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FutureHAUS – New Technologies for Energy Positive Smart Homes

What Virginia Tech project has traveled the world, visiting Dubai, UAE, New York’s Times Square, and Washington, DC?  

FutureHAUS, Virginia Tech’s Center for Design Research energy positive smart home. Winner of the the Solar Decathalon Middle East 2018, FutureHAUS was designed and built by an interdisciplinary team of VT students and researchers exploring new ways to build and new ways to live.

THE CONCEPT
Inspired by the best production practices of the automotive and airplane industry, the FutureHAUS Dubai explores the process of prefabrication to deliver modular structures that integrate smart technologies, energy efficient systems, and new materials. Our innovative prototype proposes a factory produced, energy-positive, smart home. The goal is to not only invent the future of housing with the integration of smart technologies, but also invent the future of how they will be built. (https://www.futurehaus.tech/)

Virginia Tech FutureHAUS Responsive Design Makes Whole House Work Like a Live-In App  (CBS New York) 

 

VT Documentary
Igniting a Housing Revolution

 

 

This solar-powered prefab home took over Times Square

Curbed, May 31, 2020

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Giant Music Box – Marble Machine X

 What can you do with a Bass Guitar, Computer, CAD Software, and Power Tools?

There are those who create synthesizers out of old Nintendo machines. Sebastiaan Jansen is creating a mechanical version — Marble Machine X — which he has been building and designing for 7 years. 

The machine is made mostly of wood with metal, and plastic tubing, and uses metal marbles or ball bearings for various tasks.  He used a computer to design templates for the machine’s wooden gears. He then made the gears by hand with power tools. 

in the video below,  Jansen plays a specially-designed bass guitar. The entire video is 20 minutes. If you would like to see Jansen’s Marble Machine X play the bass, start at the 11:00:00 mark.  

The YouTube channel documents the machine being designed and built as  it is still a work in progress.  The creator of the machine plans on taking it on tour with his band.

Marble Machine X

In 2016 bandleader Martin Molin of the band Wintergatan released the “Marble Machine” video. Soon after Martin started working on a new and improved version, called the Marble Machine X. This build is ongoing and is a collaborative effort of about 20 engineers from all around the world, including me. My part of the job consists of converting the digitally composed music into templates to be put on the machine.

—Sebastiaan Jansen, https://sebastiaanjansen.be/marblemachinex

 

 

Start at time marker 11:00:00 minutes to see Machine X play

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Science News for Students

www.sciencenewsforstudents.org

Enjoy keeping up to date with the latest innovations and news stories in the STEM field? Science News for Students is the place for you!  Read articles and watch videos on almost every scientific topic you can think of. The site is full of science experiments, neat jobs you’ve probably never heard of, in-depth articles of current events, discoveries, and so much more.

What you can do: Head on over to the Science News for Students website to find a screenfull of articles and videos to explore. In the top menu, you can check out the many different sections the site has to offer by clicking on the Sections drop down menu.

  • In the Explainers page you can learn to understand some of the pivotal topics in the STEM fields, including how waves work, the pH scale, and allergies. Here you can also find information on relevant topics today like the coronavirus and global warming.
     
  • The Word of the Week page will show you this week’s chosen word of focus, with an article explaining the word and its applications in the STEM fields. The previous weeks’ words are also shown below. Some examples of words you might find here are polymer, spaghettification, and momentum.  
  • The Cool Jobs page will show you some of the most interesting STEM jobs found today, including some particularly interesting niche jobs.  
  • The Analyze This page will show articles that examine some of nature’s most intriguing characteristics and try to answer the question of why things are the way they are. For example, you may read about why beetles are certain colors or why insects migrate and much more. 

I encourage you to look over all of the sections that Science News for Students has to offer. There is so much content on this website that will help you develop your STEM knowledge. Remember, paying attention and staying informed on major science topics now will help you make smarter decisions in the future.

Privacy/For Parents: Science News for Kids is a fantastic way to keep students up-to-date on current STEM news. The articles are provided for free on their main website. There is also an email newsletter students can subscribe to that they can check to stay up to date. Science News for Kids is a subsidiary of Science News (ScienceNews.org), owned by the Society for Science. Here is a link to their cookie policy: https://www.societyforscience.org/cookie-policy/ 

Keywords: Magazine, science, science news, teachers and schools, students and parents, grades 3-5, grades 6-8, science, chemistry, earth science, life science, biology, physics, space, technology, nonprofit

 

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Python

https://www.python.org

What is Python? Python is an interpreted object-oriented and high-level programming language. Python is a very popular and easy to use language, a favorite among many programmers. One of the greatest benefits of the Python language compared to others is that Python is open-sourced.  This means that anybody can contribute their work to the main Python libraries, packages of pre-made code that can be imported and used in Python. An example of this benefit would be a very efficient arrangement of code that sorts data faster than some other common method of sorting. 

