Nice and Kind Vic

vic@cornychat.com

https://i.nostr.build/Lqsu56YxOCvwc6G5.jpg

💬 cornychat.com - audio spaces 🖼️ nodeyez.com - bitcoin node images Recommends: 🥣 zap.cooking 🎵 tunestr.io 📲 relay.tools 💩 turdsoup.com 🥔 oddbean.com 🔣 listr.lol

🕹️My Nintendo Switch Code SW-7592-4594-7016

About:

I do programming, databases, data parsing, reports, visualizations. Bitcoin maxi. Available for hire

Corny Chat (https://cornychat.com) operator, running the first open source audio spaces integrated with Nostr with support for zaps, room customizations.

Nodeyez developer (https://nodeyez.com) providing sovereign scripts to get more from your node. It can generate images from your node accessible in a website dashboard or slideshow output to an attached display.

The world's biggest builder of recycling plants has teamed with a startup to install AI-powered systems for sorting recycling, reports the Washington Post. And now over the next few years, "The companies plan to retrofit thousands of recycling facilities around the world with computers that can analyze and identify every item that passes through a waste plant, they said Wednesday." "[S]orted" recyclables, particularly plastic, wind up contaminated with other forms of trash, according to Lokendra Pal, a professor of sustainable materials engineering at North Carolina State University... [W]aste plants don't catch everything. [AI startup] Greyparrot has already installed over 100 of its AI trash spotters in about 50 sorting facilities around the world, and [co-founder Ambarish] Mitra said as much as 30 percent of potentially recyclable material winds up getting lumped in with the trash that's headed for the landfill. Failing to recycle means companies have to make more things from scratch, including a lot of plastic from fossil fuels. Also, more waste ends up in landfills and incinerators, which belch greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and pollute their surroundings.

Source: slashdot.org

The world's biggest builder of recycling plants has teamed with a startup to install AI-powered systems for sorting recycling, reports the Washington Post. And now over the next few years, "The companies plan to retrofit thousands of recycling facilities around the world with computers that can analyze and identify every item that passes through a waste plant, they said Wednesday." "[S]orted" recyclables, particularly plastic, wind up contaminated with other forms of trash, according to Lokendra Pal, a professor of sustainable materials engineering at North Carolina State University... [W]aste plants don't catch everything. [AI startup] Greyparrot has already installed over 100 of its AI trash spotters in about 50 sorting facilities around the world, and [co-founder Ambarish] Mitra said as much as 30 percent of potentially recyclable material winds up getting lumped in with the trash that's headed for the landfill. Failing to recycle means companies have to make more things from scratch, including a lot of plastic from fossil fuels. Also, more waste ends up in landfills and incinerators, which belch greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and pollute their surroundings.

Source: slashdot.org