How wireless networks can battle COVID-19
Wireless network devices maintain a connection by handing off from one cell tower to another. The data created should be used to fight coronavirus, say CSU researchers (Network World).
Wireless network devices maintain a connection by handing off from one cell tower to another. The data created should be used to fight coronavirus, say CSU researchers (Network World).
“To me what’s really shocking is how warm it’s been relative to average for so many weeks and months,” says Zack Labe, a climate scientist at Colorado State University (National Geographic).
CSU Atmospheric Science postdoc Zack Labe said that while he is concerned by the recent heat, he is more unnerved by its staying power (CBS News).
CSU associate professor of systems engineering Jeremy Daily has been working with student researchers on a heavy vehicle cybersecurity program called the Student CyberTruck Experience (Fleet Owner).
CSU Atmospheric Science researcher Samuel Childs explained a mostly persistent ridge of high pressure that has been over Colorado in recent months has helped deter the develop of large hail and tornadoes (CBS Denver).
Every summer, an atmospheric event propels desert dust thousands of miles across the Atlantic. This year is particularly bad, and timed terribly with Covid-19 (Wired).
CSU announced a new study that could shed light on how the performing arts could make a comeback, safely (KDVR Denver).
This real-time tool from Colorado State University’s Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA) is probably the best out there (Fast Company).
Jean Peccoud at Colorado State writes that manganese complex methods for a coronavirus vaccine may hit complications during any attempt at mass production (Gizmodo).
With an early jump-start to the season, a record number of named storms, and a storm reaching states that don't normally see tropical systems, this season is off to a fast and interesting start (CNN).