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The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s uncrewed Smart Lander for Investigating Moon, or SLIM, mission is expected to touch down on the moon at 10:20 a.m. 1) The Sea of Tranquility 2) the Apollo 11 landing site 3) the Shioli crater that the SLIM mission is targeting and 4) the Chandrayaan-3 lunar landing site. New space raceMultiple space agencies and countries have attempted moon landing missions over the past year, leading to a historic first as well as failures. The lightweight SLIM lander, which launched in September, carries new precision technology to demonstrate a “pinpoint” landing. Part of the motivation behind the new lunar space race is a desire to access water trapped as ice in permanently shadowed regions at the lunar south pole.
Persons: Smart Lander, SLIM, China —, Ispace’s, Russia’s Luna, Astrobotic, Organizations: CNN —, Japan Aerospace, Saturday, YouTube, CNN, Getty, JAXA, Soviet, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency Locations: CNN — Japan, India, United States, Soviet Union, China, Soviet
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s Smart Lander for Investigating Moon, or SLIM, is expected to touch down on the lunar surface at 10:20 a.m. The spacecraft, also nicknamed the “Moon Sniper” for its precision technology, will begin its descent toward the lunar surface at 10 a.m. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's SLIM lunar lander launched aboard a H-IIA launch vehicle on September 7, 2023, from the Tanegashima Space Center. A new lunar space raceThe SLIM mission comes amid a renewed international push to explore the moon. If SLIM is successful, JAXA contends, it will transform missions from “landing where we can to landing where we want.”
Persons: Smart Lander, , Kenji Kushiki, SLIM, , Ray, Kushiki, Ispace’s, Luna, The Peregrine, Peregrine Organizations: CNN, Japan Aerospace, Saturday, Soviet Luna, YouTube, JAXA, Center, Ray Imaging, NASA, Getty, SLIM, Soviet, Soviet Union, The Locations: Japan, Soviet, United States, Soviet Union, China, India
For companies, EAI may be a gold mine. But that isn't stopping companies from using EAI to spy on their employees, determine how they feel, and identify who should be hired and who should be fired. HireVue, a Utah recruitment platform, began using EAI facial analysis in 2014 as part of its candidate interview process. EAI companies disagree. And if it can't, then companies using EAI to make decisions about hiring or firing someone could be entirely misguided.
Persons: EAI, Gabi Zijderveld, Smith, Zijderveld, Dow Jones, Sarah Myers West, Samu Hällfors, Framery, Hällfors, West, it's, Kat Roemmich, Roemmich, Paul Ekman's, Clem De Pressigny Organizations: Companies, Smart, CBS, Disney, Ikea, Dow, Oracle, Washington Post, Electronic Privacy, Center, LinkedIn, Nvidia, Looksery, Snap Inc, University of Michigan School of Information, Smart Eye Locations: Utah, Munich, Helsinki, Europe, American
Iulia Nandrea is an executive assistant to Rana el Kaliouby, the deputy CEO of Smart Eye. While at university, I bartended and worked as a sales representative for a liquor company to get myself through school. Rana el Kaliouby, left, and Rosalind Picard, her Affectiva cofounder. The interview process with el Kaliouby was more like a conversation between old friends than anything else. While working for el Kaliouby, Affectiva, and Smart Eye, I've learned some key lessons about money, success, and happiness — here are the ones that stand out.
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