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  • They call this the wooden

  • house district of Helsinki.

  • These beauties were built back in the early 1900s

  • so that the workers of Finland

  • could have nice places to live

  • and nice gardens to tend.

  • They're symbolic of Finland's famed

  • social support system that has made Finns

  • some of the happiest people on Earth.

  • Bless you, Finland, and your wheelbarrow gardens.

  • Of course, progress often has its own plans.

  • The workers here, for example, have been

  • replaced by artsy hipsters

  • seeking a trendy neighborhood.

  • And, soon enough, workers and hipsters all over the world

  • might be replaced by robots that don't care

  • about social systems or pretty gardens at all.

  • Hello robot overlords.

  • Here at Helsinki's most scenic garbage dump

  • are some hard-working robotic arms

  • from a company called ZenRobotics.

  • The Zen part obviously being some bizarre marketing ploy

  • because there's nothing calming about these things.

  • Their mission is to divvy up industrial trash,

  • sorting things like wood and metal into their own piles.

  • How do you get the robot to see that it's not wood,

  • that it's a piece of steel, a plastic bag?

  • All this stuff is so amorphous and different.

  • We use cameras, we use metal detectors,

  • we use 3D sensors, and we use also near infrared sensors.

  • The A.I. is able then to predict, okay,

  • what kind of material?

  • We tried to understand how is a human operator

  • sorting waste, and he is not picking it

  • and putting it here.

  • It picks and throws.

  • Yeah.

  • And we simulated the same movements,

  • so our robot opens the grip and lets the object fly.

  • And what do we know about

  • how accurate the robots are?

  • Depending on the different kind of waste,

  • we can go to a purity up to 90%.

  • Can we go take a closer look at the robots?

  • Yes, for sure, yes, let's go.

  • So, the waste comes up, goes on this conveyor belt,

  • and then this is where it's getting scanned--

  • Yes.

  • And then in this moment where it's getting scanned,

  • it's telling the robots down the line,

  • there's gonna be an object coming that I want you to grab.

  • Yes.

  • And then the arms start to go to work.

  • Yes.

  • The robot gets to pick which waste

  • and to throw it in which bin.

  • I mean, it does a really good job to me

  • of picking up these objects that are such different sizes.

  • Yep.

  • You can believe there are many man hours invested

  • to really develop a gripper, what is

  • able to grip totally different kind of sizes,

  • shapes and waste.

  • And I think that was one of the biggest challenges.

  • ZenRobotics recently put its robots

  • to work right here in the heart of Silicon Valley

  • at this massive garbage processing facility in San Jose.

  • Artificial Intelligence and trash

  • commingling in harmony.

  • Just the way nature intended.

  • Back in Finland, I took a drive from the dump to Espoo.

  • It's a city about 25 minutes outside of Helsinki

  • that is something of a tech suburb.

  • Nokia's once glorious headquarters are here,

  • and so too are its more sedate current headquarters.

  • And the Angry Birds are here too.

  • But I have not come to Espoo for disgruntled birds

  • or airborne pigs.

  • I have come to see some satellites.

  • This is the headquarters of Iceye.

  • It is one of a handful of start-ups that have built small

  • satellites that take constant pictures

  • of what's happening on Earth.

  • How many satellites have you guys put up today?

  • The commercial constellation that we operate right now

  • is three satellites.

  • Three satellites.

  • And then, your satellites, they're mini fridge sized?

  • The famous mini fridge, yeah!

  • And then you also want to try and surround

  • the earth with dozens, hundreds of these things?

  • Right, yeah.

  • So, we really want to make the system,

  • that allows you to sort of reliably, and accurately,

  • and objectively see everything at all times.

  • It's almost like having a sort of a MRI scan

  • for the earth.

  • Iceye satellites travel from pole to pole

  • every 45 minutes.

  • Rather than cameras, their three small sats

  • use something called synthetic aperture radar,

  • or SAR, to pound the earth with microwave signals

  • from low earth orbit.

  • They then use signals that are reflected back

  • from the earth to build images of the surface.

  • Unlike cameras, SAR can see through the cloudiest of days

  • and the darkest of nights.

  • Iceye combine this radar technology

  • with advanced image processing and computer vision

  • software to create highly detailed pictures.

  • Can we peak at some of these images, and--

  • Sure.

  • Walk through what you guys do?

  • So, this was an example of the hurricane Dorian,

  • in the Bahamas.

  • We were able to image this exactly when

  • the hurricane was on top of the island.

  • This is the island as it normally is.

  • And then, in the afterwards,

  • the land border used to be here.

  • And I think here, the really dramatic thing is that

  • all of these red dots are buildings fully submerged.

  • This is exactly what becomes insurance information to--

  • Yeah, so, you have proof that all

  • of this stuff flooded, and--

  • Yeah.

  • And proof is one thing, and then, of course,

  • just the ability to react.

  • Like, now what if you could trigger the payment

  • to these guys automatically?

  • So that people get to rebuild their lives,

  • and so forth.

  • Much more quickly, yeah, yeah.

  • Now here, we're looking at a large tanker, The Grace One.

  • It relates to the sanctions to Iran.

  • It became this big story, when it was impounded

  • in Gibraltar, when it was said that it was headed

  • towards Syria, with a tank full of Iranian oil.

