That’s why a 10,000-ton electric megaship has just debuted

When we talk about megaprojects, we know very well that Chinese companies are very committed to surprising us in terms of dimensions and capabilities. In this case the protagonist is the Ning Yuan Dian Kuna 10,000-ton all-electric container ship that the shipyard presents as the largest vessel of its type in the world. The ship set sail on February 1 from Jiangxi province and has been conducting trials in waters near Shanghai until a few days ago. Below these lines we tell you what is special about it. An electrical giant in figures. The ship measures 127.8 meters in length, 21.6 meters in width and 10.5 meters in depth. It has the capacity to transport 740 TEU containers (units about six meters long) and can reach a maximum speed of 11.5 knots. According to details Marine Insight, the project has been built by Jiangxi Jiangxin Shipbuilding and is designed to operate with zero emissions both during navigation and during loading maneuvers in port. The technology that drives it. The propulsion system is based on ten battery containers with a total capacity of up to 19,000 kWh, which power two permanent magnet motors of 875 kW each. From The Maritime Executive they explain that the batteries can be recharged through high-voltage connections on shore or quickly exchanged for already charged units, a cutting-edge replacement system that reduces waiting times in port. In addition, the ship incorporates photovoltaic panels to generate additional energy during its operations. Autonomous navigation on board. According to the media, the Ning Yuan Dian Kun integrates autonomous navigation systems that allow route planning, automatic collision avoidance, and unmanned operation in open waters. From Electrive share that the ship has “real-time monitoring of the environment, visual perception in any weather condition and unmanned operation functions.” These systems allow the boat to alternate between different navigation modes according to needs. What’s special about it. China seeks to establish a replicable model for zero-carbon short sea shipping. The Ning Yuan Dian Kun project was included in the national list of Advanced Green and Low Carbon Technology Demonstration Projects in 2025, with the aim of developing a scalable solution for coastal transportation. This is not the first attempt in China, since in 2024, the country had already launched the Greenwater 01 on the Yangtze River, a 120-meter-long electric container ship with batteries of up to 80,000 kWh. Between the lines. The tests have been used to evaluate the performance of the propulsion system in different conditions, the real autonomy of the batteries and the reliability of the autonomous systems. If the trials are a success, everything indicates that the ship will enter commercial service for the company, Ningbo Ocean Shipping Co., covering feeding routes linked to the port of Ningbo-Zhoushan, one of the busiest in the world. On the other hand, it should be noted that there is already a second confirmed sister ship, the Ning Yuan Dian Peng, and that it will follow in the footsteps of this first one. Decarbonization underway. If it ends up being demonstrated with this type of projects that electrification is viable on a commercial scale in maritime cargo transport, that the model ends up working economically and can be replicated on other routes, could mark a turning point in an industry responsible for around 2% of global CO₂ emissions, according to data from Statista. Maritime transport has historically been one of the most difficult sectors to decarbonize, so it could end up being an important step towards this goal. Images | PeopleDaily In Xataka | Africa has more than 30,000 kilometers of coastline and one country has managed to control them without anyone noticing: China

One night in 2000, Jennifer Lopez debuted a historic dress. And then Google changed the internet forever

