Driverless pods begin ferrying the public around Greenwich

The shuttle is a repurposed Ultra Pod, which is already in operation at London’s Heathrow Airport. With a maximum speed of 10MPH (16KPH), it’s not the fastest electric vehicle — you could beat it on a Boosted Board — however it’s hoped the leisurely pace will reassure pedestrians and minimise dangerous incidents. Each pod carries up to four people, including a safety operator who can pepper the breaks in an emergency. It’s able to ‘see’ it’s surroundings using a mixture of cameras and lasers, and use that information to track obstacles and create a collision-free route. Notably, it doesn’t need to rely on GPS for any of these calculations.


The purpose of the trials is to see how the public reacts to self-driving vehicles, and to examine how the technology can best be applied in built-up areas. Each trip will give the research team a wealth of valuable information — four terabytes of data every eight hours, to be precise. It’ll be supplemented with passenger interviews, taken before and after each trip, and written feedback that anyone can submit online through an interactive map. “It is critical that the public is fully involved as these technologies become a reality,” Professor Nick Reed, academy director at TRL said.


The “GATEway Project” at Greenwich is one of many research initiatives being funded by the UK government. We’ve already seen the “Lutz Pathfinder” pod, which is being tested in Milton Keynes, and a modified Land Rover that’s serving as a research testbed in Bristol. Plans are also underway for a 41-mile “connected corridor,” which will be used to test LTE, local WiFi hotspots and other forms of connectivity in self-driving vehicles. In the private sector, Nissan is testing its electric Leaf cars in the capital, and Roborace is developing a driverless motorsport. It’s an impressive hub of activity, even without Google and Uber’s involvement.

Can Trump resist the power of behavioral science"s dark side?

More than two dozen governments, including the U.S., now have a team of behavioral scientists tasked with trying to improve bureaucratic efficiency to “nudge” their citizens toward what they deem to be higher levels of well-being.


A few recent examples include a push by the socialist French government to increase the numbers of organ donors, a conservative UK government plan to prevent (costly) missed doctor appointments, and efforts by the Obama White House to boost voter turnout on Election Day.


While the government’s use of our psychological quirks to affect behavior rubs some people the wrong way, most of us can agree that the above examples achieve positive ends. More organ donors mean more lives saved, fewer missed doctor appointments mean the government or health industry is more efficient, and increased voting means stronger citizen engagement in democracy.


But “nudges” themselves are value neutral. That is, they can be used to both achieve altruistic ends or more malicious ones. Just as behavioral science can be used to increase voter turnout, it can also be used to suppress the votes of specific individuals likely to favor the opposing side, as reportedly happened in the recent U.S. presidential election.


The nudge, in other words, has a dark side.


My research explores how behavioral science can help people follow through on their intentions where they make better or longer-term choices that increase their well-being. Because choices are influenced by the environment in which they are made, changing the environment can change decision outcomes.


This can be positive to the extent that those designing interventions have good intentions. But what happens when someone uses these insights to systematically influence others’ behavior to favor his or her own interests – even at the expense of everyone else’s?


That’s my concern with President Donald Trump, whose campaign appears to have exploited behavioral science to suppress the vote of Hillary Clinton supporters.


Small language tweaks can lead to a large uptick in organ donors. Phil Coale/AP Photo

What’s in a nudge?


Behavioral science is a relatively young field, and governments have only recently begun using its insights to inform public policy.


The UK was the first in 2010 when it created its Behavioral Insights Team. In subsequent years, dozens of governments around the world followed, including Canada with its Behavioral Insights Unit and the U.S., which in 2015 officially launched the White House Social and Behavioral Sciences Team.


The teams’ missions are all relatively similar: to leverage insights from behavioral science to make public services more cost-effective and easier to use, to help people make better choices for themselves, and to improve well-being.


