Mapping Breakthroughs, Bayesian Big Data and the Mad Queen of Game of Thrones!

 

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Sixteenth century Turkish admiral and cartographer Piri Reis was well positioned to pursue his passion for mapping as he was reported to be a frequent visitor to the Imperial Library at Constantinople. Admiral Reis reportedly compiled his maps by collecting data from maps dating back to the 4th Century AD when Emperor Constantius founded the great library (a background video is here). Wise Themistius, a “Hellenic philosopher-statesman”, assembled a great number of calligraphers, librarians and cartographers to document the realm of the empire. He advised moderation, advised Roman emperors, and advocated tolerance of pagan religions – and helped to assemble 130,000 volumes. Wiki notes that, “the merchant class became a force of its own,  achieved through efficient use of credit and other monetary innovations. Merchants invested surplus funds in financial products called chreokoinonia (Greek: χρεοκοινωνία), the equivalent and perhaps ancestor of the later Italian commenda. Eventually, the purchasing power of Byzantine merchants became such that it could influence prices in markets as far afield as Cairo and Alexandria.”  The Sack of Constantinople in 1204 during the Fourth Crusade destroyed the library so locating this surviving fragment of a 1513 Piri Reis map on gazelle skin is rare- it shows the Central and South America shores with his annotation offering that “the map of the western lands (is) drawn by Columbus.” Florentine intellectual Paolo dal Pozzo Toscanelli proposed that sailing west would lead to India eventually. So Christopher Columbus, rumored to be a charmer, zeroed in on Queen Isabella in search of funding for his “quest to find India” – instead he enslaved the Caribbean natives in search of gold and spices.

Picture Credit: World-Mysteries.com

With the launch of satellites (Sputnik 1 in 1957) and the continuous improvement of radar, mapping has become more precise. And India is taking the lead in satellite launches with a genuine achievement of putting 20 satellites on one rocket this summer. The UK Telegraph explains that, “India’s bulk launch makes clear India’s ambition to become a key player in a growing commercial space market, undercutting rivals such as Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin. In May (2016), India tested a “reusable” space shuttle, and in 2013, launched a probe that reached the orbit of Mars for just £50m. The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) has achieved a number of milestones in space including:

NAVIC: Completion of the seventh consecutive successful launch of the navigation satellite with IRNSS-1G, which is the last of the constellation that will make India self-sufficient with indigenous navigation system. With NAVIC providing vital information about the India and its surrounding terrains with a special positioning and a separate precision service, it will reduce the country’s dependency on US Global Positioning System (GPS).

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Picture Credit: Navinet and ISRO NAVIC

Mangalyaan: ISRO’s Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM)  successfully entered the Martian orbit on September 2014 in its maiden attempt at a minuscule cost of $74M. India became the first country to successfully complete maiden Mars mission and also the fourth country to successfully venture into Mars.

Mission PSLV C28 and GLSL: In a push to service the commercial market,  PSLV C28 was the heaviest commercial mission undertaken by ISRO which successfully launched five UK satellites weighing over 1440kg. GLSO MK3 is a space crew module that will allow India to undertake a manned space program by 2020. The payload on GLSL MK4 will increase by two thirds to 6.5 tons.

Chandrayaan Lunar Exploration: The Chandrayaan-1 mission carried the Moon Impact Prob payload that discovered water on the Moon. India’s second lunar mission, Chandrayaan 2, is slated for early 2018 aboard the heavy duty GSLV Mk II rocket.

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Picture Credit: Wikipedia

Forecasting and predictive modeling has useful applications in agriculture crop planning, construction insurance, infrastructure planning, stock market analysis, and other applications including trade route planning (brings back to the Byzantine trade routes). Google acquired Terra Bella in 2014 which pioneered a new approach to satellites: TB is “building an entirely new class of imaging satellites. We’ve developed a high-resolution, small satellite platform capable of rapid response, high-resolution imagery at a fraction of the cost of traditional imaging satellites. Our second generations satellites (SkySat-3-7) include a propulsion module to support orbit-stationing and enable improvements in resolution.”  ISRO’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) rocket launched the SkySat3-7 using SSC Space propulsion into a 500 km sun-synchronous orbit on June 22, 2016. Another player in the weather monitoring and prediction space is Weather Analytics with provides geo-stable data for decision and operational support. Bill Pardue conceived of a global weather and climate database back in 1983, worked on big data at Lexis-Nexis and then teamed with climatologist John Keller, a Senior Research Meteorologist at MIT Lincoln Laboratory and at AIR Worldwide.  Another third competitor, ViaScience, applies big math to solve complex business problems but also to use Bayesian modeling to analyze “Game of Thrones.” REFS™ is their software platform that automatically generates Big Math algorithms directly from data with limited human input across a wide variety of problems.

