CRAZY RICH
Arthur Hayes lives large. Like Bobby Axelrod-in-
Billions large. Just replace New York with Hong Kong and infuse it with a dose of Silicon Valley where unicorns spring from the minds of irrepressible company founders and, well, you get the picture. One minute Hayes is hitting the powder in Hokkaido, the next he’s crushing it on a subterranean squash court in Central Hong Kong’s Wall Street. And all the while he keeps one eye trained on an obscure-sounding currency exchange that he built out of thin air and through which more than $3 trillion has flowed.
Screen-star handsome and fabulously wealthy, the African American banker turned maverick personifies the contemporary fintech pioneer. But the feds describe Arthur Hayes differently: a wanted man who “flouted” the law by operating in the “shadows of the financial markets.” Hayes’s indictment was unsealed in October, and he remains at large in Asia as prosecutors in New York hope to arrest him and try him on
News Highlights: Louisville Company claims new Technology Significantly reduces eagle casualties near wind turbines - CBS Denver LOUSIVILLE, Colo. (CBS4)
Credit Todd Katzner/U.S. Geological Survey
Wind farms pose a threat to eagles. But a new system to identify the raptors and shut down the turbines may help.
Chris McClure is the Director of Global Conservation Science at the Peregrine Fund a non-profit conservation group. He and his team tested the effectiveness of Identi-Flight systems. That s the technology that takes images and identifies birds. If it sees one, it shuts down the wind turbine.
The Top of the World Wind Farm in Converse County is outfitted with the technology. McClure and his team compared the number of eagle fatalities there to a nearby wind farm without Identi-Flight. They found the deaths decreased by 82 percent where the technology was used.
Börse Express - Vogelsterben in Windparks durch Einsatz der KI-Technologie IdentiFlight stark reduziert boerse-express.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from boerse-express.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Bird Fatalities In Wind Farms Greatly Reduced By Using IdentiFlight AI Technology 28 gennaio 2021 | 15.01 LETTURA: 3 minuti
Research published in Journal of Applied Ecology shows 82% reduction in bird fatalities. A year later, system continues to learn and improve.
LOUISVILLE, Colo., Jan. 28, 2021 /PRNewswire/ IdentiFlight® is excited to announce that an independent study, Automated curtailment of wind turbines reduces eagle fatalities, was recently published in the Journal of Applied Ecology. Conducted by The Peregrine Fund, in cooperation with Western EcoSystems Technology, Inc. and the US Geological Survey, at a wind farm site in Wyoming, the research showed use of the IdentiFlight system resulted in an 82 percent reduction of eagle fatalities.