ECOLOGY AND ENERGY PRODUCTION

ECOLOGY AND ENERGY PRODUCTION

Tuesday, January 21, 2020








Canoo revealed its all-electric lounge vehicle in September that is leased through a monthly subscription
The package includes maintenance, registration, access to insurance and charging access
The waitlist is free to join and consumers can gain points by referring others and completing surveys 
At the official launch in 2021, those with the most points will have first access to leasing one of the vehicles.

You could soon add another subscription payment to your credit card, but for a car.

Los Angeles startup Canoo has opened up the waitlist for its lounge-like electric vehicles that consumers lease through a monthly fee.

The firm is calling this release 'The First Wave', which lets consumers earn points for referring others to join and completing surveys.

Those with the most point will be at the top of the waitlist when the automobiles launch in 2021 - and it is free for customers to add their name to the list.



Canoo's subscription is based on a monthly subscription that includes maintenance, registration, access to insurance and charging on a month-to-month basis.


Los Angeles startup Canoo has opened up the waitlist for its lounge-like electric vehicles that consumers lease through a monthly fee. The firm is calling this release 'The First Wave', which lets consumers earn points for referring others to join and completing surveys

Ulrich Kranz, co-founder of Canoo, said: 'When we revealed our subscription-only canoo vehicle back in September, we were overwhelmed with the positive response we got from consumers.'

'Now we are excited to offer our community the opportunity to sign up to ride The First Wave with us.'As part of our all-inclusive, hassle-free and commitment-free car experience, people can join the waitlist in a matter of seconds with no obligation.'

'We believe that the potential of EV architecture can enable a post-SUV era that addresses the ever-growing desire for space and value.' 
Canoo; a subscription only electric car



Those with the most point will be at the top of the waitlist when the automobiles launch in 2021 - and it is free for customers to add their name to the list. Canoo's subscription is based on a monthly subscription that includes maintenance, registration, access to insurance and charging on a month-to-month basis

The battery, which reaches an 80 percent charge in just 28 minutes, provides about 250 miles on a single charge and its two engines can produce more than 300 horsepower, allowing it to top speeds of 125 miles per hour – and it goes zero to 60 in just seven seconds

The firm is set to officially launch the vehicles in 2021

The firm is not setting a specific duration for commitment and different packages will be available that the firm claims are all affordable.

The lounge car resembles a min-van with a futuristic, sleek design, and it has a symmetrical form to maximize the interior space.

And sticking with the lounge theme, the firm built in a few folding chairs into the sides of the doors and a wraparound couch in the back, according to Cnet.

The battery, which reaches an 80 percent charge in just 28 minutes, provides about 250 miles on a single charge and its two engines can produce more than 300 horsepower, allowing it to top speeds of 125 miles per hour – and it goes zero to 60 in just seven seconds.

The lounge car resembles a min-van with a futuristic, sleek design, and it has a symmetrical form to maximize the interior space. And sticking with the lounge theme, the firm built in a few folding chairs into the sides of the doors

The firm is not setting a specific duration for commitment and different packages will be available that the firm claims are all affordable, but it promises the vehicle will be comfortable - it has built a wraparound couch in the back

The vehicle is enveloped in 22 different windows that include roof, safari and street view.

Richard Kim, who is in charge of the vehicles design, noted: 'We chose to completely rethink car design and focus on what future users will actually need. Thus, we came up with this loft-inspired vehicle.'

Each vehicle will use a standard undercarriage that it calls a 'skateboard' atop which customers can select different 'top hats' that create the interior of the car.


The company says it plans to roll out four styles of electric car by 2021 that include a 'lifestyle vehicle' a 'last-mile delivery' vehicle, a 'ride-hailing' vehicle, and a 'personal commuter' vehicle.

Monday, January 13, 2020






DECLASSIFIED UFO REPORT DOCUMENTS 'GREEN CIRCULAR OBJECT' OVER SOVIET EXPERIMENTAL MISSILE RANGE


The report not only includes unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), but rumored Cold War "laser weapons."
The UFO sighting took place in 1973 and was first revealed to the public in an "Intelligence Information Report" released by the CIA in 1978. Heavily redacted, the declassified version of the document contains only a single paragraph, detailing an encounter with a UFO at a location called "Site 7."
The UFO encounter took place in the summer, when the sighting's source "stepped outside for some air," taking a break from watching a Canada vs. USSR sports match on TV. It was evening, and the source saw above "an unidentified sharp (bright) green circular object or mass in the sky."

