Recent Videos
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Instructions |
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Instructions |
| The "Recent Videos" pages allow the user to search for all videos that have been cataloged by the MyCCNews system (over 4500).
- The sytem allows the users to specify the number of videos that are listed by changing the specification for the number of rows and columns.
- Note that the images zize is based on tne number of colums.
- The system also allows for text searching of the title and description ("wild cards" are allowed).
- Videos for a specific organization or playlist can be selected by choosing the appopraate entry from the "Organization" dropdown list.
- Once all of the changes are made, click the "Apply" button.
- Clicking on image will open the video for viewing.
- The "number of views" will be updated on a weekly basis.
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Findings pave way for longer-lasting solid-state batteries - Mar 27, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Technology (46 Views;2 min.) |
| Lithium-ion batteries contain flammable materials that could pose a safety risk under certain conditions. Researchers from the National Research Council of Canada are using the CLS to develop a safer alternative: solid-state batteries. These batteries replace the flammable liquid electrolyte in conventional batteries with a solid ceramic-based material to pass charge through the battery. Solid-state batteries have another advantage: Because they can be made with lithium metal, they’re able to hold a great deal of charge in a small space, making them powerful energy storage devices. The new insights gained using synchrotron light – which is particularly well suited to studying batteries – will help the researchers improve the mix of solid and liquid parts and how these batteries are put together. To read the full story online, visit https://www.lightsource.ca/public/news/2023-24-q4-jan-march/findings-pave-way-for-longer-lasting-solid-state-batteries.php |
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Findings pave way for longer-lasting solid-state batteries - Mar 27, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Technology (46 Views;2 min.) |
| Lithium-ion batteries contain flammable materials that could pose a safety risk under certain conditions. Researchers from the National Research Council of Canada are using the CLS to develop a safer alternative: solid-state batteries. These batteries replace the flammable liquid electrolyte in conventional batteries with a solid ceramic-based material to pass charge through the battery. Solid-state batteries have another advantage: Because they can be made with lithium metal, they’re able to hold a great deal of charge in a small space, making them powerful energy storage devices. The new insights gained using synchrotron light – which is particularly well suited to studying batteries – will help the researchers improve the mix of solid and liquid parts and how these batteries are put together. To read the full story online, visit https://www.lightsource.ca/public/news/2023-24-q4-jan-march/findings-pave-way-for-longer-lasting-solid-state-batteries.php |
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This Is CDR Ep. 98: PlantVillage with Dr. David Hughes - Mar 27, 2024 Open Air (Carbon Capture) (14 Views;59 min.) |
| This week we are pleased to welcome Dr. David Hughes of Penn State University to present his work with PlantVillage and discuss how we can advance biochar carbon removal to gigatonne scale.\n\n​PlantVillage: https://plantvillage.psu.edu/\n\nAbout David:\n\n​David Hughes is the Dorothy Foehr Huck and J. Lloyd Huck Chair in Global Food Security at Penn State University and Director of USAID Innovation Lab on Current and Emerging Threats to Crops. David is additionally founder of PlantVillage; the for-profit enterprises Carbon4Good and PlantVillage ; and the Village Youth Fund. PlantVillage is a public good research enterprise at Penn State that leverages AI to help smallholder farmers adapt to climate change and leverage their farms to mitigate climate change via AI. PlantVillage is one of the fifteen teams to have won an XPRIZE Carbon Removal Milestone Award and is now competing for the Grand Prize. PlantVillage has developed a digital monitoring, reporting and verification ... |
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This Is CDR Ep. 98: PlantVillage with Dr. David Hughes - Mar 27, 2024 Open Air (Carbon Capture) (14 Views;59 min.) |
