Sensei enables customers to achieve a greater understanding of their harshest process environments, allowing them to more effectively optimise their processes. Using Sensei, sensors are embedded in the material being processed and can be set to transmit readings at whatever time intervals are required. It is the only solution in the market that has the potential to provide cost effective measurement and productivity benefits for mining, petroleum, food and beverage and environmental industries. Sensei has been supported by the ON Accelerate program at CSIRO. http://www.oninnovation.com.au/en/ON-teams/ON-Tribe/Accelerate1/Sensei
H&M introduced its latest collection called Conscious Exclusive 2019 that uses agricultural waste such as algae biomass, orange peels and the leaves of pineapples to produce fabrics.
Special robots ? a type of tablet on wheels ? will enable sick children to visit a zoo in Poland as part of an initiative by an animal charity. The young patients will be able to steer a robot around the zoological gardens in Pozna?. Thanks to the robots, they will see everything that is going on in the enclosures, and will even be able to visit parts of the zoo not usually available to visitors. www.thefirstnews.com/article/robot-named-bear-takes-sick-children-on-virtual-trip-to-the-zoo-5185
Alphabet's drone delivery company Wing announced it's launching one of the world's first drone delivery services in Canberra, Australia following regulatory approval. Customers place an order for popular items ? like food, coffee and medicine ? through Wing?s app. Minutes later, a drone arrives with the goods at their doorstep. 100 homes have access to start.
https://www.producthunt.com/newsletter/2702
The WasteShark is a 1.5 metre long drone that works like an aquatic vacuum cleaner. It's modelled on the whale shark, which is a filter feeder that sucks prey like plankton into its mouth. As it swims through water, the WasteShark sucks in plastics and other rubbish, eating up to 200 litres of waste in a single trip. The drone is capable of swimming for up to 16 hours and can be controlled manually or set to patrol a defined area. https://watersource.awa.asn.au/technology/innovation/this-waste-eating-shark-drone-is-cleaning-up-waterways/