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The UFO spotter believed the object was hovering above the cloud level, though it was a clear sky at the time of the sighting. The source was not, however, able to estimate the object's diameter.

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A parade of missiles passes a Lenin poster in Moscow's Red Square in November 1978 druing the 61st anniversary celebration of the Russian Revolution.
PHOTO BY KEYSTONE/GETTY IMAGES

The sighting got weirder from there: "Within 10 to 15 seconds of observation, the green circle widened and within a brief period of time several green concentric circles formed around the mass. Within minutes the coloring disappeared. There was no sound, such as an explosion, associated with the phenomenon," the document says.
But after a request for a Mandatory Declassification Review from researcher John Greenewald of The Black Vault—a site specializing in declassified government records—the CIA released a fuller picture of the sighting, which was recorded in the context of a detailed intelligence report into military activities at the Soviet Union's Sary Shagan Weapons Testing Range.Greenewald drew a direct line between Cold War-era sightings and similar UAP encounters documented by the U.S. Department of Defense, most famously the unidentified objects featured in three U.S. Navy videos released by the To The Stars Academy of Arts & Science in 2017 and early 2018. Subsequently, a military official revealed to The Washington Post that UAPs intrude upon military airspace as often as several times per month.
"This is very much simliar to the context we see today, with threats on military facilities," Greenewald told Newsweek in a telephone interview. "The U.S. Navy has gone on the record saying whatever this is, it's a concern. They're being encroached upon by this unidentified phenomena."
The more fully declassified file released by the CIA details activities at the testing range, including rough maps of the facilities, the command hierarchy and personnel estimates, making it a fascinating Cold War-era intelligence even absent the dramatic UFO encounter. Weapons tested at the facility included experimental missiles and warheads with cartridges loaded with hundreds of metal balls.

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A map of the facilities at Sary Shagan, included in a more fully declassified CIA intelligence report.
CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

More experimental weapons may also have been under development at the testing range. "According to hearsay, experiments involving laser weapons were conducted at an unknown location at the range. Supposedly the tests involved powerful antennas," the report notes.
Site 7, where the UFO sighting took place, was the headquarters for the "warhead checkout unit" and a garrison of Soviet Air Force personnel.
While lesser known in U.S. research circles, the sighting is just one of numerous encounters with unidentified aerial phenomena surrounding Soviet military installations throught the Cold War era, similar to unexplained encroachments still recorded by the U.S. military today.
Newsweek has also reached out to the Central Intelligence Agency with a request for additional context surrounding the document, but did not hear back in time for publication.




The area where the alleged UFO was spotted nearly five decades ago was apparently used by the USSR to test experimental missiles and laser weapon systems.
A recently declassified CIA report sheds light on an alleged UFO encounter that took place at the height of the Cold War in Kazakhstan in 1973, back when it was part of the Soviet Union.
The document, whose redacted version was first released in 1978 and which has now been made available on The Black Vault, a website that publishes declassified government files, mentions how the witness, identified in the paper as “Source”, “stepped outside for some air” and spotted “an unidentified sharp (bright) green circular object or mass” hovering “above cloud level”.

“Within 10 to 15 seconds of observation, the green circle widened and within a brief period of time, several green concentric circles formed around the mass. Within minutes the coloring disappeared. There was no sound, such as an explosion, associated with the phenomenon”, the document states citing the witness’ observations.

According to the website, the sighting took place in the vicinity of the Sary Shagan Weapons Testing Range that was allegedly used by the USSR back then to secretly launch “experimental missiles” and to test “laser weapon systems utilizing powerful antennas”.
During a telephone interview with Newsweek, The Black Vault’s founder John Greenewald compared the encounter with the so-called USS Nimitz UFO incident which took place in 2004.

“This is very much similar to the context we see today, with threats on military facilities,” he said. “The US Navy has gone on the record saying whatever this is, it’s a concern. They’re being encroached upon by this unidentified phenomenon.