How it works: In general, Python is manually installed onto the path of someone’s computer. One can download the latest version of Python from this website. A quick installation guide can be found here for Windows and here for Mac users. To make the most out of Python, integrated development environments (IDEs) are used to help format, troubleshoot and run Python code. Most IDEs are like more advanced versions of the command prompt/line, they are more visually intuitive and provide the user with troubleshooting and formatting tools. You can use some IDEs to build computer/web applications that run on Python code. 

For parents/privacy: Python can be installed onto your computer from the official Python website. Python is a very popular and secure programming language that’s great for beginners to learn on. Here is the Python code of conduct, and here are Python’s legal notices.

Resources: Interested in Python? Check out these resources to learn more and see some real-world applications!

 

 

Watch Reza Tasooji explain the basics of the Python language and some basic programming terms.

Watch this clip showing some of 2018’s best Python projects (some of them are crazy!)

Also watch Reza give an in depth tutorial on how to install Python onto your Windows operating system and explain why it’s important to create virtual python environments.

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Mozilla Hubs

Main Link: hubs.mozilla.com

Mozilla Hubs is a fantastic free online service that allows anybody to meet and interact with each other in a customizable 3D virtual environment. In a Hubs virtual room, users can chat via text or microphone input, share media including images, videos, and 3D models, and interact with the virtual world around them. Mozilla Hubs can turn a stale conference call into a fun, engaging event that simulates a real life meeting. 

What you’ll do there: Mozilla Hubs is an enclosed virtual environment where anyone with an email and a web browser or phone can interact with other users and the environment. The online service works great for meetings that involve more than just speaking. Mozilla Hubs contains many life-like features, including the ability to move around the room and dynamic volume control, i.e. if somebody walks away from you, their microphone audio will get quieter. This allows for a realistic simulation of real life meetings. 

For Parents/Privacy: Mozilla Hubs is a safe environment for everyone to interact and participate in virtual activities. No accounts nor passwords are required, just a desktop or mobile browser! For specific information on Hubs’ privacy, visit the Hubs privacy notice here: https://github.com/mozilla/hubs/blob/master/PRIVACY.md

What you’ll need to access a Hubs room: Just a web browser or mobile device! What makes Hubs such an accessible online service is that all someone needs to create a Hubs room is to just head to the main Hubs website from their desktop or mobile browser and click on create room.

 

To make the room accessible to others, the room owner must share the link underlined in black or six digit code circled in black with all users who plan on joining (as seen below).

Sharing a room in Hubs

These users can then go to the main Hubs website, click on join room, and enter the code to join the same room. Every user will be prompted with the option of joining the room with a virtual reality headset!

Joining a Hubs Room

In order to perform certain features in the Hubs room, like changing the room capacity and muting or kicking users, the owner should login to Mozilla Hubs – a surprisingly easy process! All the user has to do is click the “Sign in” button and type in their email.

How to login to Hubs

An email will be sent containing a link that upon clicking will begin a login session for that user. No password or account required!

It’s absolutely free. For basic use (everything I described above). Users may pay for an additional Hubs Cloud service offering more customization and security features. These features are helpful when hosting large, organized events. There are also options to sync Mozilla Hubs with Discord chatrooms. You can find more information on these features here. 

 

 

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World Community Grid

www.worldcommunitygrid.org

From the website:  Let your computer daydream science. World Community Grid, a philanthropic initiative from IBM, enables anyone with a computer, smartphone or tablet to donate their unused computing power to advance cutting-edge scientific research on topics related to health, poverty and sustainability. Through the contributions of over 650,000 individuals and 460 organizations, World Community Grid has supported 31 research projects to date, including searches for more effective treatments for cancer, HIV/AIDS and neglected tropical diseases. Other projects are looking for low-cost water filtration systems and new materials for capturing solar energy efficiently.

www.worldcommunitygrid.org/discover.action

From the website: Scientists at Scripps Research are using World Community Grid to help search for potential treatments for COVID-19, and to build open-source tools to help address future pandemics quickly and early. Learn more about OpenPandemics – COVID-19 and the organizations other projects.