In the UK, for example, the Behavioral Insights Team was able to persuade about 100,000 more people a year to donate their organs by tweaking a message people received when renewing their car tax. Here in the U.S., the Social and Behavioral Science Team helped the Department of Defense increase the amount of retirement savings accounts for service members by 8.3 percent.


These kinds of interventions have been criticized for unjustly interfering with an individual’s autonomy. Some even compare it with mind-control.


However, as I have pointed out elsewhere, our environment (and the government) is always exerting some influence on our behavior, so we’re always being nudged. The question is therefore not whether we will be nudged, but how and in what direction.


For example, when you sit down to dinner, the size of your plate can make a big difference in how much you eat. Studies show you’re more likely to consume less food if you use a smaller plate. So if the government is handing out the dinnerware, and if most us wanted to avoid overeating, why not set the default plate to a small one?


But now let’s consider the dark side: a restaurant might hand out a small plate if it means it can charge more for less food and thus make more money. The owner likely doesn’t care about your waist size.


Any intervention based on behavioral science is therefore neither good nor bad. What matters is the intention behind it, the aim which the nudge is ultimately supposed to help achieve.


If you want to lose weight, try a smaller plate. Plate size via www.shutterstock.com

Potential for abuse


Take the case of what Cambridge Analytica – a company founded in 2013 and reportedly funded by the family of billionaire conservative donor Robert Mercer – did during the election. This team of data scientists and behavioral researchers claims to have collected thousands of data points on 220 million Americans in order to “model target audience groups and predict the behavior of like-minded people.”


Essentially, all that data can be used to deduce individual’s personality traits and then send them messages that match their personality, which are more likely to be persuasive. For example, highly neurotic Jane will be more receptive to a political message that promises safety, as opposed to financial gains, which may be more compelling to conscientious Joe.


So what’s the problem? In and of itself, this analysis can be a neutral tool. A government might want to use this approach to provide helpful information to at-risk populations, for example by providing suicide prevention hotlines to severely depressed individuals, as Facebook is currently doing. One might even argue that Cambridge Analytica, first hired by the Cruz campaign and later by Trump, was not acting unethically when it sent such personalized messaging to convince undecided voters to support the eventual Republican nominee. After all, this is what all marketing campaigns set out to do.


But there is a fine ethical line here that behavioral science can make easier to cross. In the same way that people can be influenced to engage in a behavior, they may also be discouraged from doing so. Bloomberg reported that Cambridge Analytica identified likely Clinton voters such as African-Americans and tried to dissuade them from going to the ballot box. The company denies discouraging any Americans from casting their vote.


Beyond hiring the company, the Trump administration has a direct tie to Cambridge Analytica through chief strategist Steve Bannon, who sits on its board.


Alexander Nix, CEO of Cambridge Analytica, talks about what his company does.

How might Trump nudge?


So far, it’s unclear whether or how the Trump administration might use behavioral science in the White House.


Trump, like most Republicans, has emphasized his desire to make government more efficient. Since behavioral science is generally a low-cost intervention strategy that provides tangible, measurable gains that should appeal to a business-minded president, Trump may very well turn to its insights to accomplish this goal. After all, the UK’s Behavioral Insights Team was kicked off under conservative leadership.


The White House Social and Behavioral Science Team’s impressive interventions have led to hundreds of millions of dollars in savings across a variety of departments and at the same time increased the well-being of millions of citizens. The future of the team is now unclear. Some members are worried that Trump will use their skills in less benevolent ways.


Trump’s apparent use of Cambridge Analytica to suppress Clinton turnout, however, is not a good sign. More broadly, the president does not seem to value ethics. Despite repeated warnings from government ethics watchdogs, he refuses to seriously deal with his innumerable conflicts of interest. Without the release of his tax returns, the true extent of his conflicts remain unknown.


And as we know from behavioral science, people frequently underestimate the influence conflicts of interests have on their own behavior.


