All posts tagged: Powering

Unfounded health claims are powering a solar backlash

Unfounded health claims are powering a solar backlash

Kevin Heath had hoped there would be solar panels by now on his family farm in southeastern Michigan, roughly 50 miles outside Detroit. About six years ago, he agreed to lease part of his land for a solar project. It would help him pay off debt and keep the farm in the family, he said. But the opportunity was thwarted when, in 2023, following pushback from some local residents, his township passed an ordinance that banned large solar projects from land zoned for agriculture. In the fight over solar development, Heath said he was bombarded by just about every argument from critics — including claims that solar fields are a health hazard. “I’ve heard them say that, but I’ve never heard anybody prove that,” Heath said. “The health and safety issue,” he added, “that is just a joke.” Michigan has big prospects in solar farming — measured by the expected growth in the capacity of its farms to add electricity directly to the grid. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, most of the nation’s …

Semi-solid-state EV batteries are powering up trucks, flying cars

Semi-solid-state EV batteries are powering up trucks, flying cars

Semi-solid-state batteries are already expanding from the first passenger EVs to new segments, including flying cars and light trucks. New battery chemistries, such as semi-solid, all-solid-state, and sodium-ion batteries, are quickly moving from the lab to reality. At the Chengdu Motor Show last year, SAIC Motor launched the new MG4, deeming it “the world’s first mass-produced semi-solid-state” EV. As the first to achieve mass production of the new battery tech, SAIC said it was “setting a new benchmark,” enabling longer driving ranges, faster charging, enhanced efficiency, and improved safety and performance in cold weather. Advertisement – scroll for more content SAIC’s British sub-brand, MG Motor, introduced the MG SolidCore Battery last week, its semi-solid-state battery tech that will be used in upcoming EVs in Europe, such as the new MG4 EV Urban. While the company didn’t reveal any battery specs or other details, the new MG4 in China uses a 53.95 kWh semi-solid manganese-based lithium-ion battery, delivering a CLTC range of 530 km (330 miles). It starts at just 102,800 yuan ($14,500). In Europe, it …

Manufact raises .3M as MCP becomes the ‘USB-C for AI’ powering ChatGPT and Claude apps

Manufact raises $6.3M as MCP becomes the ‘USB-C for AI’ powering ChatGPT and Claude apps

For decades, software companies designed their products for a single type of customer: a human being staring at a screen. Every button, menu, and dashboard existed to translate a person’s intention into a machine’s action. But a small startup based in San Francisco and Zurich believes that era is ending — and that the future belongs to companies that build software not for people, but for the artificial intelligence agents that increasingly act on their behalf. Manufact, a three-person company that emerged from Y Combinator’s Summer 2025 batch, announced in February that it raised $6.3 million in seed funding led by Peak XV, the venture capital firm formerly known as Sequoia Capital India and Southeast Asia, which now manages more than $10 billion in assets. Liquid 2 Ventures, Ritual Capital, Pioneer Fund, and Y Combinator also participated in the round, alongside angel investors including the co-founder and chief operating officer of Supabase. The company’s thesis is deceptively simple and potentially enormous: as AI agents take over more of the work that humans perform inside software …

The billion-dollar infrastructure deals powering the AI boom

The billion-dollar infrastructure deals powering the AI boom

It takes a lot of computing power to run an AI product — and as the tech industry races to tap the power of AI models, there’s a parallel race underway to build the infrastructure that will power them. On a recent earnings call, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang estimated that between $3 trillion and $4 trillion will be spent on AI infrastructure by the end of the decade — with much of that money coming from AI companies. Along the way, they’re placing immense strain on power grids and pushing the industry’s building capacity to its limit. Below, we’ve laid out everything we know about the biggest AI infrastructure projects, including major spending from Meta, Oracle, Microsoft, Google, and OpenAI. We’ll keep it updated as the boom continues and the numbers climb even higher. Microsoft’s 2019 investment in OpenAI This is arguably the deal that kicked off the whole contemporary AI boom: In 2019, Microsoft made a $1 billion investment in a buzzy non-profit called OpenAI, known mostly for its association with Elon Musk. Crucially, …

Powering a bright future for neutron science

Powering a bright future for neutron science

Helmut Schober, Director General of the European Spallation Source (ESS), shares an update on the progress made so far in the construction of Sweden’s next-generation neutron science facility. The European Spallation Source is a next-generation neutron science facility under construction in Lund, Sweden, with its Data Management and Scientific Computing Centre located in Copenhagen, Denmark. Once completed and fully operational, ESS will be a world-leading accelerator-based neutron source for studying the structure and behaviour of materials at the atomic level. ESS, which has been in construction since 2014, is one of the largest science and technology infrastructure projects being built today. The facility design and construction include the most powerful linear proton accelerator ever built, a five-tonne, helium-cooled tungsten target wheel, 15 state-of-the-art neutron instruments, a suite of laboratories, and a supercomputing data management and software development centre. To learn more about the progress made so far and the great potential for science that will come from the facility, The Innovation Platform spoke with Helmut Schober, Director General of ESS. Can you elaborate more on …