IBM’s World Community Grid is a way for everyone to get directly involved in research without having to work at all! By downloading a free software toolkit called BOINC, anyone can help researchers in a wide variety of fields by letting this program run while the computer is not being used. The program performs designated calculations that are hard for people but easy for computers. The more people that participate in the World Community Grid project, the faster we can solve some of the most complicated and urgent problems in human history!

How it Works: The BOINC software, a free and safe program developed by the University of California, Berkeley, runs designated calculations in an area specified by the user while the computer is idle (the computer must be on). If you begin running an application, BOINC will minimize its performance until idle again. The user can pause (suspend) or abort the project tasks or modify the CPU usage of BOINC when active.

Parental permission and administrative access to your computer is REQUIRED to install the BOINC program. For an in depth look at the World Community Grid Privacy policy, go to https://www.worldcommunitygrid.org/viewPrivacyStatement.do 

Getting Started: Head to the main World Community Grid website, a page with colorful slides, which you can view to learn more about the project. On the first blue slide, click the red “Join Volunteers” button in the middle of the page (circled in white).

 

 

 

 

A blue sign up page should appear, where you should enter your email and a password to create a World Community Grid account. This account will be used to keep track of the projects and tasks your computer will be working on.

 

 

 

 

After clicking “Next” (highlighted in white above), you will be asked to select projects you are interested in. Your computer can complete tasks from any of these areas. After selecting the projects of interest and clicking “Next” again, the installer should begin downloading. 

 

 

 

 

BOINC project manager

Installing and Usage: After downloading, open up the installer. Follow the instructions given by the installation wizard, and World Community Grid will be installed on your computer. By default, World Community Grid will begin on startup, but this can be changed in task manager by going to the “Startup” tab and disabling it on Windows.

The application itself contains two main tabs, “Tasks” and “Projects”. While the application is running, a taskbar in the “Tasks” tab will display the progress of the current project. In the “Task Commands” menu, the graphics tab will show a graphical description of the project, while the suspend and abort tabs will pause or abort your project upon clicking, respectively. The “Properties” tab of the “Task Commands” window will show statistics and extra information relating to the current project. 

The “Projects” tab shows you the current project being worked on and gives you the option to add new projects. Clicking on the “Add Project” button will open a new window with a list of projects to choose from. Clicking on “Next” will add the project to your current list of projects. The drop down menu in the projects tab allows you to select the project you’d like to work on. The “Project Commands” menu lets you update, suspend, reset and remove the selected project.  

 

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BOINC

boinc.berkeley.edu

BOINC lets you help cutting-edge science research using your computer (Windows, Mac, Linux) or Android device. BOINC downloads scientific computing jobs to your computer and runs them invisibly in the background. It’s easy and safe.

About 30 science projects use BOINC; examples include Einstein@Home, IBM World Community Grid, and SETI@home. These projects investigate diseases, study global warming, discover pulsars, and do many other types of scientific research.

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World Health Organization

Main Link:  https://www.who.int/

The World Health Organization (WHO) website is incredibly useful for staying up to date on current international health crises and retrieving health information. It is especially useful today as we fight through the coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic on a global scale. The WHO makes it incredibly easy to access important information and guidelines in an organized and timely manner. In addition to raw information, the WHO deliberately organizes and displays data geographically, helping to manifest the bigger picture from across town to across the world. 

What you can do: By going to the WHO main website, you will gain access to tons of medical and research data. Important news alerts and articles can be found on the main page, as well as WHO guidelines to follow. Different health topics, country/regional data, and breaking headlines are all available at the click of a button. Just from the home page you have the ability to view an interactive world map with COVID-19 data. A more in depth tutorial of how to navigate the website is below. 

Privacy/for parents: The WHO is a reputable international organization that works as an agency for the United Nations. General data and usage statistics may be collected. Learn more about the WHO website’s privacy policy here: https://www.who.int/about/who-we-are/privacy-policy

Navigational overview: The WHO website’s homepage contains a top menu, emergency and COVID-19 quick-links, an interactive map and news articles near the bottom of the page. 

WHO homepage

The top menu contains most of the data available on the site. The first tab, Health Topics, contains both an alphabetical assortment and a list of the most relevant health topics.

