And make sure that there is a change in the future. The education secretary says University Tuition fees should reflect the economic benefit graduates will give to the country, ahead of a review of Higher Education funding in england. Ministers rejects pleas to issue a medical cannabis licence to a six year old boy whose rare form of epilepsy improves after taking the drug. A plane with more than 60 people aboard has crashed in iran its not clear whether there are any suivivois. Its not clear whether there hour. Are any on iivois. Choose wi fi, choose snapchat, choose a pre ordered macchiato with almond milk, choose likes, choose follows, choose pizza delivered by drone, swipe right, swipe left, follow, follow, follow. We are constantly being bombarded with updates, tweets, information and fake news. Were glued to our phones, addicted to digital status. Were even smashing up our gadgets, obliterating them to pieces in a violent quest to rid ourselves of these virtual assistants. Our self imposed restraints. Well, its time to get away from all that, just for a few minutes. This week, Justin Rowlatt travelled thousands of miles to a village in the himalayas which is getting electricity for the very first time by harnessing the power of the sun. Ivejoined a team hiking up the frozen zanskar river. Weve got an eight day ilio kilometre trek ahead of us. Our destination hanamur village. It has around 50 people, its four houses huddled together under granite cliffs. For hundreds of years the only light after dark was the thin flicker from oil lamps. Sta nzin chonzom struggles to cook in the dim light. Translation these traditional lights are not portable from one room to another and they dont cover enough area for the children to read. It also causes pollution. If we had solar power it would be much betterfor us. The next morning and the team gets to work. This is the satellite dish and take a look at this. Its taken quite a beating along the way. It will be interesting to see if this works. This is a street light. 0h, youve got street lights 20 watts. Oh my god, its a complete grid because you get wild animals in the summers and winters. If you have street lights, no wild animal will come. Oh, thats good this is a charge controller. Tying the grid together is over 550 metres of wiring, but theres a problem. Ok, the bulb and switches connected by wire, but the wire is very thick and it is frozen. Its so cold. Its about minus 15 now. Yeah, we need to warm this for about half an hour so that it can be usable. His team is hard at it, threading cables through the tightest nooks and crannies. Each home is topped off with a shimmering solar panel. 0k this is a solar panel and the capacity of the solar panel is 260 watts. This panel is a polycrystalline panel. That means at any temperature it can charge the batteries very well. So even when it is freezing, as it is now, this will still generate electricity . The beauty is at low temperatures it gives a better current. So it gets better . It gets better. So this is like a High Altitude desert, so it gets sun Something Like 360 days in a year . 360 days in a year and. It gets sun . And in one day it gets nine hours of sunlight, in summer. In winter it gets six hours of sunlight, and proper sunlight. Generating as much power as possible is only the half of it. The other issue is making sure no power is wasted. Whats more, the solar panels dont just passively drip dc into a battery, this system has a brain. Remote motion sensors ensure whats generated lasts. The idea is you dont have to remember to turn the lights off, as soon as you leave the room the lights go off. The sun sets. And it is almost ready to go. The new solar micro grid is a big dealfor the villagers. There is an elaborate ceremony. The local Buddhist Monk says a prayer for the system. And then its time to throw the switch. Cheering and applause the hope is the new grid can ensure the future of the village. That battered satellite dish does work after all, and so. Does the motion sensor. Global himalayan expedition has installed over 250 micro grids in outlying areas of ladakh. After hanamur, we visited one specifically designed to light up the minds of schoolchildren. Welcome, welcome thank you very much its at the government higher secondary school. Hello, kids all hello, sir so theyve got an innovative Computer System and what im going to do is test it by asking you a few simple questions. So im going to write them on the board and then you fire up the computers and well get to work. 0k, sir 0k. Here we go. Thats right. So get to work it might look like theyre online, but theyre actually scouring through an off line internet. So even without a data connection, these children will learn the sort of Research Skills essential for finding out information in a connected world and, of course, it all runs off solar power. Theres half a terabyte of memory in here and installed on here is all of wikipedia, ted talks, all sorts of other encyclopaedias, all sorts of works, works that the kids can use in order to research all sorts of subjects. So thats the heart of the system. But this is the key to keeping it all low power. This is a raspberry pi, a uk developed Computer System. Incredibly low energy, drives the keyboard and the mouse. So this is the computer that they use. What it means is they can have up to ten of these bright led screens all running on 2a volts, so very, very efficient. 