If you have a moment, go to Google and type something like “Jennifer Lopez 2000 Grammy dress.” Leave that new AI Mode section aside and tap on the ‘Images’ tab to find a green Versace dress with a jungle print that caused a real sensation in both the fashion media and the world of technology. In fact, that dress marked a before and after on the internet. Because before February 23, 2000, when we wanted to see what clothes the current star had worn to an event (to give an example), we had to wait for the news to appear on TV, browse through magazines or go to the Internet to Google it. And there you didn’t find the photo, but instead you had to wade through a sea of ​​blue text links to search through. There was no Google Images. We’re not even talking about videos. Before JLo’s Grammys dress, this was all field text Why it is important. Google’s decision to organize information based on images and not only on text not only changed the world of fashion as the work of a European brand went from being seen on the catwalks and little else, to reaching the entire world. It also modified our way of accessing information, laying the foundations for an Internet (and later, social networks) focused more on audiovisuals than on pure and simple text. These were the dawn of the internet of content. What started in July 2021 with an index of 250 million images, went to one billion images in 2005 and by 2010, exceeded 10 billion. Later, Google stopped offering that figure to focus on quality over quality. Paradoxically, in 2025 it is following the opposite path, massively deindexing images by considering them low quality or generated by AI. The context. In the year 2000, the Google search engine was not what it is now: the undisputed leader with almost 90% share. And the “almost” thing is something about the post-internet – ChatGPT had been overcoming that barrier for more than a decade. In fact, with just a couple of years of life, he was beginning his rise at a time when there was no hegemony as he managed to impose later, with others like Yahoo! and Altavista with greater weight. And then she arrived on the red carpet at the 42nd Grammy Awards, nominated that year for Best Dance Recording for “Waiting for Tonight.” Jennifer Lopez wore a semi-transparent green dress with a dizzying V-neckline that fell to her navel. If you already existed at that time and were old enough to watch TV, you surely saw it because because her dress was viraleven before that concept was used for matters other than biology. Seeing it once wasn’t enough, so people went online to look for it en masse. “People wanted more than text (…). At the time, it was the most popular search we had ever seen” counted Eric Schmidt for Project Syndicate. The former Google CEO explained that at the time “we didn’t have a sure way to get users exactly what they wanted: J.Lo wearing that dress.” Between the lines. That’s when started to cook Google Search Image. According to Cathy Edwards, director of engineering and product at Google Images, it wasn’t something that happened overnight, but JLo lit the fuse. There were few employees, but like Edwards explained In 2020, it was clear to everyone that they needed to build a photocentric search engine. The question was knowing what priority to give it. That same summer, Google hired a newly graduated engineer, Huican Zhu, and put him to work with Huican Zhu, who was the executive director of YouTube and who at that time was responsible for product. The two stood hand in hand and, According to Edwardsthey practically developed it alone to launch Google Search Images in July 2021. In Xataka | People are so fed up with the current Internet that they are returning to MySpace. Not out of nostalgia, but out of rebellion In Xataka | All the times that throughout the 20th century we imagined ourselves on the Internet

The director of ‘The substance’ debuted 30 years ago with a homemade tribute to Star Wars that you can now see for free

It is one of the most surprising films of the year: ‘The substance‘(What can you see In Filmin and Movistar Plus+) It is a history of neocárnico horror that satirizes the obsession of society to supervise the body of women. With absolutely star Demi Moore and Margaret Qualley and a display of absolutely demential effects, the film It is also a tribute to many forms and styles of horror cinemafrom the toxic avenger films to ‘Videodome’. That is, its director Coraline Fargeat is a devouring of all kinds of films. In fact, he already demonstrated it three decades ago and with only 17 years. Herself Account to Letterboxd I “did A small Star Wars movie. Using my family’s camcorder, I encouraged my toys in Stop Motion, I dressed my friends from Ewoks and Stormtroopers, and edited it in a VHS video (which was the fashionable device at that time!) “. The rudimentary images and the zero budget are apologized by Fargeat himself: “It was a fond thing, but Everything I liked to make movies was already there… It was the place where I felt free, passionate and alive, and capable of expressing myself fully. It was after making this little movie when I knew I wanted to be a director … today that I am nominated for best director, I can’t help remembering this little movie … Follow your dreams. “ The truth is that the result is absolutely adorable, and the shameless campaign at ease: infrahuman costumes, direct ripeo of plans and complete dialogues of the original film, sectional script twists … and of course, an absolute devotion for the act to create stories, even if they are second -hand. To do this, Fargeat puts the hands of the licensed toys that he had on hand and the soundtrack of John Williams, of course used without permission, as well as the portal of a building, shot as if they were the interiors of an imperial base. And, of course, a final Ewok party that lengthens more than reasonable. Now that Fargeat is a prestigious director and Oscar nominated What would she do if a new installment of ‘Star Wars’ fell into their handsa possibility not as far from reality as a few years ago. Surely we would see much more canteen, much more alien with tentacles and confrontations with infinitely more visceral imperial assault troops. It seems impossible for Disney to put a family franchise as ‘Star Wars’ in the hands of such a radical director, but for that Oscar win, right? Header | Letterboxd In Xataka | ‘Star Wars’: Where and what order to watch all the films of the saga

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