| This week we are pleased to welcome Dr. David Hughes of Penn State University to present his work with PlantVillage and discuss how we can advance biochar carbon removal to gigatonne scale.\n\n​PlantVillage: https://plantvillage.psu.edu/\n\nAbout David:\n\n​David Hughes is the Dorothy Foehr Huck and J. Lloyd Huck Chair in Global Food Security at Penn State University and Director of USAID Innovation Lab on Current and Emerging Threats to Crops. David is additionally founder of PlantVillage; the for-profit enterprises Carbon4Good and PlantVillage ; and the Village Youth Fund. PlantVillage is a public good research enterprise at Penn State that leverages AI to help smallholder farmers adapt to climate change and leverage their farms to mitigate climate change via AI. PlantVillage is one of the fifteen teams to have won an XPRIZE Carbon Removal Milestone Award and is now competing for the Grand Prize. PlantVillage has developed a digital monitoring, reporting and verification ... |
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Two coral snakes recorded battling for prey in a scientific first - Mar 27, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth (480 Views;1 min.) |
| Two red-tailed coral snakes have been observed competing over a caecilian in the first documented wild case of kleptoparasitism.\n\nRead more at https://phys.org/news/2024-03-coral-snakes-prey-scientific.html\n\nIn this video: Two coral snakes competing over amphibian prey. \n\nCredit: Henrik Bringsøe and Niels Poul Dreyer\n\nSubscribe: https://www.youtube.com/c/Science-X-Network\n\nJoin Science X channel to support our mission:\nhttps://www.youtube.com/c/Science-X-Network/join\n\nThank you for helping our YouTube channel reach new heights! Hitting subscribe aids us in our mission to bring you the latest and greatest research news in science, medicine and technology. |
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Launch Webinar: 2023 Global Biochar Market Report - Mar 26, 2024 Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist) (165 Views;62 min.) |
| IBI and @USBiocharInitiative hosted the launch webinar of the 2023 Global Biochar Market Report! Drawing on perspectives from more than 1,000 global study respondents, the inaugural report marks a significant milestone in biochar market analysis.\n\nAvailable for download from 25 March 2024, it offers a snapshot of the biochar industry’s global landscape, delivering critical insights for policymakers and investors committed to the Paris Agreement goals and carbon removal initiatives. \n\nThe report highlights industry growth trends, key challenges, burgeoning market demands, and the pivotal role industry organizations play in this dynamic environment.\n\nDownload the report: https://biochar-international.org/2023-global-biochar-market-report/\n\nThis is an urgent call to action for those vested in the biochar's expansion and impact as a climate change solution — a convergence of innovation, opportunity, and strategic insight awaits.\n\n \n\nInternational Biochar Initiative ... |
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Launch Webinar: 2023 Global Biochar Market Report - Mar 26, 2024 Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist) (165 Views;62 min.) |
| IBI and @USBiocharInitiative hosted the launch webinar of the 2023 Global Biochar Market Report! Drawing on perspectives from more than 1,000 global study respondents, the inaugural report marks a significant milestone in biochar market analysis.\n\nAvailable for download from 25 March 2024, it offers a snapshot of the biochar industry’s global landscape, delivering critical insights for policymakers and investors committed to the Paris Agreement goals and carbon removal initiatives. \n\nThe report highlights industry growth trends, key challenges, burgeoning market demands, and the pivotal role industry organizations play in this dynamic environment.\n\nDownload the report: https://biochar-international.org/2023-global-biochar-market-report/\n\nThis is an urgent call to action for those vested in the biochar's expansion and impact as a climate change solution — a convergence of innovation, opportunity, and strategic insight awaits.\n\n \n\nInternational Biochar Initiative ... |
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Rethinking wind power’s towers and turbines - Mar 26, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Technology (107 Views;1 min.) |
