facility:is building

  • Bill Barhydt on How #abra Is Building a Global Bank With #bitcoin
    https://hackernoon.com/bill-barhydt-on-how-abra-is-building-a-global-bank-with-bitcoin-ef5f66d9

    Audio interview transcription — WBD073Note: the following is a transcription of my interview with Bill Barhydt, CEO and Founder of ABRA. I use Rev.com from translations and they remove ums, errs and half sentences. I have reviewed the transcription but if you find any mistakes, please feel free to email me. You can listen to the original recording here.You can subscribe to the podcast and listen to all episodes here.In this episode, I talk with Bill Barhydt, the CEO of ABRA. We discuss their recent announcement whereby users of the app can use Bitcoin to trade stocks and ETFs and the complexity of building a global bank on Bitcoin.https://medium.com/media/18869c019574e610f6724906afed6ebf/hrefConnect with What Bitcoin Did:Listen: iTunes | Spotify | Stitcher | SoundCloud | YouTube | (...)

    #trading #blockchain

  • The U.S. Is Building a Drone Base in Niger That Will Cost More Than $280 Million by 2024
    https://theintercept.com/2018/08/21/us-drone-base-niger-africa

    A U.S. drone base in a remote part of West Africa has garnered attention for its $100 million construction price tag. But according to new projections from the Air Force, its initial cost will soon be dwarfed by the price of operating the facility — about $30 million a year. By 2024, when the 10-year agreement for use of the base in Agadez, Niger, ends, its construction and operating costs will top a quarter-billion dollars — or around $280 million, to be more precise. And that’s actually an (...)

    #CCTV #drone #aérien #surveillance #vidéo-surveillance

  • Google, Not the Government, Is Building the Future
    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/17/technology/personaltech/google-not-the-government-is-building-the-future.html

    One persistent criticism of Silicon Valley is that it no longer works on big, world-changing ideas. Every few months, a dumb start-up will make the news — most recently the one selling a $700 juicer — and folks outside the tech industry will begin singing I-told-you-sos. But don’t be fooled by expensive juice. The idea that Silicon Valley no longer funds big things isn’t just wrong, but also obtuse and fairly dangerous. Look at the cars, the rockets, the internet-beaming balloons and gliders, (...)

    #Google #algorithme #solutionnisme_technologique #domination

  • Russia Is Building a Nuclear Space Bomber - The Daily Beast
    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/07/14/russia-is-building-a-nuclear-space-bomber.html

    the military space plane could give Russia a potentially history-altering nuclear first-strike capability.
    “The idea is that the bomber will take off from a normal home airfield to patrol Russian airspace,” Solodovnikov said, according to Sputnik, a government-owned news site. “Upon command, it will ascend into outer space, strike a target with nuclear warheads and then return to its home base.”
    Thanks to its orbital capability, the bomber would be able to nuke any target on Earth no longer than two hours after taking off, Solodovnikov claimed.

    (...) In 1967, the United States and Russia and 102 other countries signed the Outer Space Treaty, which bans the explicit militarization of space.

    #espace #militarisation #armes_nucléaires #russie

  • China Is Building a Robot Army of Model Workers
    https://www.technologyreview.com/s/601215/china-is-building-a-robot-army-of-model-workers/#/set/id/601326

    Despite the huge challenges, countless manufacturers in China are planning to transform their production processes using robotics and automation at an unprecedented scale. In some ways, they don’t really have a choice. Human labor in China is no longer as cheap as it once was, especially compared with labor in rival manufacturing hubs growing quickly in Asia. In Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia, factory wages can be less than a third of what they are in the urban centers of China. One solution, many manufacturers—and government officials—believe, is to replace human workers with machines.

    Gerald Wong, CEO of CIG, is developing an automated electronics factory.
    The results of this effort will be felt globally. Almost a quarter of the world’s products are made in China today. If China can use robots and other advanced technologies to retool types of production never before automated, that might turn the country, now the world’s sweatshop, into a hub of high-tech innovation. Less clear, however, is how that would affect the millions of workers recruited to China’s booming factories.

