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Eastern Shipbuilding Group challenges students to build artificial reefs

Eastern Shipbuilding Group challenges students to build artificial reefs

Yahoo09-05-2025
BAY COUNTY, Fla. (WMBB) – The Eastern Shipbuilding Group's Coastline Initiative challenges students from local schools to design and build artificial reefs.
Participating teams from Wewahitchka High School, Port St. Joe High School, Haney Technical College, and Chipola College had three months to get their projects off the ground.
To meet regulations, they had to submit a plan to Eastern Shipbuilding to get approved through the permitting process.
Students gained hands-on experience in welding and marine engineering, preparing them for future careers in skilled trades.
'There's several trades involved. And it's not only welding, you know, their steel, this fabrication. There's the engineering side of it, designed the whole creativity aspect of design is a whole issue of its own,' Eastern Shipbuilding Group Director of Operations England Reeves said.
Navy acquires Barefoot Palms property for base expansion plans
Eastern Shipbuilding Group donated the scrap material and equipment needed for the reefs. And they stopped by the schools to meet with students.
'We get some face-to-face time with the students, which I think it makes a difference. You know, it really engages them. And they see industry partners, you know, real-life stuff happening outside of the school system. These industry partners coming inside the school and meeting, discussing, going over these plans and in their bill materials and, you know, face to face with students, I don't think they get that much,' Reeves said.
The artificial reefs will be going to a permitted zone, 15 to 28 miles offshore from Panama City. They will bring habitats to several local fish species.
'The habitat is what the fish like for this area, mainly it's what we call a bottom species, snapper or grouper. Amberjack, triggerfish, those species like some kind of structure to live around, either it being like natural structure, like limestone edges or coral reefs, or artificial structure that's manmade that people put out,' Bay County Artificial Reef Association Member B.J. Burkett said.
The reefs will sit on display in front of Captain Anderson's Marina for a 14 day inspection period that ends May 22. They are reviewed by the Army Corps of Engineers, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, and the U.S. Coast Guard.
After they are approved, they will be deployed by the Bay County Artificial Reef Association.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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‘Johnny Mnemonic' predicted our addictive digital future
‘Johnny Mnemonic' predicted our addictive digital future

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‘Johnny Mnemonic' predicted our addictive digital future