Spoiler Alert for Season 7: It’s All About the Mad Queen !

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Picture Credit: HBO.com

How is the HendoHoverboard Doing Now? Arx Pax is the Real Story…

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Back to the Future with Marty McFly (circa 1989) as seen on Kickstarter (2014)

This cool device was imagined by Californians Jill and Greg Henderson in 2008 as they envisioned a lift technology to help save buildings from earthquakes, protect antiques, and other applications. But the Hendo fundraising for the hoverboard was Kickstarter success story ($450,000 raised). Hendo’s 60 pound prototype with de-toothed sawblades was launched on May 12, 2013 on their kitchen table. The Hendo1 (pictured ) hovered for just 15 minutes barely one inch above conductive material (originally copper) and just ten were made to order. But it made it into Time’s list of the 25 Best Inventions of 2014.

Now Hendo, Arx Pax, and their Hendo hovering technologies are based on what the Hendersons call “Magnetic Field Architecture™ (MFA).”

Picture Credit: HendoHover

Greg explains, “At an altruistic level, MFA (Patent No: US 9,126,487 B2) has the ability to change the way we think about the way communities are designed and built—from family homes to hospital rooms and more. In other words, build structures in such a way that, with the flip of a switch, they can literally be lifted out of harm’s way, so that the potential ravages of earthquakes and floods will no longer hold sway over the inhabitants and occupants.”

Wired got to try out version 2.0 in March 2016 and it looks clunky but the key is the Hover Engines. The fun hoverboad is at the center of the Entertainment and Recreation Division at Arx Pax “With MFA, Arx Pax is able to cross the last barrier in the Virtual Reality world by synchronizing hover technology with the virtual experience for total immersion” and so the company is developing HoverParks but also developing HoverKarts (think bumper cars) and HoverLuges. So adrenaline junkies will have a lot to look forward to in the virtual reality field with these products and experiences. Arx Pax is certainly dedicated to educating businesses (especially developers) about MFA and in licensing.

“To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.”   From the United States Constitution, Article 1, Section 8 – Patent Clause

But the real story behind Arx Pax is all about protecting communities from natural disasters by employing structural isolation, as Greg is an architect and has collaborated with UC Berkeley’s ShakeAlert software (cool video here) on the SAFE Building System(SAFE Building System US Patents: 8,777,519; 9,103,118; 9,398,878.  Multiple patents pending). But, MFA is also about industrial automation which employs hover technology which may allow for unprecedented production flexibility and access to materials, and thus material storage savings.

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Picture Credit: Arx Pax Industrial Automation

Hyperloop or Hovering Mass Transportation systems employ lifting efficiencies which achieving 40 watts per kilogram (or better), yielding energy savings of friction-less motion that are significant. In addition, the simple passive hover surface significantly reduces the cost of infrastructure as compared to older MagLev technologies. The Hover Engines noted above are built into a SpaceX Hyperloop competition earlier in 2016 at Texas A&M University with an update here about magnetic levitation at the University of Cincinnati last week.

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Picture Credit: Arx Pax Hyperloop

So there are some very interesting technologies at the heart of some “gizmos” and Greg Henderson should be lauded for inventing MFA which harnesses “eddy currents” to create a resistance force. Other applications envisioned include:

  • Hovering robots that can clean and sterilize key areas of sensitive facilities like hospitals,
  • Industrial tools such as fork lifts incorporating MFA Technology for a safer and more efficient workplace, and
  • A magnetic tractor beam through a partnership with NASA will be used for satellite positioning (or maybe shuttle craft like in Star Trek)

LIVE LONG AND PROSPER ! (HT to Dr. Spock)

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Picture Credit: Arx Pax