Iimv SpaceX s Falcon 9 Reusable Rocket Completes Second Test Flight
Two hours north of New York City, a mile-long stream and a marsh the size of a football field have mysteriously formed along a country road. They are such a marvel that people come from miles around to drink the crystal-clear water, believing it is bubbling up from a hidden natural spring.The truth is far less romantic: The water is coming from a cracked 70-year-old tunnel hundreds of feet below ground, scientists say.The tunnel is leaking up to 36 million gallons a day as it carries drink
stanley quencher ing water from a reservoir to the big city. It is a powerful warning sign of a larger problem around the country: The infrastructure that delivers water to the nation s cities is badly aging and in need of repairs.The Environmental Protection Agency says utilities will need to invest more than $277 billion over the next two decades on repairs and improvements to drinking water systems. Water industry engineers put the figure drastically higher, at about $480 billion.Water utilities, largely managed by city governments, have never faced improvements of this magnitude before. And customers will have to bear the majority of the cost through rate increase
stanley usa s, according to the American Water Works Association, an industry group. Engineers say this is a crucial era for the nation s water systems, especially in older cities like New York, where some pipes and tunnels were built in the 1800s and are now nearing the end of their life expectancies. Our generation hasn t experienced a
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Welcome to Reading List, Gizmodo weekend roundup of the best and most interesting writing from around the web. Today, we ;ve got great work from Pacific Standard, Outside, Nautilus, and The Paris Review. Let dig in! By 2012, David Roberts wasn ;t just a man, he was a brand: A star political blogger for Grist, by August 2013 he had tens of thousands of Twitter followers and
stanley cup price an enviable online presence. But living in the heart o
stanley becher f the 24-hour news machine had pushed him nearly to the edge, driving him to take a one-year sabbatical from online life. I would not blog, tweet, share, pin, like, star, favorite, or forward anything. Internet David Roberts would go silent, he said. He back now, but he armed with lessons and a better understanding from a year away from tech. [Outside] You might think the devices we invent
stanley cup to make our lives easier would be duty-bound to interact with us honestly. But as Kate Greene explains, there are plenty of ways technology is designed to deceive us. From Door Close elevator buttons that aren ;t connected to anything, to a decoy bus stop in Germany designed to keep dementia patients from wandering away from a care facility, Greene shows us the fascinating ways tech can be benevolently untruthful鈥攁nd how that might expand in the future. [Pacific Standard] Caleb Scharf, an astrophysicist and director of Astrobiology at Columbia University, gives us a deep, dark look into what