| Despite its boom in recent years, wind power must expand further for the EU to meet its goals of cutting greenhouse-gas emissions. To help achieve those targets, 30 gigawatts of wind turbines need to be built every year between now and 2030. \n\nThe need for new designs able to boost profitability is driving scientific efforts. \n\nFollow the link to discover how EU funding is bringing environmentally friendly and economically viable wind-power solutions âž¡ï¸ https://bit.ly/4csNQZT\n\nSubscribe to our channel to stay informed about the latest developments in EU-funded research.\n\n#ResearchImpactEU |
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This is CDR Ep.98: PlantVillage with David Hughes - Mar 26, 2024 Open Air (Carbon Capture) (33 Views;59 min.) |
| This week we are pleased to welcome Dr. David Hughes of Penn State University to present his work with PlantVillage and discuss how we can advance biochar carbon removal to gigatonne scale.\n\n​PlantVillage: https://plantvillage.psu.edu/\n\nAbout David:\n\n​David Hughes is the Dorothy Foehr Huck and J. Lloyd Huck Chair in Global Food Security at Penn State University and Director of USAID Innovation Lab on Current and Emerging Threats to Crops. David is additionally founder of PlantVillage; the for-profit enterprises Carbon4Good and PlantVillage ; and the Village Youth Fund. PlantVillage is a public good research enterprise at Penn State that leverages AI to help smallholder farmers adapt to climate change and leverage their farms to mitigate climate change via AI. PlantVillage is one of the fifteen teams to have won an XPRIZE Carbon Removal Milestone Award and is now competing for the Grand Prize. PlantVillage has developed a digital monitoring, reporting and verification ... |
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Rethinking electricity grids. - Mar 24, 2024 Just Have A Think (59,419 Views;12 min.) |
| As renewable energy developers struggle with the almost impenetrable complexity of regulatory and permitting bureaucracy that can add more than a decade to the timeline of a new installation, clever boffins have been quietly revolutionising the materials used to make the wires that run between the pylons that take electrons from where they're generated to where they're needed. The cost savings, energy efficiency improvements, and speed of installation that those materials are facilitating may just make the difference in the race for decarbonisation. Get your 20% discounted tickets for Everything Electric LIVE, LONDON here https://uk.everythingelectric.show/london REMEMBER : Use Discount code JHTEE20 to get 20% off Help support this channels independence at http://www.patreon.com/justhaveathink Or with a donation via Paypal by clicking here https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=GWR73EHXGJMAE'source=url You can also help ... |
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From Chaos to Regeneration - Our World in Crisis - Mar 23, 2024 Facing Future (612 Views;28 min.) |
| Life on our planet is under attack. False solutions mask the real questions - How will we grow our food, what kind of economy do we really need, and how can we stop the expansion of fossil fuels? To counter the dominant patriarchal culture, whose exploitation of nature and of other cultures, and particularly of women, climate justice groups are raising their voices and taking action to protect #Biodiversity, the health of their ecosystems, and the #RightsOfNature. \n \n#OspreyOrielleLake, founder and executive director of the Women's Earth and Climate Action Network, discusses her new book, The Story is in Our Bones: How Worldviews and Climate Justice Can Remake a World in Crisis with host, Dale Walkonen. \n\nEdited by Mike Coe\n\nFor information about WECAN, visit:\nhttps://www.wecaninternational.org/\n\nOsprey's Book is available at:\nhttps://www.goodreads.com/book/show/137212679-the-story-is-in-our-bones\n\nFor more information about #ClimateChange, visit the FacingFuture ... |
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NASA’s Gavin Schmidt explores off-charts heat and climate science gaps - Mar 22, 2024 Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist) (134 Views;62 min.) |
| Longtime climate journalist ANDY REVKIN speaks with longtime NASA climate scientist GAVIN SCHMIDT about his Nature commentary on what missing factors may be behind 2023’s shocking ocean and atmosphere temperature spikes and what data are needed to help climate models, forecast and policies catch up. \r\n\r\nRead the Nature piece:\r\nhttps://go.nature.com/3Vsr12A\r\n\r\nSubscribe to Sustain What: \r\nhttps://revkin.substack.com/subscribe |