    #Chine #Robots #usines

  • Israel Is Building a Secret Tunnel-Destroying Weapon | Foreign Policy
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/03/10/israel-is-building-a-secret-tunnel-destroying-weapon-hamas-us-gaza

    According to intelligence officials, Israeli engineers are working tirelessly to develop what’s being called the #Underground_Iron_Dome — a system that could detect and destroy cross-border tunnels. According to a report on Israeli Channel 2, the Israeli government has spent more than $250 million since 2004 in its efforts to thwart tunnel construction under the Gaza border.

    The United States has already appropriated $40 million for the project in the 2016 financial year, in order “to establish anti-tunnel capabilities to detect, map, and neutralize underground tunnels that threaten the U.S. or Israel,” said U.S. Defense Department spokesman Christopher Sherwood. While the majority of the work in 2016 will be done in Israel, Sherwood added, “the U.S. will receive prototypes, access to test sites, and the rights to any intellectual property.
    […]
    Among the Israeli companies working to develop the new anti-tunnel mechanism are Elbit Systems and Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, the same company that developed the Iron Dome rocket defense system. Both companies declined to provide any details due to security reasons, as did the IDF and other Israeli officials, who fear that such information could play into Hamas’s hands. Yet according to intelligence sources who spoke with Foreign Policy on the condition of anonymity, the system involves seismic sensors that can monitor underground vibrations.

    IDF Chief of Staff Gen. Gadi Eizenkot hinted at these efforts in February. “We are doing a lot, but many of [the things we do] are hidden from the public,” he told a conference at Herzliya’s Interdisciplinary Center. “We have dozens, if not a hundred, engineering vehicles on the Gaza border.

    Yaakov Amidror, a former national security advisor to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former head of Israel’s National Security Council, told FP the confidential new system is not yet operational, but it is “in a testing mode.

    Since the beginning of 2016, nearly a dozen Hamas tunnels have collapsed on the Palestinians who were building them, killing at least 10 of the group’s members. While winter rains have been blamed as the culprit, the wave of collapses has led many here to wonder if Israel’s new secret weapon is already at work.

    Asked by the Palestinian Maan News Agency in February whether or not Israel was behind recent tunnel collapses, the coordinator of government activities in the Palestinian territories, IDF Maj. Gen. Yoav Mordechai, responded, “God knows.

    • In the meantime, Israeli residents of Gaza border towns are growing frustrated with what they perceive as a government that lacks any vision beyond fighting a war with Hamas every two or three years. Israel has fought three wars with Hamas since it withdrew from the Gaza Strip in 2005 — 2008’s Operation Cast Lead, 2012’s Operation Pillar of Defense, and 2014’s Operation Protective Edge. While border residents wish the government and military would do more to protect them from Hamas’s tunnels, many of them also want the government to help the people of Gaza.

      Gaza is a pot that’s about to boil over, and unless something changes there, nothing is going to change here,” says Adele Raemer, who lives a mile from the Gaza border in Nirim, an Israeli settlement. “People can’t live like that without exploding. They are going to go underground and build tunnels if that’s how they are going to make a living.

  • Russia’s new underwater nuclear drone should raise alarm bells - The Washington Post
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/russias-ship-of-terror/2015/12/27/b2085ee0-a9bb-11e5-bff5-905b92f5f94b_story.html

    Russia appears to be creating a tactical nuclear weapon that could be slipped into a harbor, unleashing a tidal wave as well as the devastating effects of a nuclear explosion. It might be used to attack a military target, such as a submarine or naval base, but cities and industry could also be hit. According to the video, the mission of the proposed system is: “Damaging the important components of the adversary’s economy in a coastal area and inflicting unacceptable damage to a country’s territory by creating areas of wide radioactive contamination that would be unsuitable for military, economic, or other activity for long periods of time.” There are no arms control treaties in place to stop this; smaller tactical nuclear weapons have never been limited by treaty. And it is true that the United States, Russia and China are all modernizing nuclear and conventional forces.

