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Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Scaling up a cleaner-burning alternative for cookstoves

For millions of people globally, cooking in their own homes can be detrimental to their health, and sometimes deadly. The World Health Organization estimates that 3.8 million people a year die as a result of the soot and smoke generated in traditional wood-burning cookstoves. Women and children in particular are at risk of pneumonia, stroke, lung cancer, or low birth weight. 

“All their life they’re exposed to this smoke,” says Betty Ikalany, founder and chief executive director of Appropriate Energy Saving Technologies (AEST). “Ten thousand women die annually in Uganda because of inhaling smoke from cookstoves.”

Ikalany is working to eliminate the health risks associated with cookstoves in Uganda. In 2012 she met Amy Smith, founding director of MIT D-Lab, who introduced her to D-Lab’s method of manufacturing briquettes that produce no soot and very little smoke. Ikalany saw an opportunity to use this technology in Uganda, and founded AEST that same year. She started assembling a team to produce and distribute the briquettes.

Made of charcoal dust, carbonized agricultural waste such as peanut shells and corn husks, and a cassava-water porridge, which acts as a binding agent, the briquettes are wet initially. To be usable in a cookstove, they must be completely dried. Ikalany’s team dries the briquettes on open-air racks.

In ideal sunny conditions, it takes three days for the briquettes to dry. Inclement weather or humidity can substantially slow down the evaporation needed to dry the briquettes. When it rains, the briquettes are covered with tarps, completely halting the drying process.

“The drying of the briquettes is the bottleneck of the whole process,” says Danielle Gleason, a senior studying mechanical engineering. “In order to scale up production and keep growing as a business, Betty and her team realized that they needed to improve the drying process.”

Gleason was one of several students who were connected to Ikalany through MIT D-Lab courses. While taking the cross-listed MIT D-Lab class 2.651/EC.711 (Introduction to Energy in Global Development) as a sophomore, she worked on a project that sought to optimize the drying process in charcoal briquettes. That summer, she traveled to Uganda to meet with Ikalany’s team along with Daniel Sweeney, a research scientist at MIT D-Lab.

“Drawing upon their strong theoretical foundation and experiences in the lab and the classroom, we want our students to go out into the field and make real things that have a lasting impact,” explains Maria Yang, professor of mechanical engineering and faculty academic director at MIT D-Lab.

During her first trip to Uganda, Gleason focused on information gathering and identifying where there were pain points in the production process of the briquettes.

“I went to Uganda not to present an incredibly complex solution, but simply to learn from our community partners, to share some ideas our team has been working on, and to work directly with those who will be impacted by our designs,” adds Gleason.

Armed with a better understanding of AEST’s production process, Gleason continued to develop ideas for improving the drying process when she returned to MIT last fall. In MIT D-Lab 2.652/EC.712 (Applications of Energy in Global Development), she worked with a team of students on various designs for a new drying system.

“We spent a whole semester figuring out how to improve this airflow and naturally convect the air,” Gleason explains. With sponges acting as stand-ins for the charcoal briquettes, Gleason and her team used heat lamps to replicate the heat and humidity in Uganda. They developed three different designs for tent-like structures that could facilitate drying at all times — even when raining. At the end of the semester, it was time to put these designs to the test.

“You can prototype and test all you want, but until you visit the field and experience the real-world conditions and work with the people who will be using your designs, you never fully understand the problem,” adds Gleason.

Last January, during MIT’s Independent Activity Period, Gleason returned to Uganda to test designs. She and her team found out that their original idea of having a slanted dryer didn’t work in real-world conditions. Outside of the controlled conditions in the lab, their dryers didn’t have enough air flow to speed up the drying process.

They spent several weeks troubleshooting dryer designs with Ikalany and her team. The team ended up designing covered dryers that allowed the briquettes to dry in both sun and rain, increasing the overall throughput.

“We believe that once we are able to scale up what we have learned from Danielle and her team we should be able to produce five times more a day,” says Ikalany. “Our production capacity will increase and the demand for customers will be met.”

In addition to helping Ikalany scale up the production of the potentially life-saving briquettes, Gleason and her fellow students left Uganda with a broadened world view.

“For most students, this is the first time they will visit these countries,” adds Yang. “Not only do we want to benefit our collaborators, we want our students to gain formative and enriching experiences.”

Gleason left Uganda with a deeper appreciation of community. “Seeing how close the community Betty and her team are a part of really made me value the idea of community more,” she recalls.

While other students will pick up where Gleason and her team left off in their work with Ikalany in the coming months, Gleason hopes to continue working on solutions in the developing world as she explores future career paths. “I really love looking at how people interact with the things they use, and I think there’s so much room for growth in user-interfacing in the developing world,” she says.



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Kenneth Stephens: From False Imprisonment To Partnering In A Law Firm

BE Modern Man: Kenneth Stephens

Attorney, commercial litigator; 32; Partner, Stephens, Reed & Armstrong

Twitter: @kenstephensesq; Instagram: @kennethstephens

I formerly managed a law firm that focuses primarily on advising construction companies and litigating their disputes. In May of 2019, my firm merged with another well-known firm to create a new law firm, Stephens, Reed, & Armstrong. We are a wholly minority-owned law firm with two offices servicing clients throughout Texas. All three named partners are members of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. and have strong commercial litigation experience.