In addition, studies show that people can easily set aside moral concerns in the pursuit of efficiency or other specific goals. People are also creative in rationalizing unethical behavior. It doesn’t seem to be a stretch to imagine that Trump, given his poor track record where ethics is concerned, could cross the fine ethical line and abuse behavioral science for self-serving ends.


Cass Sunstein is one-half of the duo that coined the term ‘nudge’ to describe using small interventions to drive government policy changes. AP Photo

A virus and a cure


Behavioral science has been heralded as part of the solution to many societal ills.


Behavioral economists Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein, co-authors of the book “Nudge” coining the term, have been strong advocates of using the field’s tools to improve government policy – when the intentions are transparent and in the public interest.


But might the current administration use them in ways that go against our own interests? The problem is that we may not even be aware when it happens. People are often unable to tell whether they are being nudged and, even if they are, may be unable to tell how it’s influencing their behavior.


Governments around the world have found success using the burgeoning field of behavioral science to improve the efficiency of their policies and increase citizens’ well-being. While we should continue to find new ways to do this, we also need clear guidelines from Congress on when and how to use behavioral science in policy. That would help ensure the current or a future occupant of the White House doesn’t cross the line into the dark side of nudges.

EXCLUSIVE: OMG! Avni"s "Truth" to finally get EXPOSED in "Naamkarann"?







The revelation about Ananya (Aditi Rathore) being Avni has been the only mission for both Ali (Gautam Vig) and Neil (Zain Imam) for a long time now in ‘Naamkarann’ (Star Plus).


The recent episode witnessed another attempt by Neil to decode Avni’s truth as he tried different pendants on her. However, Avni has still managed to be safe and Neil is frustrated about the same.


In the upcoming episodes, the expose seems to be finally happening as Ali and Fatima (Gulfam Khan) will be desperate to unravel the truth.





The viewers will soon see Riya’s birthday celebrations where Ananya will also be present. Despite Fatima’s advice to forget Avni and move on, Ali will be adamant on proving that Ananya is indeed Avni. He will request Fatima for a chance to prove the same. 


On approval, the duo will gatecrash Riya’s birthday party and will spot Ananya there. 


When Fatima and Ananya will come face to face, the latter will struggle to hold her feelings and this will hint Fatima about the possibility of her being Avani. 


But soon, Avni will realise that she might get exposed and will convince Fatima that she is Ananya by behaving rudely. 





However, Avni is not completely out of danger as Neil is still on the lookout for proofs to expose her. Avni’s repeated attempts to stay away from Neil will be seen going in vain as destiny will keep bringing them together. 


With barely dodging a bullet in case of Fatima and Ali, and escaping Neil’s tactics, will Avni be able to hide her truth for a long time? Only time will tell.


Are you excited about this upcoming twist?


Indonesia calling telly actors Mrunal Jain and Shivin Narang







Mrunal Jain and Shivin Narang
Mrunal Jain and Shivin Narang


Actors Mrunal Jain and Shivin Narang, who feature in Nagarjuna and Veera respectively, have been roped in for two Indonesian serials.


Shivin, who has already begun shooting for his show, says, “The response has been fantastic. This is my second visit to Indonesia. People are warm. I feel like I am in India.” Mrunal adds, “I head [there] next week and am looking forward to shooting in a different country and language.”

5,000 People Applied For 100 Seats On Greenwich"s Driverless Shuttle

A prototype autonomous shuttle bus is being tested in Greenwich, and apparently the public is super excited to try it out.


Called GATEway (Greenwich Automated Transport Environment), the computer-driven shuttle can go up to a thrilling 10mph, and rides a two-mile path along the river near The O2. There’s a representative from Oxbotica, the company behind the shuttle, on every ride in case something goes wrong.



Oxbotica offered 100 places to the public to try out the shuttle, and the BBC reports that more than 5,000 people applied for them. Presumably these people didn’t realise they can also ride the driverless DLR nearby.


