![]() He’s a chemical engineer who for 15 years has been exploring carbon structures and has used them to come up with a new kind of tire infused with a carbon black material. One of them that has been coming for a while is CarbonX, started by Rutger van Raalten from Delft, Netherlands. The Dutch showed up with a set of 70 startups at CES 2023, including a number that were part of the Responsible Tech booth in the Eureka Park startup section at the show. CarbonX makes better tires for electric cars CarbonX CEO and cofounder Rutger van Raalten. The company started in 2017 and started delivering telescopes in 2019. The version on display at CES 2023 sells for around $2,500. This is another example of AI invading every product and winding up in places where you don’t expect it. An app helps you see it even better, enabling you to see galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters from a downtown location. But with the machine learning, artificial intelligence (AI) can improve the image processing and reduce that light pollution and give you clearer imagery to look at in the night sky. People go out of their way to head into the wilderness to use their telescopes as a result. Ludovic Nachury, head of communication at the Marseille, France-based company, told me that city lights are always the worst problem that prevents you from seeing stars. But Unistellar showed up at the Showstoppers press party with a cool tech: A telescope that uses machine learning to reduce the blurriness you see when there is too much light pollution around you. ![]() Now your smartphone app - like Night Sky - can tell you that. Celestron always made regular advances with the tech, like telling you what constellations you were looking at in the night sky. It’s been a while since I wrote about the technology in telescopes. Unistellar telescope reduces light pollution with AI The Unistellar telescope reduces light pollution in the night sky. Here are the 18 things that caught my eye. I dragged my roller bag all over the place and it managed to save me from slippery floors (through some kind of tripod balancing) on three occasions. This year featured nearly 3,000 exhibitors, up from 1,900 in 2021 and down from 4,000 (in-person) in 2020.
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