AIB abandons contactless payment plan after previous suspension
Facebook to finish new political classified ads before US election
FoodCloud CEO wins European Tech Women Award
Prodigy Learning wins contract for evaluation tool in Irish schools
Why Facebook can simply block Australian users from sharing news
Zoom Exceeds Expectations with 355% Profit Expansion
How Covid-19 Much Replaced Network Traffic and Telecom Behavior
In virtual transformation, all workloads can be fully moved to the cloud
Apple and Google Reveal More Top Points About Latest Touch Tracking Update
Facebook and Twitter delete Russia-linked accounts from US users.But it’s not the first time
Cybercriminals Mimic Key Logo Spaces to Scam Customers
The Covid Tracker Ireland app has been updated. What happens?
How rural spaces can triumph over the virtual divide exposed through Covid-19
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Eir fiber broadband reaches 2 million installations
Virgin Media switches to 1 Gbps broadband on Irish network
Local government calls for 5G national strategy
Huawei says 5G ban is ‘bad news for uk mobile phones’
Teemyco virtual start-up raises $1 million amid peak demand
The AI generation of an Irish start-up targets esa’s ground satellite area
Startup Boost launches programs for its Irish pre-accelerator
SoftBank leads $100 million at Biofourmis
6 proptech startups to follow
Zipp Mobility invests 500,000 euros from Brian O’Driscoll and others
Weekend Takeout: Sit Back With 10 Science & Technology Readings
Moral license in the world of design
The countdown has begun to the Irish scientific extravaganza, Inspirefest 2017
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Construction of the 500 million euro Limerick Twenty Thirty begins
Dave, generation and popular power
Teen-Turn has been chosen for the Nature’s Science Awareness Award
Tatooine-like planets can form sloping rings around several stars
ERC Start-up Grants for Irish Researchers to ‘Innovate’
Sanofi and GSK Launch Trials on Covid-19 Vaccine
Astronomers stumble upon a bang never noticed between two black holes
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New double-sided framed solar panel unveiled at Kilkenny
The new Irish Centre for Intensive Computing is presented as an EU initiative
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ESB receives a loan of 150 million euros for national counter deployment
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WeForest doubles its crowdfunding purpose to empower an Indian village
World awaits birth of ‘dragon babies’ in Slovenia
Discovery of gold and platinum in streams in south-eastern Ireland
The bees are in trouble, so are we
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US company Peak6 announces 160 new jobs in Belfast
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This week, in the long-term technology box, Elgin Energy unveiled Ireland’s first double-sided solar panel control at a dairy farm in Kilkenny.
In an effort to harvest more solar energy for renewable electricity, Elgin Energy has implemented a control site for the first bifacial module, also known as double-sided solar panels, in Ireland. The control site installed on a dairy farm in Skeoughvosteen, Co Kilkenny, and is part of a partnership with panel manufacturer Longi and inverter manufacturer SolarEdge.
The task hopes to read about the production profile of bifacal panels in Ireland and make a direct comparison of the energy production of bifacal and single fault panels. Based on studies around the world, partners found that there can be up to 10 percent construction.bifacial production compared to monofacial production.
“We are very pleased to publish this local allocation in collaboration with Longi and SolarEdge,” said Ronan Kilduff, CEO of Elgin Energy.
“This verification site is the first of its kind in Ireland and will provide information that will tell the Irish solar industry and our progression in Ireland and the UK.”
The UK government has shown that the country’s first quantum computer for advertising use will be built in Abingdon, Oxfordshire, with the support of a £ 10 million investment from government and industry.
The new quantum computer will be developed through Rigetti Computing, which has also developed a cloud platform that allows computer programmers to write quantum algorithms.as well as the University of Edinburgh.
“Our ambition is to be the leading economy ready for quantum technology, which may be offering UK businesses and industries billions of pounds of opportunities,” said UK Science Minister Amanda Solloway.
“Therefore, I am very pleased that corporations across the country have our first advertising quantum computer, founded in Abingdon.
The Minister also announced the launch of the UK’s National Quantum Computing Centre, first promised in 2018 from a 93 million pound investment.
The Irish Center for High-End Computing (ICHEC) has officially launched the Euro High-Performance Competence Center (EuroCC), which it will host for the next two years. The European allocation of € 57 million is aimed at speeding up the preparation of willing researchers to the extensive European IT network and to help SMEs adopt the newest technologies.
“This is a European-wide technique for investing in high-performance IT by facilitating closer coordination of all states in the areas of infrastructure, technological progression and complex software progression,” said ICHEC Director JC Desplat.
“Ireland understands the desire to obtain full merit from strategic projects such as EuroHPC, which have the prospect of putting the country’s researchers on an equivalent basis with their peers in the EU and beyond.”
While the number of electric vehicle (EV) charging problems in Europe and North America was around 900,000 in 2019, Berg Insight predicts that this number may only be 4.4 million through 2024.
Europe accounts for the majority, with around 600,000 of these load problems, corresponding to a connectivity penetration rate of 46%, according to market analysts.In North America, about 300,000 of the total number of load problems were connected to a connectivity penetration rate of 35pc.
“The number of connected charging problems has increased, especially over the previous year, and as the fleet of electric vehicles continues to grow rapidly, the demand for connected charging stations will be stable,” said Adam Bjorkman, IoT analyst at Berg Insight..
“The number of connected home charging stations is still limited in any of the regions, however, it is expected to increase along our homes’ overall trend of becoming smarter.”
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