By building a practice in the area of construction law, I’ve been able to inspire other minorities to consider starting practices in areas of law where minorities are typically underrepresented. I’ve also been able to hire multiple associates from Texas Southern University’s Thurgood Marshall School of Law, the Houston HBCU that I attended for my undergraduate and law school education.

In addition to practicing law, I’ve decided to launch a YouTube channel called #GrindLife where I share my knowledge of entrepreneurship with others. The platform allows me to reach back and help other people who are trying to start a business without formal business education or experience.

WHAT ARE YOU MOST PROUD OF IN LIFE?

I am most proud of keeping my promise to God and becoming a lawyer. In 2009, I was weeks away from graduating from college with honors and receiving a bachelor’s degree in business management, when I was falsely accused of a crime, arrested, and sent to jail. While I was in jail, I prayed about the situation and promised God that if my case was dismissed, I would take it as a sign that I am supposed to practice law. After my case was dismissed, I kept my promise and after passing the bar exam, I had the judge that presided over my case swear me into the profession.

HOW HAVE YOU TURNED STRUGGLE INTO SUCCESS?

When I was in law school, I applied to hundreds of law firms. I traveled around the country interviewing, often times at my own expense. Many of these firms were large corporate law firms and I was betting on getting hired by one of them so that I could quickly pay off my student loans before starting my own law firm. Unfortunately, I received hundreds of rejection letters and no offer.

I graduated from law school and was a young, naïve, newly minted lawyer. I worked for a small law firm with a base salary of $1,800.00 per month. After months of not knowing how I was going to pay rent or buy groceries, I decided to start my own law firm. All I had was a laptop and hope.

I struggled initially to get clients and scraped up contract work from other attorneys. Out of necessity, I discovered the power of social media marketing and this helped my practice take off. Fast forward to today and many of those firms have reached out to me directly or indirectly about positions at their firms.

WHO WAS YOUR GREATEST MALE ROLE MODEL AND WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM HIM?

My father, Kenneth Stephens Sr. is my biggest male role model. The three things he instilled in me are faith, family, and the power of education. I watched how he leveraged his military career into a Ph.D. two masters degrees and a means take care of his family. I also saw how he did whatever was necessary to make sure that his family was taken care of. Sometimes this meant checking his ego and taking jobs that were well beneath his experience and pay level. However, in the end, watching him persevere and get to the position he is in now was very inspiring.

WHAT’S THE BEST ADVICE YOU’VE EVER RECEIVED?

Check your ego. I used to have a huge ego problem. I was easily offended and if I felt slighted, I wouldn’t let it go. I also thought very highly of myself and it likely caused me to miss opportunities. Since learning to check my ego, I’ve been able to develop more meaningful relationships and have seen upticks in business.

HOW DO YOU DEFINE MANHOOD?

I define manhood as recognizing the responsibilities you have to God, family, and your community, embracing those responsibilities, and doing all that you can to make sure that you are handling them.

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT BEING A BLACK MAN?

Our resilience. Black men in this country catch hell. Whether it be the looming fear of being stopped by the cops for no reason or going out of the way to be “non-threatening” to make others comfortable, we endure a lot.

However, despite these types of constant pressures and limited resources, we thrive. We climb corporate ladders as high as the ceilings will allow us to go and when we get tired of the glass ceiling, we go and design our own where the sky is the limit.


BE Modern Man is an online and social media campaign designed to celebrate black men making valuable contributions in every profession, industry, community, and area of endeavor. Each year, we solicit nominations in order to select men of color for inclusion in the 100 Black Enterprise Modern Men of Distinction. Our goal is to recognize men who epitomize the BEMM credo “Extraordinary is our normal” in their day-to-day lives, presenting authentic examples of the typical black man rarely seen in mainstream media. The BE Modern Men of Distinction are celebrated annually at Black Men XCEL (www.blackenterprise.com/blackmenxcel/). Click this link to submit a nomination for BE Modern Man: https://www.blackenterprise.com/nominate/. Follow BE Modern Man on Twitter: @bemodernman and Instagram: @be_modernman.

 



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Body of missing Alabama girl, Kamille ‘Cupcake’ McKinney, found; 2 being charged

By JAY REEVES Associated Press
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — Investigators searching through garbage found the body of a 3-year-old girl who was missing more than a week, and authorities are charging two people with murder, police said Tuesday.

Birmingham Police Chief Patrick Smith told a news conference that the remains of Kamille McKinney were located in a trash bin that had been taken to a landfill. Police had been watching garbage deposits from a certain part of the city, he said.

Smith said police were obtaining murder warrants against two people previously identified as persons of interest in the case, 39-year-old Patrick Devone Stallworth and his 29-year-old girlfriend, Derick Irisha Brown.

Lawyers for both have said they are innocent.

The child, known as “Cupcake” to relatives, vanished while outside a birthday party on Oct. 12. Investigators know of no link between the suspects and the girl or her family, Smith said.