The test rides will take place within the next month, and Oxbotica hopes NooNoo – sorry, GATEway – will become part of the London transport ecosystem within the next couple of years. [BBC]


More London Posts:






By Holly Brockwell on 04 Apr 2017 at 9:30AM







By Holly Brockwell on 04 Apr 2017 at 6:30AM



Tanzania Struggles to End Child Labor


Three years ago, 14-year-old Julius left his family near the lakeside city of Mwanza, Tanzania, to try his luck mining gold.


Today, Julius is in no hurry to leave, despite having one of the riskiest jobs on a chaotic mine site — handling mercury each day with his bare hands.


“It’s good work. I’m paid well,” Julius, who wanted to use only his first name, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, wearing an orange T-shirt and skinny jeans coated with red dirt.


Julius, now 17, said he has been working with mercury for three years, but no one had ever told him it was dangerous.


There are more than 4 million child laborers in Tanzania aged between 5 and 17, according to a government survey released last year in conjunction with the International Labor Organization. That’s roughly a third of the country’s children.


More than 3 million are doing hazardous jobs, including at illegal mines like the one near Nyaligongo in northern Tanzania, where they are exposed to mercury, heavy dust and work long shifts without safety gear.


Many unaware of laws


The Tanzanian government is aware of the problem but has struggled to keep children out of small, unlicensed mines. Its laws do not allow children under 14 to work, and hazardous work is not permitted for children over 14. Tanzania has signed all major international conventions on child labor and introduced its own laws to prevent the worst child labor.


But not everyone knows of the child labor laws, including families and local officials.


Government workers tasked with enforcing the laws lack the staff and funds for inspections, let alone prosecutions.


“In Tanzania we have a good law and strategy to eliminate all kinds of child labor, but the problem here is who is going to implement this at the local level,” said Gerald Ng’ong’a, executive director of Rafiki Social Development Organization (SDO), an NGO that works on child labor in northern Tanzania.


“Local officials don’t have enough information about the law and how to protect children.”


Lure of gold


The problem is especially hard to tackle in the informal sector, said Emma Gordon, senior Africa analyst at global risk consultancy Verisk Maplecroft, which ranks Tanzania as the 55th-most “at risk” country in its 2017 Child Labor Index, due to be published Wednesday.


“The government’s focus is very much centered around large industrial projects, particularly foreign-owned businesses that would be able to pay fines if violations were discovered,” Gordon wrote in an email to the Thomson Reuters Foundation.


FILE - Teenage boys mix mercury and ground gold ore at a processing site in Mbeya Region, Tanzania, in this 2013 photo.


FILE – Teenage boys mix mercury and ground gold ore at a processing site in Mbeya Region, Tanzania, in this 2013 photo.


In Lake Victoria’s gold belt, where gold has been extracted since the 1890s, licensed and unlicensed small mines operate with major mining firms close by. The scrappy “artisanal” mines provide a crucial source of income to people outside Tanzania’s cities, but like the mining site at Nyaligongo, many operate without government licences.


The majority of children working in gold mines are employed by individuals running these unlicensed mines, observers say. They are among the worst exploited of the mines’ workers, typically earning the equivalent of about 1 euro ($1) a day.


“Pit owners employ children because they’re cheap labor,” said Ng’ong’a.


Legal or not, the lure of the mines — and the harsh poverty of the farming communities around them — keep children coming.


Brothers Petromos and Mayalamos, 12 and 16, left their village outside Mwanza because they heard there was good money to be made at this mine.


“The work is difficult,” said Mayalamos. “But I can only leave this place once I’ve earned enough.”


Nyaligongo village relies on gold to survive.


On the village’s main street, cramped shops sell vegetables, SIM cards and lunch to off-duty miners. Middlemen purchase gold from miners to sell in the closest town, Kahama, where it is resold in bigger cities like Mwanza and Dar es Salaam.