    India Is Building a Top-Secret Nuclear City to Produce Thermonuclear Weapons, Experts Say | Foreign Policy
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/12/16/india_nuclear_city_top_secret_china_pakistan_barc

    The weapons could upgrade India as a nuclear power — and deeply unsettle Pakistan and China.

    #armement #nucléaire #chine #inde #pakistan #russie

  • Is building a new capital for Egypt a top priority ? Ahram Online
    http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContentP/4/127411/Opinion
    Maasoum Marzouk , Tuesday 21 Apr 2015

    The whole world saw the Egyptian prime minister sobbing when reading his speech at the conclusion of the Egypt Economic Development Conference held lately in Sharm El-Sheikh. It was a moving scene on a human level. The same goes for the “selfie” moment when a group of youth crowded around the president, full of human warmth and spontaneous emotion that incited laughter and applause.

    Between Mahlab’s tears and gathering around El-Sisi, the scene seemed as if it were shot in an old romantic black and white film: tears, smiles and a happy ending, as if for a moment we were not witnessing the conclusion to an economic conference, but rather the conclusion of a “One Hundred Years of Cinema” festival.

    Well, let’s put aside congratulating ourselves and being proud of good organisation. A huge number of people have already talked and sung about the cup that is half-full with hundreds of billions of dollars. I hope that hearts can be open for he who wants to discuss the part that is half empty. Away from torturing ourselves or scaring others or hurling dirt, it is the duty of every reasonable person.

    The Prophet Abraham said to God: “My Lord, show me how You give life to the dead.” It was said to him: “Have you not believed?” He replied: “Yes, but [I ask] only that my heart may be satisfied.” I have wished — and still wish — to swallow all I have seen and heard until now. Perhaps there is something that was not declared and bore great benefit, or God forbid additional disasters.

    Does constructing a new capital for Egypt occupy a top priority in addressing our economic problems? During the last decades, a number of what we can call “small capitals” were built, such as Sadat City, 10th of Ramadan, Madinaty (My City), El-Tagammu El-Khames (The Fifth Settlement), 6th of October, etc. Billions of dollars were even poured in the form of concrete jungles in North Coast cities that weren’t used except for a few months during the entire year. As a point of fact, I am not convinced that we have, for the time being, the luxury of spending more than $45 billion on new cities.

    How easy and sweet to make people live with illusions. But this crime in which the same elites have participated before, and of whom most came out to promote illusions once again, is spreading without any of them wondering whether these billions will be nothing but another tranche of debt that will accumulate on the shoulders of upcoming generations while it seeps into the sands (like Toshka), or into the pockets of some lucky ones, as is usual.

    Yes, it is a good thing and an old dream that we have a new capital in order that we get rid of the pains of our old capital and have a city that we are proud of. However, should we pour $45 billion into additional concrete jungles, or should we push it into the arteries of micro, small and medium sized projects (the prescription of Brazilian President Lula da Silva who eradicated poverty in his country during two presidential terms). We could also feed by it structural reform in all levels of education during the next 10 years (the Asian Tigers experience). Are we in dire need to build skyscrapers challenging those of Dubai and other Gulf cities, or are we in need of decent dwellings to accommodate almost 12 million Egyptian citizen living in slums, housing shelters and cemeteries?

    Regarding contracts struck at the conference, what has transpired until now confirms that we are standing in front of one of the applications of the Chicago School in economics, which was embraced by Ahmed Nazif’s government and his inheritor’s clique. It is also similar to the bible of the International Monetary Fund (whose managing director, Mrs Lagarde, attended and was in a state utter happiness and joy).

    As I have mentioned, all members of the Mubarak regime’s economic team were the guardians of this school. They attempted, indeed, to solve the Egyptian economy’s crises through selling Egypt by way of privatisation (although they dared not come near subsidies). Despite the fact that programme application was underway for more than 30 years (or since the beginning of the Open Door era), the majority of the Egyptian people did not feel a significant improvement in their living conditions. The result was that corruption increased in every form and the gap widened between classes, against the backdrop of oppressive practices that led, in the end, to the explosion in January 2011.