  • This is an image from a while back

  • where we're able to see the Grace One ship here,

  • in the Iranian shores in January.

  • So, maybe the US knows where this tanker is.

  • The NSA knows, the CIA.

  • And they can choose to make public what they want.

  • But, basically, with you guys, there's a democratization

  • to all this, where anyone who's willing to pay

  • for your imagery, you know?

  • Yeah.

  • It's not just in the hands of these few governments now.

  • It's like everybody can know what's going on.

  • Yeah, I think that's part of the big story here.

  • In the case of this tanker, what was really interesting is,

  • was it full or was it not full?

  • How full was it? And so forth.

  • If it's full of oil, it's down in the water,

  • and you're getting something on the depth,

  • from like a shadow off the water, or something like that.

  • Yeah, exactly like this.

  • And then this is a mine, it's an open pit mine.

  • So, the more mundane use case here is just that

  • you monitor the progress of the mining activity.

  • But, of course, the safety of, is there some

  • displacement that is likely to cause landslides?

  • Or, is there some underground mining that

  • is likely to cause collapses?

  • When it started in 2014,

  • Iceye was the very first company

  • to build a commercial satellite in Finland.

  • Since then, it's raised more than 65 million dollars

  • from investors and plans to launch a constellation

  • of 18 small satellites in the next couple of years.

  • Right now, we're fully booked with customers.

  • So, there will be some governments.

  • There will be some insurance, some finance.

  • I mean, there's a ton of positive use cases

  • to all this stuff.

  • I do think some people, though, would be creeped out a bit,

  • about this all-seeing eye,

  • that is keeping track of what people are doing.

  • I think, as far as the sort of creepiness,

  • and sort of personal level,

  • I think a lot of the mobile phones, internet,

  • Google type services, they tend to track you

  • to much higher precision, than we ever,

  • so, like we never would never really

  • be in the business of identifying humans.

  • We don't image faces.

  • The resolution is way lower than that.

  • For us, it's about objectivity,

  • of being able to provide as neutral

  • a source of information as possible.

  • AI robots and super fancy satellites

  • are all well and good.

  • Probably?

  • But no visit to Finland would be complete

  • without exploring its oldest and most famous tech:

  • the sauna.

  • Or, as they say it here, the sauna.

  • And since Finland is a tiny place full

  • of accommodating people,

  • I was able to find not just a sauna

  • but the sauna.

  • And not just any sauna companion

  • but the sauna companion.

  • Finland's most famous actor, Jasper Paakkonen.

  • Along with having an outstanding six-pack,

  • Jasper owns this beauty.

  • He joined me at about 11 p.m.

  • to teach me the art of the sauna

  • and what it means to the Finnish people.

  • When you walk into a sauna, you're stripped down

  • from your clothes, you're stripped down from

  • all the titles, your wealth.

  • You leave your wallet outside

  • and it's just a bunch of people at their most bare

  • state of being.

  • And it's really hard to not be honest

  • when you're so exposed and so bare.

  • Yeah.

  • So, this is a pretty common thing,

  • is to come in here and hash things out?

  • Yeah.

  • Sauna is the only word from Finnish language

  • to travel to other languages as a common word

  • to use and saunas are more common in Fin,

  • it's more common to own a sauna than it is to own a car.

  • Which means every single person has a sauna.

  • Yeah.

  • Everybody has these saunas, but the ones here

  • are very traditional and what is the

  • classic Finnish sauna?

  • The real sauna would always be a wood-heated sauna

  • because the burning of the wood gives the sauna its,

  • this very distinct flavor or this loyly.

  • Loyly the word means like the spirit of the sauna

  • and the feel when you throw water

  • onto the sauna heater's rocks.

  • That's loyly and you just get much better loyly

  • when you heat it with wood.

  • Loyly. Loyly.

  • Loyly. Loyly.

  • Perhaps unimpressed by my grasp

  • of the Finnish language,

  • Jasper decided it was a good idea

  • to complete the sauna experience

  • by subjecting me to a ritualized form of icy torture.

  • We just lower ourselves down to our necks,

  • and then we take a few deep, kind of just easy breaths.

  • Try not to hyperventilate.

  • Okay.

  • Takes a second to settle in.

  • I feel good.

  • Wooh!

  • Okay, that's refreshing.

  • All right, man.

  • See now, you start feeling this tingling, warm...

  • Definitely able to breathe now, so that's positive.

  • And you don't feel cold, right?

  • No, I feel good actually, yes.

  • Once you do it a few times, first you get used to it,

  • and then you get addicted to it.

  • So, how many times would you do that

  • during the course of a sauna session?

  • I usually do it four times back and forth.

  • So, sauna, swim, sauna, swim.

  • And then you end it with the swim.

  • I often say that sauna is like the church

  • for a normal, average Finn.

  • If he or she goes to the sauna,

  • you're in silence and you sweat out the daily sorrows,

  • both mentally and physically.

  • There's something church-like.

  • Sadly, I feel like our version

  • is like a football game or something!

They call this the wooden

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從三溫暖到衛星,芬蘭正在升溫。 (From Saunas to Satellites, Finland Is Heating Up)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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