Students leave to work


More than 8,000 people live in Nyaligongo, says Faustine Masasila, the village’s secretary and a mine site owner, and more are still arriving.


“There are people here who used to have very miserable lives,” Masasila said, walking through the buzzing market. “If you work hard, you are guaranteed prosperity.”


FILE - Two 13-year-old boys and one 15-year-old boy pour crushed gold ore over a sisal sack to concentrate the particles of gold at a processing site in Mbeya Reigon, Tanzania, in this 2013 photo.


FILE – Two 13-year-old boys and one 15-year-old boy pour crushed gold ore over a sisal sack to concentrate the particles of gold at a processing site in Mbeya Reigon, Tanzania, in this 2013 photo.


At the primary school down the road, teachers are less impressed with mining’s promise of a good future.


A poster on the school office wall is a testament to the number of children who leave to work when they are old enough.


This year, in Class 1, there are 236 students aged 6 and 7, while in Class 7 there are only 40 students aged 13 and 14.


“I feel very frustrated when children leave and go to the mines instead of going on to secondary school,” said Mabula Kafuku, the education officer for the ward. “They don’t even have enough knowledge to mine safely.”


Children dropping out of school is a nationwide problem in Tanzania and a major impediment to the government’s aspiration to become a middle-income nation by 2025. A recent Human Rights Watch report found that in 2016, more than 5 million children aged between 7 and 17 were out of school across the country.


For government workers tasked with inspecting mines for health, safety and labor violations, enforcing the law at the far-flung informal mines sprinkled around the Lake Victoria region is an onerous task.


Masasila, the village secretary, cannot recall ever seeing inspectors at the mining site near Nyaligongo.


“If you have children working in remote areas, you need a budget to visit. We don’t have such things,” said Hadija Hersi, a regional labor officer in Mwanza. “That’s why you have NGOs stepping in to intervene.”


Some success


Several nongovernmental organizations, including Terre des Hommes Netherlands, have been trying to get child workers back in school and help families develop alternate income sources to wean them off their wages.


Since 2014, Terre des Hommes Netherlands, working with Rafiki SDO, has managed to help more than 725 children leave the mines. In Geita, another nearby gold-mining area, U.K.-based Plan International has helped 12,000 children withdraw from small-scale mining work and is trying to reach another 11,600.


But as long as people are struggling to find work outside Tanzania’s cities, there is only so much NGOs can do.


At the mine, Nyanjige Mwendesha looks on as her three children, ages 10, 12, and 15, sit on the red, dusty ground, smashing up rocks with small metal hammers in the midday sun.


Mwendesha brought her family to work here after there wasn’t enough rain on her farm this year. The family needed the money.


“When it starts to rain, I’ll go back to the farm,” she said.

Kasam Tere Pyar Ki: Tanuja stabbed, Rishi discovers Poorab’s hand behind Tanuja’s attack








Kasam Tere Pyar Ki latest news: Poorab mission gets completed as Tanuja (Kratika Sengar) gets stabbed amid Rishi’s (Ssharad Malhotra) party


The upcoming episodes of Kasam Tere Pyar Ki will bring about a dramatic twist in the storyline as Tanuja will get stabbed by Poorab’s goon. Amid the party sequence, a goon enters disguised as a waiter and is determined to shoot Tanuja.






Whenever the goon tries to take an aim at Tanuja, he is not able to do so and Tanuja gets saved. Rishi turns into Tanuja’s protective shield as he always protects her from the goon’s aim. Tanuja and Rishi once again dance with each other and the romance is rekindled once again between them. However, both Tanuja and Rishi are not aware that a big tragedy is going to enter their lives very soon. The goon mistakenly loses his gun but he does not give up as he is determined to complete his mission to kill Tanuja.





