely to the ground to prevent it from striking people or vital infrastructure. In multiple field tests in the mountainous areas of Hamada, Shimane Prefecture, between December and January, the company flew a drone equipped with a proprietary lightning-resistant cage to an approaching thundercloud when it noted the electric field intensity at ground level had increased, signaling an impending lightning strike. The drone, which was connected to the ground with a wire, triggered a lightning strike -- marking the first time such a feat has been achieved globally, according to NTT -- with the 2,000 volts of electric current flowing through the wire.

  Country: Asia > Japan > Honshū > Chūgoku > Shimane Prefecture (0.32)
  Industry: Information Technology > Services (0.96)

The most difficult thing in data science: politics

#artificialintelligence

When I was waking up at 6 AM to study Support Vector Machines I thought: "This is really tough! But, hey, at least I will become very valuable for my future employer!". If I could get the DeLorean, I would go back in time and call "Bulls**t!" on myself. The truth is that reality is much more nuanced, and the fact the field is still far away from being mature isn't helping at all. The classical story goes something like this: "data scientists spend 80% of their time getting, cleaning and managing data, only the rest is spent on analysis and machine learning".