It's been a little over a week since the Philippines was rocked by Typhoon Hiyan, but the world is still coming to grips with the extent of the devastation.
Via clare wormald, PIRatE Lab
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William H's comment,
September 17, 2:49 PM
I am always excited whenever people introduce new ways to tackle contemporary environmental issues that have evidence to back it up as a solution. I know that glass is not usually recycled nationally and so having a use for them like replenishing coasts would be a revolutionary outcome! Cool find Dustin!
Kailani Franklin's comment,
September 18, 1:41 AM
This sounds likes such a great solution. I really hope it will be implemented.
Mikayla Salas's comment,
September 19, 6:19 PM
This sounds like a really great solution. Super interesting to read about.
Kailani Franklin's comment,
November 20, 2:31 PM
It's great that more money is being put into keeping students safe, but at the same time its sad that there is such a demand to do this because of tragic events in the past. School should be a safe place for kids.
William H's comment,
November 18, 4:02 PM
It is interesting to see this article when the article I just posted referred to other drone sightings across Europe. This seems to be another instance of this phenomenon.\
Taylor Sithammavong's comment,
October 31, 3:35 PM
This is absolutely devastating. I wonder if this is a search and rescue drone or how they could use drone to help those who are trapped.
Barbara Kim's comment,
November 1, 2:18 AM
Seeing the drone footage of the aftermath just hits on another level. I really hope people in Jamaica get quick aid so they can start recovering.
Kailani Franklin's comment,
October 29, 7:59 PM
This will probably have negative effects on the children. Tree canopy is needed to help regulate temperature. A combination of extreme heat, lack of trees to regulate temperature, and a lack of shade will increase the risk of heat exhaustion/hyperthermia.
jasemahmedselman@gmail.com's comment,
October 31, 4:44 PM
سكس رحمة محسن فديو كامل جديد مصرى
https://tinyurl.com/46wjyup8 |
Kailani Franklin's comment,
November 17, 12:50 AM
I wonder if this will cause people to switch to a different drone brand. I think it will be hard to switch to another drone brand because DJI is such a huge drone distrbutor.
William H's comment,
November 12, 1:56 PM
Dang! They had a good eye! I was struggling to find the letters in our lab activity and I couldn't even see the dog in the picture. I am sure the more and more you do it, the better you become at identifying those types of things.
Adam Steinmehl's comment,
October 31, 3:37 PM
It's interesting to use natural evolution to make our technology better. Cool read!
William H's comment,
November 4, 5:05 PM
Interesting law! I feel it makes sense. It is not allowing anyone to disable drones, but it allows authorities to do it if deemed necessary. Given by what has been going on recently in National Parks where frequent drone flights are going unchallenged would allow authorities to prevent such disruptive behavior from occuring.
William H's comment,
October 28, 12:36 PM
I guess I did not consider the fact that just because there is a government shutdown does not mean people stop going to the parks. That is insane that the frequency jumped from one drone sighting a week to five every day. I also think it is rather sketch that DJI used possibly illegally gained footage. Very questionable behavior.
Esteban Roman's comment,
October 24, 2:59 PM
I agree that drones are becoming more influential in wars.
Mikayla Salas's comment,
October 31, 2:59 PM
It does appear that drones are being used more for a lot of different things.
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