The upcoming twist will show Tanuja being completly unware as the goon approaches her with a knife. The goon stabs Tanuja mercilessly and Tanuja falls on the ground. The goon stabs Tanuja in the dark and therefore no one comes to know about his identity. As soon as Rishi sees Tanuja being stabbed and lying unconscious, he begins to panic. Rishi shouts out Tanuja’s name in shock and tries to revive Tanuja. Tanuaj’s life will be in danger and Rishi will try his best to save his lady love.


Let’s wait and see whether Rishi finds out about Poorab and Malika’s hand in Tanuja’s attack. Stay tuned for latest news and future story updates of Kasam Tere Pyar Ki.


Reebok will introduce plant-based sustainable shoes this year

According to Reebok Future head Bill McInnis “We like to say, we are ‘growing shoes’ here at Reebok. Ultimately, our goal is to create a broad selection of bio-based footwear that can be composted after use. We’ll then use that compost as part of the soil to grow the materials for the next range of shoes. We want to take the entire cycle into account; to go from dust to dust.”


While the shoe itself won’t arrive until later this year, Reebok says it’s using DuPont’s Susterra Propanediol to create the sole. It originates from “non-food source” industrially grown corn, while the upper will be made of organic cotton. Last year, the Future department the Liquid Speed shoes made with 3D drawing technology, and this next project will fit right alongside them. More importantly, McInnis claims this is “just the beginning,” and expects to use it as a blueprint moving forward.

Mumbai Food: Try three new Menus



Take a veggie walk
11 am to 12 am Tuck into Paneer Pretzel Strips, Sticky Maple Chilli Paneer Bao, a vegetarian BLT sandwich or Protein Sliders. Cool off with Berry Bliss and Watermelon Mint Fresca or dig into Blueberry Pancakes, a dessert burger or Cookie In A Cup.


AT: The Rolling Pin, Senapati Bapat Marg, Lower Parel
CALL: 46104610



Binge on salad
11 am to 10.30 pm If you’re keen to get a feel of the tropics, dig into salads from a seasonal menu. Try Summer Burrata and Citrus Salad, packed with proteins, or the Vietnamese Jungle Raw Mango Salad that comes in a coconut shell and comprises greens, raw mangoes, radish and tomatoes.


AT: Ministry Of Salads, shop no.4, opposite Tata Garden, Bhulabhai Desai Road
CALL: 9768539164



Try a kalingar cocktail
6 pm to 1.30 am If you’re bored of Bloody Marys and LIITs, sip innovative concoctions like Vada Pav infused with whiskey and curry leaf syrup or Taaza Kalingar, with fresh-cut watermelon pieces, orange juice and vodka.


AT: A Bar Called Life, opposite PVR Cinemas, Devle Road, JVPD
CALL: 26200122




Kuch Rang Pyar Ke Aise Bhi: Suhana Jatin plan Dev Sonakshi"s close dance amid wedding







Kuch Rang Pyar Ke Aise Bhi: Golu, Jatin and Suhana (Aliya Shah) plans Dev (Shaheer Sheikh) and Sonakshi’s close dance on Saurabh’s​wedding


The upcoming episode of Sony Entertainment Televisions popular daily soap Kuch Rang Pyar Ke Aise Bhi will show major fun moments in Saurabh’s wedding.


Saurabh and Ronita’s​ wedding preparations are going on in full swing, Saurabh is also happy to get married to Ronita.





Suhana gets Dev and Sonakshi’s wedding picture which Golu gets for Suhana from Dixit house, Suhana hopes to see her parents together again.


Golu and Suhana are confused as what to do while Suhana seeks Jatin’s help to bring Dev and Sonakshi closer as she wants them together.


Jatin’s​ plan uniting Dev and Sonakshi






Jatin thus decides to help Suhana, gives an idea of close dance for Dev and Sonakshi amid Saurabh’s wedding thus clicking some bells amid them.


Let’s wait and watch will Suhana manages to get Dev and Sonakshi together again.


Stay tuned for more exciting updates of the upcoming episodes.