Staying on the topic of not NMS, I give you a couple shots from FAR: Lone Sails.
This game was developed by students at ETH, in Zurich. It looks lovely and the soundtrack is beautiful. Worth a try.
Maybe some actual pictures coming tomorrow.

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Israel
seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from United States
seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from China
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from China
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from Canada

seen from United States
Staying on the topic of not NMS, I give you a couple shots from FAR: Lone Sails.
This game was developed by students at ETH, in Zurich. It looks lovely and the soundtrack is beautiful. Worth a try.
Maybe some actual pictures coming tomorrow.
Swiss glaciers under threat again as heat wave drives zero-temperature level to record altitude - Times of India
GENEVA: The Swiss weather service said Monday a heat wave has driven the zero-degree Celsius level to its highest altitude since recordings on it in Switzerland began nearly 70 years ago, an ominous new sign for the country’s vaunted glaciers.MeteoSwiss says the zero-degree isotherm level reached 5,298 meters (17,381 feet) above sea level over Switzerland overnight Sunday to Monday. All of…
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ETH Zuerich Home Page English Mar 1997 Archived Web Page
#Repost @schochalbert • • • • • • #ethz #thinktank #zurich🇨🇭 #switzerland🇨🇭 https://www.instagram.com/p/CQ4PKSBsEe0/?utm_medium=tumblr
Supplying modern societies with important goods and services has become more volatile due to the globalization of the flow of goods. In Switzerland, enterprises and the state cooperate on national economic supply to ensure the provision of vital requirements in times of crises. Changes are required if this system is to continue in the future.
The Federal War Office for Alimentation was founded after the First World War, which in time became today’s National Economic Supply (NES) organization, part of the Federal Department of Economic Affairs, Education and Research. In its contemporary form, it is a uniquely Swiss solution for safeguarding the country against bottlenecks in vital supplies.
Five of the NES specialist divisions – Foodstuffs, Therapeutic Products, Energy, Information and Communications Technology (ICT), and Logistics – are responsible for ensuring the integrity of these essential supply processes. The Industry Division, on the other hand, is concerned with the provision of industrial material and equipment required by the other specialist divisions, such as packaging. The divisions responsible for Energy, ICT, and Logistics supply processes also indirectly serve as interfaces with other units and are therefore of relatively greater importance, since failures of these processes would have immediate effects on other aspects of supply. For instance, a sustained lack of electricity would also have severe impacts on all other supply processes.
(...) Until the late 1980s, the activities of NES focused on three main application scenarios: War, power-political threats, and severe shortages. With the end of the Cold War, the relevance of the first two cases for the supply situation was diminished in the 1990s, causing the raison d’être of the NES to be questioned from various quarters.
(...) Due to Switzerland’s great reliance on imports, combined with society’s low tolerance for damage and the increasing complexity of supply, the relevance of the NES’s mission is likely to increase in the future.
Silicone 3D printing startup Spectroplast spins out of ETHZ with $1.5M
Silicone 3D printing startup Spectroplast spins out of ETHZ with $1.5M
3D printing has become commonplace in the hardware industry, but because few materials can be used for it easily, the process rarely results in final products. A Swiss startup called Spectroplast hopes to change that with a technique for printing using silicone, opening up all kinds of applications in medicine, robotics, and beyond.
Silicone is not very bioreactive and of course can be made into…
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Robots learn to grab and scramble with new levels of agility
Robots learn to grab and scramble with new levels of agility
Robots are astonishing things, but outside of their accurate domains they are incredibly limited. So flexibility — not physical, but mental — is a regular location of research. a trio of brand-new robotic setups demonstrate ways they can evolve to accommodate novel situations: using both “hands,” getting up after a descend, and understanding visual instructions they’ve never seen before.
The…
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