In the mid-1990s, Hollywood began trying to envision the internet (sometimes called the 'information superhighway') and its implications for life and culture. Some of its attempts have aged better than others. Perhaps the most thoughtful is the 1995 film Johnny Mnemonic, the screenplay for which was written by cyberpunk pioneer William Gibson, based on his 1981 short story. The film tells the story of Johnny (played by Keanu Reeves), whose vocation is couriering large amounts of data uploaded to a digital memory bank installed in his brain. As Johnny is asked to carry more and more data, his memory bank crowds out or burns away his own organic memories. Desperate to earn enough for a brain operation to restore them, he agrees to a final, dangerously large data haul that may cost him his life. Johnny Mnemonic brought Gibson's projections of our online future to millions who might never have encountered them in his books. 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This story is part of 1995 Week, where we'll revisit some of the most interesting, unexpected, and confounding developments in tech 30 years ago. This tension between digital and organic memory arguably began at the turn of the century, when Google established itself as the de facto directory of the information available online. Suddenly, we had access to a vast public store of shared knowledge, data, and content. Studies soon showed that people were forgoing committing information to (organic) memory because they knew it was readily available via Google. Researchers from Columbia, Harvard, and the University of Wisconsin discovered the 'Google Effect' in a 2011 study, which showed that people are far more likely to remember where data is stored than the actual data itself. Increasingly, the value of consumer tech products seems to be measured by their ability to addict—by how much of the user's time and brain space they can claim. Addiction hijacks the brain, reserving more and more time and attention for the object of desire. Every major technology wave in the last three decades has resulted in increased dependency on digital devices and content. Mobile phones proved remarkably addictive. A number of recent studies peg our daily use at between 3.5 and 4.5 hours per day. Pew Research found in early 2024 that 16- to 24-year-olds (tomorrow's adults) often spend more than six hours a day looking at their smartphones. Numerous studies have shown strong correlations between smartphone addiction and mental and physical health problems, including anxiety, depression, poor sleep, and academic struggles. Mobile phone makers have been forced to add features to help people moderate their screen time, but usage continues to rise. 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The app reached 2.05 billion users worldwide in 2024, with users averaging around an hour per day. A 2024 Pew Research report found that about 58% of U.S. teens use TikTok daily, including 17% who said they use it 'almost constantly.' These tech waves build on each other. Internet usage increased with mobile devices; mobile usage increased with the social web. Generative AI apps may prove even more addictive and intrusive. OpenAI's ChatGPT is the fastest-growing consumer app in history, amassing 100 million users just two months after launching in late November 2022, and 500 million weekly active users by March 2025. ChatGPT generates everything from computer code and companionship to custom images and video. Internet sites and social platforms no longer rely strictly on human-created content—they'll soon generate much of it using AI. This might be a personalized companion, a business coach, or even a version of a loved one who's gone, like the ghostly AI character who advises Johnny in the film. This is likely to further increase the share of our time spent in digital spaces. These technologies capture our brains by capturing our attention, but the tech industry is already developing devices that capture space in our physical bodies—just like Johnny's memory bank. Neuralink's brain–computer interface (BCI) is implanted in the brain and can translate brain activity to communicate with external tech devices. In the near future, we may choose to use such interfaces to augment our brains with specialized knowledge bases or connect 'memory prosthetics' that allow us to store, retrieve, or even offload memories digitally. Some in AI circles even believe the only way humans can stay relevant in the age of AI is by integrating AI models with their brains. Human–computer fusion is a major theme in Gibson's work. In Neuromancer (arguably Gibson's most revered book), the protagonist Case has a bodyguard/sidekick named Molly who has implanted cybernetic eyes that see in the dark, display data to her, and improve her spatial vision during fights. His characters often use 'dermal sockets' in the skull behind the ear to gain new skills (like operating weapons or vehicles). Case and Johnny use these neural interfaces to plug their brains and nervous systems into an alternative, digital world referred to as 'cyberspace' or 'the matrix.' The best-known description of this realm comes from Neuromancer: 'A consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators, in every nation . . . A graphic representation of data abstracted from the banks of every computer in the human system. Unthinkable complexity. Lines of light ranged in the nonspace of the mind, clusters and constellations of data. Like city lights, receding.' In the decades after Johnny Mnemonic, tech companies would invest heavily in developing virtual reality spaces for both consumers and businesses. Companies like Second Life, Microsoft, Magic Leap, Oculus Rift, and more recently Meta and Apple, have taken up the chase. But so far, the tech industry's attempts at creating entertaining, social, and functional digital spaces have failed to go mainstream. After Facebook sunk billions into building the 'metaverse'—even appropriating part of the term as its company name—mainstream consumers decided it wasn't the new digital 'town square' and not a place they wanted to spend their time. But that was mainly due to shortcomings in the hardware and software, not a cultural rejection (like with video phones or Google Glass). As extended reality (XR) hardware gets smaller, more powerful, and more comfortable, and digital experiences become more believable, XR could yet go mainstream. It could still become another wave of addictive technology that traps users in digital space. Gibson's presentation of technology in Johnny Mnemonic betrays an awareness of its addictive qualities. Johnny's last and biggest courier job looks like a drug deal. He meets a crew of Chinese underworld figures in a Beijing hotel room to pick up the data. The upload procedure itself, with its careful assortment of digital paraphernalia, smacks of an allegory to administering a dangerous drug like heroin. Because Johnny lacked enough space in his memory bank for the data, his post-upload reaction looks like an overdose. His body shakes. He grinds his teeth. He perspires heavily. After staggering to the bathroom, he's physically jolted by hallucinatory flashes of the data as it bursts through the limits of his memory bank and into his brain. Staring into the mirror, he discovers his nose is bleeding. Later, Johnny's love interest, Jane (Dina Meyer) is shown to suffer from a tech-related disease. She has a system of interconnected contact points on her inner forearm—like the track marks of a junkie. She suffers from a condition called NAS (nerve attenuation syndrome), or the 'black shakes,' a neurological disorder caused by overexposure to computers and other electronics. Asked for the cause of NAS, Henry Rollins's Spider character (an anti-corporate activist and underground cybernetic doctor) gestures around at all the electronic equipment in his lab and huffs: 'All this . . . technological civilization, but we still have all this shit 'cuz we can't live without it!' Later in the film, an associate named J-Bone (Ice-T) informs Johnny that the data he's carrying is actually the cure for NAS, complete with clinical trials data, and the property of a big pharma multinational. The company, Pharmakom Industries, had been hiding the cure from the public to continue selling drug treatments for the disease's symptoms. That too has a prophetic ring. In 2025, I already reserve a large part of my cognitive capacity for my online, digital life. Most of us do, and we're already shouldering a heavy cognitive load of digital information—and paying for it. We're more stressed, depressed, isolated, and lonely. As digital devices like Neuralink bring the digital world even closer to our brains, the side effects may become more visceral. By giving up part of his brain to someone else's data, Johnny gave up part of his memories. He gave up part of his identity—part of himself. At times, as data burst from the limits of his memory bank, pieces of it flashed in his mind like broken images and mingled with flashes of his own, real memories. One day, an AI implant may introduce a foreign intelligence into our brains that mixes with our organic, 'earned' knowledge and experience. Did Johnny ever wonder where the digital part of him ended and his real self began? Will we?

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Local students deploy artificial reefs after three month challenge
Local students deploy artificial reefs after three month challenge

Yahoo

time27-05-2025

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Local students deploy artificial reefs after three month challenge

BAY COUNTY, Fla. (WMBB) – On Thursday, local students saw all their hard work come to fruition. On May 8, a program sponsored by the Bay County Artificial Reef Association, the University of Florida IFAS Extension, Eastern Shipbuilding Group and some local schools with welding programs. Students at Wewahitchka and Port St. Joe high schools, Haney Technical College and Chipola College participated in the second annual Eastern Shipbuilding Group Coastline Initiative. It's a one-of-a-kind competition that challenges students from local schools to design and build innovative artificial reefs. Eastern Shipbuilding Group challenges students to build artificial reefs Eastern Shipbuilding Group donated the scrap material and equipment, and helped approve the plans for the three month reef project. On Thursday, the Bay County Artificial Reef Association took the four reefs out to a permitted zone, about 15 to 28 miles offshore from Panama City. They were carefully lowered to the bottom of the gulf, between 100-140 feet deep. They'll become habitats for snapper, grouper, amberjack, trigger fish and many other marine life species. Getting the reefs to the bottom took some skill and coordination among the crew members. There are a lot of guidelines they had to follow. The reefs had to be out of a certain material and the crew could not leave any ropes or debris on them. 'Dang, it broke easy, didn't it. We tried to right the reef and as you can see, all our twine come back with what we were doing. So, zero line is left on the reef,' Bay County Artificial Reef Association B.J. Burkett said. Anyone who wants to dive or fish off the reefs will have to wait, as the Bay County Artificial Reef Association wants to make sure they have time to establish marine life. They'll post the coordinates publicly in about a year. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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