0k, everybody, times up we need answers. Im going to come down the line and im going to pick on you so who is atahualpa . Atahualpa was the last king of the inca empire. Excellent, very good so, tell me, what do you think of this system . How does it work . It works very well and i get many knowledge from it. Its very useful. Its really easy to operate. I think its perfect for students of mountain areas. Solar micro grids are a great fit for ladakh, where steepling geography has scattered communities and made them difficult to reach with powerlines. 1. 2 billion people globally live without electricity and for many of them solar is a perfect solution too because, as weve seen, it can be rolled out almost anywhere under the sun. It feeds the demand for electricity without eating up the planet. But there is a rather unfortunate tradition at the end of the trek. Thats right. A dip. Shrieks hello and welcome to the week in tech. It was the week that the uk government unveiled an Artificial Intelligence tool for blocking extremist content online. And its notjust airspace that drones are going to be occupying in the future, researchers at North CarolinaState University have developed a drone that can fly through the air and propel itself underwater. Plus, the Winter Olympics website was frozen by a cyber attack during the opening ceremony. And robots got to compete in their own Winter Olympics. Eight teams unleashed downhill skiing droids onto the slopes, competing for a 10,000 prize. Robots arentjust skiing, though. Boston dynamics is at it again, with a demo guaranteed to freak most people out. Its robo dog can now open doors. Thats one less obstacle in the way of World Domination for our future robot overlords. And pig farmers in china are using al to bring home the bacon. Using id barcodes on pigs, the ai measures Animals Health and behaviour, which developers alibaba hope will improve farming efficiency. And, finally, bitcoin might be preventing us from making contact with aliens. Researchers at seti, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, complained this week that the price of key computer chips have been driven through the roof by demand from cryptocurrency miners. With no price drop in sight, were alljust going to have to watch this space. Fashionably late, apple has decided it wants a slice of the home speaker market, finally releasing its homepod, some two and a half years after the first generation amazon echo hit the shelves. Theyve gone for the same cylindrical shape as both the google home and amazon echo, but it feels and looks more like a premium, high end speaker than either of those systems. And thats the key point here. The amount of audio work apple have done on this device means its key selling point is as a speaker. It is impressive, with a four inch upward facing woofer and seven beam forming tweeters, each with its own amplifier, meaning it can push sounds in different directions. So it sounds exactly the same wherever you are in the room. What it doesnt do is give you the opportunity to change the levels in any way. If i wanted to push the bass up right now theres no way of me doing that. And even in a space this big, the sound really carries. Whats interesting, though, is even at 100 volume, when i cant even hear myself think, siris still going to recognise my voice. Hey, siri, pause. Music stops just like that. Whereas apple seems to be going all in for sound quality, amazon, with their ears on the market, seem to be focusing on different features. Their echo spot is all about one thing the screen. The latest from amazon now has the ability to make video calls, as well as doing the usual like play music, tell you the weather and even boil your kettle, if you have a smart home setup. But really it comes into its own as a very nice alarm clock. Its notjust a function that makes these two home assistants different, the price is anotherfactor. While the echo spot costs £119, the homepod will set you back £319. As is apples way, the homepod ties you into apple. So instead of being able to access any Music Streaming Service by voice activation, for example, it will only let you use apple music in this way. So if youre one of the 17 million spotify subscribers, youd have to go into your phone and use airplay as a workaround, essentially turning this Premium Smart speaker into a. Well, speaker. And, as people have been discovering, one that might leave a nasty white mark on wooden tops. Apples response . Choose a different surface, or get a cloth and some elbow grease. Now, over the next few weeks were going to be talking to some of the gods of the visual effects world. Last week we went behind the scenes of blade runner 2049, this week it is the turn of the oscar nominated guardians of the galaxy volume ii and we started by talking about its truly bonkers opening sequence. The beginning of the sequence features a title sequence where groot is dancing in the foreground. And it doesnt cut. It is on groot the whole time. He has to hold the attention of the viewers with his crazy little dance, while what happens in the background never stops. We have Something Like 4,000 frames of continuous