More than $1 billion in claims for losses related to toxic Colorado mine spill denied.
Pipe protection
Folmar™ Pipe Protection from Great Water Tech is a proprietary, silicate-based mineral solution that prevents corrosion, scale, metal leeching, and the formation of disinfection by-products (DBPs) throughout all levels of water infrastructure.
Wireless, battery-powered water monitoring
Trimble’s Telog® 41 Series of wireless, battery-powered sensors for water monitoring applications are Internet of Things (IoT) sensors that use innovative, low-power, Long-Range (LoRa® technology) wireless communications to remotely measure and monitor water, wastewater and groundwater systems including water pressures, flows, levels and rainfall volumes.
Three dead after becoming trapped in Florida wastewater trench
A mixture of hydrogen sulfide and methane gases overcame the workers.
Hanes brands awarded above-average scores for water management
Company earns A- and B ratings, scoring ahead of CDP program averages in peer comparison.
New Jersey American Water investing $5.8M in service areas
Aging water lines will be replaced with ductile iron pipes.
U.S. to pay $2B to marines exposed to toxic drinking water in N. Carolina
Exposure occured while marines were assigned to Camp Lejeune in North Carolina.
Foundry grew 11% in 2016 to $50bn, says IC Insights
The pure-play foundry market grew 11% in 2016 to top $50 billion, says IC Insights, and will grow at a CAGR of 7.3%
Read full article: Foundry grew 11% in 2016 to $50bn, says IC Insights
It’s Never As Easy As You Think
Maybe the West Coast algorithm companies are beginning to realise that they’re not Masters of the Technoverse. Hard on the heels of Apple and Google giving up on plans to manufacture driverless cars, Google now says it has given up its plans to make Internet-delivering drones. It’s somehow innate in software guys to believe that …
Read full article: It’s Never As Easy As You Think
The Market Which Vanished
In 1970, the world’s first digital watch, the Pulsar, was launched. It cost $1500 and was made by the Hamilton Watch Company. In 1973 Roger Moore’s James Bond sported one in Live and Let Die. The LED display had to be turned on for each reading of the time and the batteries typically lasted four …
Read full article: The Market Which Vanished