19,703 research outputs found

    Too Good to be True?: The Opportunity and Cost of the $1 Building

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    A study commissioned by The Kresge Foundation's Arts & Culture Program finds that arts organizations have experienced a wide range of outcomes when acquiring low-cost or free buildings, also known as "$1 buildings." In many cases, the actual costs of acquiring such buildings were much higher than organizations anticipated, according to the study, conducted by Boston-based Technical Development Corp

    Bringing power and progress to Africa in a financially and environmentally sustainable manner

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    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The future of electricity supply and delivery on the continent of Africa represents one of the thorniest challenges facing professionals in the global energy, economics, finance, environmental, and philanthropic communities. Roughly 600 million people in Africa lack any access to electricity. If this deficiency is not solved, extreme poverty for many Africans is virtually assured for the foreseeable future, as it is widely recognized that economic advancement cannot be achieved in the 21st Century without good electricity supply. Yet, if Africa were to electrify in the same manner pursued in developed economies around the world during the 20th Century, the planet’s global carbon budget would be vastly exceeded, greatly exacerbating the worldwide damages from climate change. Moreover, due to low purchasing power in most African economies and fiscal insolvency of most African utilities, it is unclear exactly how the necessary infrastructure investments can be deployed to bring ample quantities of power – especially zero-carbon power – to all Africans, both those who currently are unconnected to any grid as well as those who are now served by expensive, high-emitting, limited and unreliable electricity supply. With the current population of 1.3 billion people expected to double by 2050, the above-noted challenges associated with the African electricity sector may well get substantially worse than they already are – unless new approaches to infrastructure planning, development, finance and operation can be mobilized and propagated across the continent. This paper presents a summary of the present state and possible futures for the African electricity sector. A synthesis of an ever-growing body of research on electricity in Africa, this paper aims to provide the reader a thorough and balanced context as well as general conclusions and recommendations to better inform and guide decision-making and action. [TRUNCATED]This paper was developed as part of a broader initiative undertaken by the Institute for Sustainable Energy (ISE) at Boston University to explore the future of the global electricity industry. This ISE initiative – a collaboration with the Global Energy Interconnection and Development Cooperation Organization (GEIDCO) of China and the Center for Global Energy Policy within the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University – was generously enabled by a grant from Bloomberg Philanthropies. The authors gratefully acknowledge the support and contributions of the above funders and partners in this research

    The Official Student Newspaper of UAS

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    Letter from the Editor / Whalesong Staff -- Mindfulness and Meditation -- One Campus One Book / Mixed -- Notes from the Symposium -- Afternoon with Hieu / Tidal Echoes -- Hunting In Wartime / UAS In Brief -- Snapshots from the Annual Traditional Games -- A Time to Remember: Hacksaw Ridge -- Budget Cuts / Study Abroad -- RBF and the Real Bee-otches (Satire) -- Calendar and Comics

    Caution Ahead: Overdue Investments in New York's Aging Infrastructure

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    While Superstorm Sandy focused much-needed attention on key pieces of New York City's infrastructure, the city faces a number of other infrastructure vulnerabilities that have little to do with storm-preparedness -- from aging water mains and deteriorating roads to crumbling public schools. If left unchecked, they could wreak havoc on the city's economy and quality of life

    Real-time rendering of cities at night

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    En synthèse d’images, déterminer la couleur d’une surface au pixel d’une image doit considérer toutes les sources de lumière de la scène pour évaluer leur contribution lumineuse sur la surface en question. Cette évaluation de la visibilité et en l’occurrence de la radiance incidente des sources de lumière est très coûteuse. Elle n’est généralement pas traitée pour chaque source de lumière en rendu temps-réel. Une ville en pleine nuit est un exemple de telle scène comportant une grande quantité de sources de lumière pour lesquelles les rendus temps-réel modernes ne peuvent pas évaluer la visibilité de toutes les sources de lumière individuelles. Nous présentons une technique exploitant la cohérence spatiale des villes et la co-hérence temporelle des rendus temps-réel pour accélérer le calcul de la visibilité des sources de lumière. Notre technique de visibilité profite des bloqueurs naturels et pré-dominants de la ville pour rapidement réduire la liste de sources de lumière à évaluer etainsi, accélérer le calcul de la visibilité en assumant des bloqueurs sous forme de boîtes alignées majoritairement selon certains axes dominants. Pour garantir la propagation des occultations, nous fusionnons les bloqueurs adjacents dans un seul et même bloqueur conservateur en termes d’occultations. Notre technique relie la visibilité de la caméra avec la visibilité des surfaces pour réduire le nombre d’évaluations à effectuer à chaque rendu, et ne calcule la visibilité que pour les surfaces visibles du point de vue de la caméra. Finalement, nous intégrons la technique de visibilité avec une technique de rendu réaliste, Lightcuts, qui a été mise à jour sur GPU dans un scénario de rendu temps-réel. Même si notre technique ne permettra pas d’atteindre le temps-réel en général dans une scène complexe, elle réduit suffisamment les contraintes pour espérer y arriver un jour.In image synthesis, to determine the final color of a surface at a specific image pixel,we must consider all potential light sources and evaluate if they contribute to the illumination. Since such evaluation is slow, real-time renderers traditionally do not evaluate each light source, and instead preemptively choose locally important light sources for which to evaluate visibility. A city at night is such a scene containing many light sources for which modern real-time renderers cannot allow themselves to evaluate every light source at every frame.We present a technique exploiting spatial coherency in cities and temporal coherency of real-time walkthroughs to reduce visibility evaluations in such scenes. Our technique uses the natural and predominant occluders of a city to efficiently reduce the number of light sources to evaluate. To further accelerate the evaluation we project the bounding boxes of buildings instead of their detailed model (these boxes should be oriented mostly along a few directions), and fuse adjacent occluders on an occlusion plane to form larger conservative occluders. Our technique also integrates results from camera visibility to further reduce the number of visibility evaluations executed per frame, and evaluates visible light sources for facades visible from the point of view of the camera. Finally, we integrate an offline rendering technique, Lightcuts, by adapting it to real-time GPU rendering to further save on rendering time.Even though our technique does not achieve real-time frame rates in a complex scene,it reduces the complexity of the problem enough so that we can hope to achieve such frame rates one day

    Governors State University Board of Trustees Meeting Minutes - December 15, 2006

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    Minutes for the Governors State University Board of Trustees Meeting - December 15, 200

    Facilities Governance Report: Board of Regents, September 12-13, 2018

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    Facilities Governance Report, which is required by the Regent Policy Manual, replaces the previous governance reports on energy conservation, fire and environmental safety, and deferred maintenance. This combined, more comprehensive report provides a means to discuss, in total, Regent facilities. Along with its human resources and its intellectual, financial and equipment assets, facilities are one of the primary resources of an educational institution
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