“We believe this was something they thought about and acted upon. They saw an opportunity to take a young child, and they did,” said Smith, who did not reveal a potential motive.

Stallworth, arrested after officers located a vehicle seen near the abduction site, previously was charged with child pornography, but authorities said the charge wasn’t related to the missing child.

It wasn’t clear how long the child might have been dead. Mayor Randall Woodfin said the girl’s parents were experiencing “unimaginable” pain.

“This is a tough moment for our city, a tough moment for the family,” he said.
Gov. Kay Ivey, in a statement Tuesday night, offered her condolences to Kamille’s family.
“The heart of our state is broken…,” Ivey said. “Our prayers remain with Kamille’s family and all who have been touched by this nightmare.”

The post Body of missing Alabama girl, Kamille ‘Cupcake’ McKinney, found; 2 being charged appeared first on theGrio.



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Black transgender woman, Brianna Hill, shot to death in Kansas City

This week a Black transgender woman was found shot to death in Kansas City, making her the 21st nationwide this year.

According to local station KCTV5 News, Monday, Brianna “BB” Hill, was allegedly murdered by an unidentified man who currently in police now in custody.

READ MORE: Melina Matsoukas, Lena Waithe honor Atatiana Jefferson at awards ceremony

Hill, who goes by the nickname Be’Be was pronounced dead when police arrived at the scene shortly after the shooting. Kansas City police Capt. Tim Hernandez says the alleged shooter was still at the scene when officers arrived. As a result, police are not looking for any more suspects.

“That’s part of my family because we are out here, we are trying to survive and people take action against us, nationwide,” said George Cherry, a neighbor of Hill’s, who says her death hit close to home for him as a gay man.

“They are human beings. Quit the violence,” he continued. “This shouldn’t be happening to the LGBTQ community. It hurts our families and our community,”

READ MORE: Naomie Harris reveals that she too was groped by an A-List actor

READ MORE: Transgender inmate who says she suffered abuse freed; vows to fight for others

The Human Rights Campaign reports Hill is the 21st known transgender or gender non-conforming person killed this year in the United States, and of that 21 she is the 19th Black transgender woman to be killed, and the third killed in Kansas City, specifically.

The Human Rights Campaign also estimates murders of trans people reached a high in 2017, and in 2018 approximately at least 26 trans people were killed, the vast majority of them being trans women of color.

The post Black transgender woman, Brianna Hill, shot to death in Kansas City appeared first on theGrio.



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Russia Africa summit: What's behind Moscow's push into the continent?

Will Russia's renewed interest in Africa make it a key player in the region?

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Sharm el-Sheikh: UK to resume flights after safety ban

Four years after the bombing of a Russian plane, the UK says airport security at the resort is safe.

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Google Pixel 4 and Pixel 4 XL Review: Almost the Best

For once, Google’s latest phone falls short. Its predecessor is just as good ... and cheaper

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Drugstores Are in the Sweet Spot for Drone Deliveries

UPS has a deal with CVS, and Google sibling Wing is making deliveries for Walgreens in Virginia.

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Neil Young’s Adventures on the Hi-Res Frontier

The artist is intent on bringing real quality to streaming audio, whether you want it or not.

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Tech Marketing Is Losing Its Cool

When the cracks in the facade begin to show, just keep calm and consider supply and demand.

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In Praise of Ugly and Conspicuous Security Cameras

Surveillance works best when the bad guys can see they're being watched. So why design smart-home security cameras to blend in so beautifully?

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Who Are the Most Successful Entrepreneurs? The Middle-Aged

Sure, youth and innocence are great. But what if experience is even greater? We might get more innovation if we let the elders take the lead.

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You Know What They Say: ‘Great Wi-Fi, Grateful Family’

These multitalented routers ensure that your home Wi-Fi isn't just stable and fast but also secure.

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Six-Word Sci-Fi: Predict a Scandal at the 2040 Summer Olympics

Each month we publish a six-word story—and it could be written by you. 

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NASA's Biggest Telescope Ever Prepares for a 2021 Launch

Once the $10 billion Webb Telescope is blasted into orbit, it will seek out water on Earth-like planets, stars being born, and more elusive interstellar quarry.

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Keep Track of Your Kids Without Giving Them a Smartphone

Small children (and sometimes bigger ones) can be as slippery as salmon. Keep an eye on them with a kid-friendly GPS tracker.

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In Hong Kong, Which Side Is Technology On?

Both. Yes, authoritarians have co-opted tech. But the story is far from over.

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Angry Nerd: Enough With Technology That ‘Democratizes’ Things\!

Democracy is a kumbaya potluck where the whole class is invited. Silicon Valley's democratization, meanwhile, caters to infinite constituencies of one.

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It's Time to Get a Password Manager: Bitwarden, 1Password, Dashlane, LastPass

Your brain has better things to do than store secure passwords. Get a dedicated password manager to keep your login data synced and secure across all devices.

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Take Control of Your Data With Helm's Personal Server

Don't trust the tech giants to safeguard all your information? We don't blame you. Here's a solid option for doing it yourself.

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