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Using drone swarms to fight forest fires - Mar 21, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Technology (95 Views;1 min.) |
| Read more at https://techxplore.com/news/2024-03-drone-swarms-forest.html\n\nIn this video: Multiple swarms of drones for testing the proposed approach for disaster management. Credit: Artificial Intelligence and Robotics Laboratory, Department of Aerospace Engineering, Indian Institute of Science (IISc)\n\nSubscribe: https://www.youtube.com/c/Science-X-Network\n\nJoin Science X channel to support our mission:\nhttps://www.youtube.com/c/Science-X-Network/join\n\nThank you for helping our YouTube channel reach new heights! Hitting subscribe aids us in our mission to bring you the latest and greatest research news in science, medicine and technology. |
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Will climate change take snow away from us? - Mar 22, 2024 Yale Climate Connections - Polar (136 Views;1 min.) |
| Climate scientist Michael Mann and research professor Kenneth Kunkel talk to meteorologist Alexandra Steele about the changes we're seeing now and what we're likely to see in the years to come. \n\nCredits\nScript, research, interviews, camera: Alexandra Steele \nScript Editors: Sara Peach, Pearl Marvell\nEdit Producers: Cameron Powrie, Sam Lucas\nProduction support: Anthony Leiserowitz, Lisa Fernandez\nProduction Editor: Iain Moss\nGraphics: Screen Stories\nProduction Manager: Ellie Aitken \nSocial Media Manager: Ellie Phillips\nDirector of Production: Hal Arnold\nProduction Company: Little Dot Studios\nAdditional footage: Protect Our Winters |
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Quick Look: NASA's Chandra Identifies an Underachieving Black Hole - Mar 21, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth (201 Views;1 min.) |
| Astronomers have found a quasar not living up to expectations.\n\nQuasars are rapidly growing supermassive black holes pulling in lots of material.\n\nThe quasar H1821 643 is not as influential as many slower-growing giant black holes.\n\nThis discovery was made using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Very Large Array.\n\nMore at: https://chandra.si.edu/photo/2024/h1821 |
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A snake-like robot designed to look for life on Saturn's moon - Mar 20, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Technology (318 Views;15 min.) |
| Read more at https://techxplore.com/news/2024-03-snake-robot-life-saturn-moon.html\n\nIn this video: A team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory is creating and testing a snake-like robot called EELS (Exobiology Extant Life Surveyor). Inspired by a desire to descend vents on Saturn’s icy moon Enceladus and enter the subsurface ocean, this versatile snake robot is being developed by JPL to autonomously map, traverse, and explore previously inaccessible destinations on Earth, the Moon, and other worlds in the solar system. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech\n\nSubscribe: https://www.youtube.com/c/Science-X-Network\n\nJoin Science X channel to support our mission:\nhttps://www.youtube.com/c/Science-X-Network/join\n\nThank you for helping our YouTube channel reach new heights! Hitting subscribe aids us in our mission to bring you the latest and greatest research news in science, medicine and technology. |
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Dung Beetles: Nature's Secret Gardeners! - Mar 20, 2024 PHYS.ORG - Biology (451 Views;1 min.) |
| Dung beetles, those unsung heroes of the insect world renowned for their prowess in breaking down cattle dung, have now been found to have a positive impact on plant growth.\r\n\nRead more: https://www.uwa.edu.au/news/article/2024/march/dung-dynasty-the-plant-boosting-powers-of-beetle-recyclers\r\nï¹\r\n\r\nThe University of Western Australia (UWA) is recognised internationally as a top 100 university. Browse our channel to learn about our ground-breaking research, state-of-the-art facilities and vibrant student experience.\r\n\r\nFor more information: https://www.uwa.edu.au/\r\nï¹\r\n\r\nFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/universitywa/\r\nTwitter: https://twitter.com/uwanews\r\nInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/universitywa/ |
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