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UCSB Races to Digitize Bee Collections for AI Era

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - Scientists at UC Santa Barbara are working to transform decades of collected bee specimens into usable digital data.

The Big Bee Project aims to unlock hidden information inside collections that have long sat in drawers.

This story will show how researchers are turning old specimens into powerful tools for modern science.

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The post UCSB Races to Digitize Bee Collections for AI Era appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

UCSB Races to Digitize Bee Collections for A.I. Era

Kraig Pakulski 0 17 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - Scientists at UC Santa Barbara are working to transform decades of collected bee specimens into usable digital data.

The Big Bee Project aims to unlock hidden information inside collections that have long sat in drawers.

This story will show how researchers are turning old specimens into powerful tools for modern science.

The Latest Breaking News, Weather Alerts, Sports and More Anytime On Our Mobile Apps. Keep Up With the Latest Articles by Signing Up for the News Channel 3-12 Newsletter.

The post UCSB Races to Digitize Bee Collections for A.I. Era appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Santa Barbara County Pushes For More Housing With Streamlined ADU Plans

Kraig Pakulski 0 16 Article rating: No rating

ORCUTT, Calif. (KEYT) – New free, and pre-approved options from Santa Barbara County can now help California's housing crisis by encouraging unincorporated areas the county build more ADUs, or Accessory Dwelling Units.

An ADU can take a few different forms, such as a separated modular home or ‘pool house,’ or it can be an attached living space that’s been converted from something like a garage. They are designed for permanent, independent living, but is associated with an existing or planned primary residence.

While cities such as Santa Maria and Lompoc offer permits for many flexible options of ADUs that the homeowner can design, they are associated with their usual costs.

Unincorporated county jurisdictions such as Guadalupe and Orcutt, however, can now utilize these free, pre-approved and pre-designed options from the County of Santa Barbara Planning Department.

These streamlined plans seek to comply with state laws Assembly Bill 2221 and Senate Bill 897, offering non-discretionary approval processes for units up to 1,200 square feet.

The goal of these state mandates is in response to the ongoing housing crisis, seeking to increase housing options across the board for everyone.

The Latest Breaking News, Weather Alerts, Sports and More Anytime On Our Mobile Apps. Keep Up With The Latest Articles by Signing Up for the News Channel 3-12 Newsletter.

The post Santa Barbara County Pushes For More Housing With Streamlined ADU Plans appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

343 days on the front line: Ukrainian officer’s long deployment underscores Kyiv’s manpower issues

Kraig Pakulski 0 19 Article rating: No rating

By Daria Tarasova-Markina, Lauren Kent, CNN

(CNN) — Infantry officer Oleksiy just spent 343 days without leaving the front line, in what his battalion believes is one of the longest combat deployments for an officer in the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

His lengthy deployment, in the woodlands between settlements in the eastern Zaporizhzhia region, underscores Ukraine’s severe lack of manpower as the war drags on after more than four years.

The 37-year-old had the opportunity to leave the front at one point but volunteered to stay due to the manpower challenges.

“My company is understaffed (as are all the others) and of those who are here, roughly half are in the 50-plus age bracket,” said Oleksiy – whose call sign is “Botanik,” a.k.a. “nerd” – in a statement published by his unit. “Ideally, an infantryman would spend a month on combat duty and a month recovering in a frontline village. But under current conditions, that’s completely unrealistic due to the shortage of men.”

His battalion, which identified Oleksiy only by his first name, told CNN that a typical deployment is about three to four months for their unit. Throughout the military, soldiers typically serve on the front lines in rotations of less than three months, although it varies widely.

“Infantry serve the longest, and the farther from the front line, the shorter the combat deployment,” Major Yaroslav Halas, an officer with the 3rd Mountain Assault Battalion of the 128th Mountain Assault Brigade, told CNN. “For example, reconnaissance UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) pilots may be in combat positions for 3 to 4 days, while FPV drone pilots stay for a week (as they are closer to the front line).”

The lengthening deployments come as Ukrainian commanders in other units have warned of personnel issues, acknowledging that the army will never match the manpower of Russia’s far larger military force.

CNN has previously reported on Ukraine’s increased use of land robots and drones controlled by pilots positioned miles away from the front line, as the country tries to use technological advances to gain an advantage. Ukraine has also stepped up its efforts to draft more men without a valid exemption from serving.

Other examples of Ukrainian men serving long stints have been reported by local media in recent months. Senior Lieutenant Ivan Kavun, the commander of a machine-gun platoon in the 30th Mechanized Brigade, spent 486 days in a frontline deployment, according to his unit.

“Supplies were dropped to us by drones. If a vehicle came in, it would bring a month’s worth of provisions,” Kavun recounted in a video shared by his unit. “There were both funny and not-so-funny stories. A cat was born in our dugout. Then it was wounded by a tank shell fragment, right there in the dugout.”

In the statement posted on social media by his brigade, Oleksiy described the horror of losing men under Russian fire, as well as the constant assaults that grew more intense if the weather was too poor for Ukraine to thwart attacks with drones.

“I see my main role as a commander as minimizing personnel losses. Ideally, there would be none at all … But in war, and in the infantry, this is, unfortunately, impossible,” he said. “As for my personal motivation, I don’t want my family, my daughter, to see what I see – explosions, incoming missiles, destroyed villages, death. That’s why I’m here.”

He is called “nerd” because of his “intellectual appearance” and his glasses, but also because he is a scientist by training with a biology degree from Karazin Kharkiv National University. In fact, Botanik

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