WHO menu 1

The second tab, Countries, displays the world’s main regions and countries found a-z.

WHO menu 2

Clicking on the specific letter the country begins with will redirect you to a list of countries beginning with that letter. Clicking on the country will display an overview with a map and health statistics from that country.

WHO Country

Clicking on a specific region will take you to a specialized WHO website for the region, i.e the Americas region will redirect you to -> https://www.paho.org/en

WHO Region

The third tab, News Room, displays current WHO headlines and links for all WHO news.

WHO Menu 3

The fourth tab, Emergencies, shows relevant and recent emergencies It might be helpful to visit the by country and by disease tabs.

WHO Menu 4

The fifth tab, Data, contains a link to all WHO data sets and other data and statistics links and resources.

WHO Menu 5

Back on the homepage, clicking on the red Emergency block will take you to a new emergency page.

WHO Emergency Page

On the left, you will see a question bar, where you can type in a question and relevant Q/A will appear. You will also see a press conference schedule and videos on this page. Rolling updates on disease are located below the conference videos. 

On the right, you will see a donate button, a question answering tab, travel advice, and many helpful links including a Mythbusters tab.

The Quick Links tab on the homepage gives scam alerts, advice guidance, updates and research development links. 

Clicking on the Interactive Map will give a geographical map of coronavirus, where you can click on a country to access its COVID-19 data. Upon hovering over a country, confirmed cases/deaths will be shown. You can use the left menu/guide to represent countries by infections/deaths. There is a “Download Map Data” button in the bottom right-hand corner of the map, in addition to info below the map.

WHO Interactive Map

This should be a good starting point for getting familiar with the WHO website. Don’t forget, all these resources are available to you for free!

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Annenberg Learner

Main Link: https://www.learner.org/

Annenberg Learner is an online education platform best known for its free-to-watch courses and workshops for teachers. It provides online courses and teaching instructions on many subjects – for both students and teachers. Annenberg Learner also offers supplementary material for teachers and students, including interactive activities, homework and reviews to go along with lessons. Teachers are provided instructional objectives and activity overviews.

What you can do: Courses for students provide video lectures, a written lesson overview, in-class activity worksheets (like questions to answer while following along an instructional video) and homework (exercises and review questions). They include faculty guides for class activities and exercise answers for teachers. 

Teachers are provided free workshops for their own professional development. These professional development courses help teachers learn how to better teach a class or subject. Each course displays several methods of teaching, i.e. visually, hands-on, example-based as well as multiple example problems where each may suit a particular student differently than another. They are offered by grade level. 

For parents/privacy: Annenberg Learner collects minimal data from student visitors; most of it comes from the website, including cookies, browser information and your IP address. For teachers, Annenberg Learner asks for your job title, grade(s) you teach and subject area upon signing up. Learn more here: https://www.learner.org/privacy-policy/

What it costs: Courses from Annenberg Learner are free for individual students and teachers, but instructors of institutions that charge tuition must buy a license to use them in a classroom setting. Annenberg Learner courses can be licensed from several distributors, including collegeanywhere.com, alexanderstreet.com and films.com.

An example course from films.com (Against All Odds: Inside Statistics):

    • $1,598.40
    • 3-Year Streaming License
    • 360 minutes
    • 32 video modules

Learn more here: https://www.learner.org/faq/

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Big Think

www.bigthink.com

Interested in science and have a spare 15 minutes? Head over to BigThink.com and check out some really neat science articles and videos. You’ll find a plethora of science news, articles and fun facts waiting for you.

Big Think examines topics that span all over the STEM fields, from logical fallacies to computer science ideologies, to quantum mechanics. In addition to articles and videos, Big Think also hosts a weekly podcast with special guests that are leaders of the STEM industries. daily and weekly newsletters, and live sessions hosted by Big Think where special guests discuss current work in their field.  Big Think provides premium courses that can be accessed with a paid monthly subscription (you can start with a 7-day free trial), entitled “Big Think Edge”.

For parents/privacy: Big Think is free to use/access on all platforms. Some of Big Think’s topical newsletters may be better suited for mature audiences. The Big Think website uses some cookies and browser information to improve the website experience. For more information, visit the Big Think privacy policy here.

Keywords: Magazine, top rated website, website, science, video, podcast, newsletter, teachers and schools, students and parents, organizations, science, grades 9-12, science, technology, innovation, mind, research