action. We were faced with the fact that the environment was completely spectacular and had to be created entirely digitally. Everything that we were inserting had to be reflected and thats multiple times the computation to compute the light on them and also their reflection. Everything ended up being done two or three times, because of the surface of the world they were standing on. We were delighted to have the opportunity to take on rocket the raccoon. The first shaders that weve got here at framestore, the muscle systems, all of these things had updated in the three years between the first guardians and this one. We wanted to bring all of that into rocket, which meant rebuilding him from the ground up. And yet making sure that he was absolutely recognisable as the same character from the first movie. Space being very open, its very hard to tell how fast things are moving. And james gunns very keen on selling the speed of the action. So we conceived of these sort of wafts and waves of Plasma Energy that lived in and around this planet which we could whip past the camera to really sell how fast the camera and the spaceships were all moving. There is a scene in the middle of the movie where rocket and yondu are in prison, but when they break out theyre on board this enormous, very big spaceship. Which of course didnt exist. We had big shots of yondu walking through these huge hallways full of spaceships or sort of docking bay with all of the ravagers, who are the crew of the spaceship, being shot at with his arrow. Ultimately, the arrow which yondu is firing works its way all the way around the spaceship. We had to design the interior of the spaceship to give a really satisfying journey for this arrow to take. It looks like a Busby Berkeley movie, with crazy camera angles. Every movie that we get involved in we want to be pushing the envelope, trying something new, with expectation that we will get there. Old film stock is a treasure trove of historical information. In the case of old bbc programmes it can be a race against time to find any remaining copy and digitise it or risk losing it forever. But when producer Charles Norton was given an old morecambe and wise episode there was a problem. Archivists at both the bbc and the British Film Institute had a look at the film and essentially judged it to be irrecoverable, due to the advanced decomposition and they were, effectively it was going to be thrown out. The pictures inside that film, theyre still there, theyre still printed on the plastic, but theyre all locked inside this permanently fused block of immobile gunk, which, sooner or later, will just rot away to soup. So charles brought the film to queen mary universitys dental department to use their x ray machine to see through the lump of decaying film to the precious pictures within. But now they had another problem. The film was too big to be x rayed. The only thing you could do would be to cut the film into little pieces and scan one piece at a time. I didnt expect him to say yes to cutting up the film, but given the alternative was watching this just rapidly disintegrate, he said, yeah, lets do it. We were using an infrared laser, it generated a lot of heat, occasionally there were flames. At the best we had a little bit of damage at the edge of the frames, at worst we lost whole frames. Graham took 5000 images of each chunk as it rotated through 360 degrees to make a 3 d model. At that point they started to see what was on the film for the first time. When you first start seeing those pictures of Eric Morecambe in one of his stereotypical poses, you cant help but smile and think, yes, this has to be done. Once the scans were finished, they had loads of data, but they also had a new problem. The next really difficult part was finding a way of digitally flattening out this warped object and digitally prising apart all of the individual film layers within it. We originally has some Manual Software where i would physically go through each individual block and spend five or ten minutes flattening out one layer after the other, but that was, over several thousand frames, quite labour intensive. At this Point Charles took the problem to a data scientist. What a human would do is try to see where the image was within the cross section, the problem here is that a computer algorithm cannot quite do that. What the algorithm does is it follows, predominantly, the layers of plastic, so not the images, but the plastic. And then, once we have the layer of plastic, we can move to the edge of that layer and read off the image. That process was repeated on all of the film, making short work of a task that would take a human thousands of hours of work. Now charles is beginning the next phase, turning these scarred pictures back into video. That is the next problem. But for now he has managed to put together a taster of what is on that film. And beautifully as well. Not a word out of sync. No, im not miming now. Its me. You realise, of course, that the tape has stopped. No, yeah, well, of course its stopped. Youve started again how does he do it . That is an impressive sight, isnt it . That is the kings library, assembled by king george iii in the second half of the 18th century. Now four floors below my feet here at the British Library lie its vast basements, which as you can imagine also contain a lot of books. But did you know that they also contain 6. 