AI, Fancy Footwear, and All the Other Gear Powering Olympic Bobsledding

AI, Fancy Footwear, and All the Other Gear Powering Olympic Bobsledding

Olympic bobsledding often gets called the “Formula 1 of ice.” Tracks are more than 1.5 kilometers (nearly a mile) long, and athletes often race down them at speeds nearing 145 kilometers per hour (90 mph). Bobsledders—whether in teams of four, two, or sliding solo—are often subjected to gravitational forces in excess of 5g. At the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Games, they’re using tech aimed at making each phase of the race, from initial push to technical driving to final braking, just a little bit more precise than in previous Games. Men’s four-person bobsledding made its Olympic debut in Chamonix, France, in 1924; women’s two-person bobsledding didn’t enter the Games until 2002 in Salt Lake City. Women’s monobob arrived in 2022. While the earliest bobsleds were made of wood, the sport has been synonymous with steel for years, although in recent decades it has been replaced by carbon fiber, which provides greater lightness and strength. Each new technological development in the sport has come amid the constraints necessary to keep athletes safe, such as weight and …

NAACP threatens to sue Musk’s xAI over Mississippi gas turbines powering data center

NAACP threatens to sue Musk’s xAI over Mississippi gas turbines powering data center

The NAACP on Friday threatened to sue Elon Musk’s AI company xAI, claiming that gas turbines powering a company data center are polluting communities in Mississippi and Tennessee. “Our communities are not playgrounds for corporations who are chasing profit over people. xAI’s first data center is already creating pollution for Mississippi’s neighbors in Memphis —… Source link

NanoClaw solves one of OpenClaw’s biggest security issues — and it’s already powering the creator’s biz

NanoClaw solves one of OpenClaw’s biggest security issues — and it’s already powering the creator’s biz

The rapid viral adoption of Austrian developer Peter Steinberger’s open source AI assistant OpenClaw in recent weeks has sent enterprises and indie developers into a tizzy. It’s easy to easy why: OpenClaw is freely available now and offers a powerful means of autonomously completing work and performing tasks across a user’s entire computer, phone, or even business with natural language prompts that spin up swarms of agents. Since its release in November 2025, it’s captured the market with over 50 modules and broad integrations — but its “permissionless” architecture raised alarms among developers and security teams. Enter NanoClaw, a lighter, more secure version which debuted under an open source MIT License on January 31, 2026, and achieved explosive growth—surpassing 7,000 stars on GitHub in just over a week. Created by Gavriel Cohen—an experienced software engineer who spent seven years at website builder Wix.com—the project was built to address the “security nightmare” inherent in complex, non-sandboxed agent frameworks. Cohen and his brother Lazer are also co-founders of Qwibit, a new AI-first go-to-market agency, and vice president …

Inside the marketplace powering bespoke AI deepfakes of real women

Inside the marketplace powering bespoke AI deepfakes of real women

Civitai automatically tags bounties requesting deepfakes and lists a way for the person featured in the content to manually request its takedown. This system means that Civitai has a reasonably successful way of knowing which bounties are for deepfakes, but it’s still leaving moderation to the general public rather than carrying it out proactively.  A company’s legal liability for what its users do isn’t totally clear. Generally, tech companies have broad legal protections against such liability for their content under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, but those protections aren’t limitless. For example, “you cannot knowingly facilitate illegal transactions on your website,” says Ryan Calo, a professor specializing in technology and AI at the University of Washington’s law school. (Calo wasn’t involved in this new study.) Civitai joined OpenAI, Anthropic, and other AI companies in 2024 in adopting design principles to guard against the creation and spread of AI-generated child sexual abuse material . This move followed a 2023 report from the Stanford Internet Observatory, which found that the vast majority of AI models …

LHC now powering nearby homes through heat exchange system

LHC now powering nearby homes through heat exchange system

A groundbreaking energy project at CERN is proving that cutting-edge science and everyday sustainability can go hand in hand. A newly operational heat exchange system is now capturing waste heat from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and redirecting it to warm homes and businesses in the nearby French town of Ferney-Voltaire. What was once excess heat released into the atmosphere is now a low-carbon resource supporting a growing local heating network. The Large Hadron Collider explained The Large Hadron Collider is the world’s most powerful particle accelerator, located underground near Geneva on the French–Swiss border. It propels subatomic particles to near-light speeds before smashing them together, allowing scientists to study the fundamental building blocks of the Universe. The LHC has been instrumental in major discoveries, including the Higgs boson, and plays a central role in advancing our understanding of physics. Its vast scale and energy demands also make it uniquely suited to innovative energy recovery projects such as this heat exchange system. Turning scientific waste heat into community energy Since mid-January, thermal energy recovered from …