5 million sound recordings which are now being digitised . The British Library is the national sound archive, with sound recordings spanning the last 130 years. These are stored on all sorts of physical formats, from delicate wax cylinders to brass discs, to short lived formats like minidiscs, remember those . There is a big push to digitise them and make them available online. Each of the a0 different types of storage format has unique challenges, they all need their own playback devices, and some need a little tlc to coax the best quality sound from them. Something reasonably robust like a vinyl disc, we have an ultrasonic bath to be able to shake that debris out of its hiding place, but we also have more traditional type of record cleaning machines, the brush and vacuum arrangements, that can produce some quite startling results when you start to clean off otherwise invisible gunk. The team also have a workshop to keep their collection of machines in tiptop condition, so staff can work on as many concurrent transfers as possible and chip away at the millions of recordings. If you are faced with a tape or a disk in a really parlous state and you take it off a shelf, it may be mouldy, it may need treatment, it may need some sort of repair, doing that process, that active process of caring for, conserving, and repairing that media such that it can be replayed, evenjust once, is hugely rewarding. Certainly challenging. But with only 2 of their collection digitised and only 15 years until some recordings become unsalvageable, it is a race against time to save as many as possible. Which reminds me that i have a box full of minidiscs in the loft, i should bring them in. Anyway, thats it for this week from the British Library. Dont forget we live on facebook and on twitter at bbc click. Thank you very much for watching. And well see you soon. Its time to update you on the weather prospects for the whole of the British Isles for the next couple of days and we will do that in detailand couple of days and we will do that in detail and then look at the themes for the next couple of days. In the short term, a lot of this, i can assure you , in the short term, a lot of this, i can assure you, notjust in lyme regis either, and for that we have to thank the presence across central and western parts of a warm front introducing the milder air coming up and the size of ours from way down in the atlantic, but it means the cloud will thicken, we have seen rain across some of the Western Areas that will through the rest of the evening and overnight creep further towards the east. Not a cold start to the new day, except in the Northern Isles with something clearer, some cooler starts, and cool clearer, some cooler starts, and cool, but these weather fronts will march further towards the north and east. Stuck between the warm front and cold front, sadly way out in the atla ntic lots and cold front, sadly way out in the atlantic lots of mild air giving a pretty leaden start to monday rat across parts of the British Isles. Ive changed the model to give you the best detail we can, its almost like if you need reading glasses, putting them on so you know the book is there and now weve put the glasses on we can see the detail of where we think the rain will be and there it is across many central and eastern areas at this stage, perhaps a little thinner towards the west andi a little thinner towards the west and i will show that in a moment. As we come out a look at the big picture we take off the reading glasses, here is the book of what we expect to see on monday. It will be a cloudy do, the rain heaviest in eastern spots, the odd moderate burst, perhaps late in the day across east anglia and south east. Further the west with some sunshine, and some gaps in the cloud around the irish sea, ten, 11, 12, possibly 13 degrees. 0n the irish sea, ten, 11, 12, possibly 13 degrees. On tuesday by this stage the cold front will have swept across to the eastern side of the British Isles to join the old warm front and there you have it, lots of cloud, onshore breeze, of rain, the driest and finest weather, no doubt, on the western side of the British Isles. Its not cold behind that warm front, temperatures still above par, but as we begin to see the influence of High Pressure dominating the scene into the middle pa rt dominating the scene into the middle part of the week we will feed in something fresher from the near continent, and as a consequence there is temperatures are set to drop. This is bbc news. Im shaun ley. The headlines at 4. 00 brendan cox, the husband of the murdered mp, jo cox, resigned from two organisations set up in her memory, after claims of Sexual Misconduct in the past. Her friends say its the right thing to do. Im not defending his actions, i am trying to think about this person who i know and my friend who isnt here, and make sure that there is a change in the future. The education secretary says University Students should pay different amounts, to study different courses, ahead of a review of Higher Education funding in england ministers reject pleas to issue a medical Cannabis License to a six year old boy whose rare form of epilepsy improves after taking the drug