Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Canadian Smartphone App Makes Solar Panels More Effective

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Jul, 2016 12:18 PM
    A young researcher in Canada has created a smartphone app that helps find out when the solar panels are facing the most effective direction -- making them up to 40 per cent more effective.
     
    Bruce Gao, 22, created the software when he was attending Canada’s Shad programme for exceptional high school students, The Star reported on Tuesday.
     
    The idea to create the app came to him after he visited an orphanage in China where he saw children huddled together in beds to share body heat. 
     
    It was monsoon and the solar panels meant to provide electricity weren’t installed to their full capacity that rendered heating system in the building ineffective.
     
    Once Gao made up his mind to do something about that, he researched how solar panels should be positioned to soak up the most energy.
     
    The app SimplySola, which he developed along with a high-school classmate, works using a combination of GPS and the built-in compass in smartphones. 
     
    Users place their phones on top of the solar panels, and the app shows them when the panels are facing the most effective direction.
     
    Pointing solar panels in the right direction can make them up to 40 per cent more effective, Gao said. The innovation is now being used in 130 countries.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Buying Second-Hand: Used Smartphone Is The New Cool

    Buying Second-Hand: Used Smartphone Is The New Cool
    Market research firm Gartner recently released a report projecting the used smartphone market to roughly double to 120 million units, or a wholesale value of $14 billion by 2017, CNET reported.

    Buying Second-Hand: Used Smartphone Is The New Cool

    Emojis Get Different Skin Colour Options In The Latest Version Of Apple's Operating System

    Emojis Get Different Skin Colour Options In The Latest Version Of Apple's Operating System
    NEW YORK — Lovers of emojis, the cute graphics that punctuate online writing and texts, will soon be able to pick from different skin tones on Apple devices.

    Emojis Get Different Skin Colour Options In The Latest Version Of Apple's Operating System

    YouTube's New Mobile App To Help Parents Control What Their Kids Watch Online

    YouTube's New Mobile App To Help Parents Control What Their Kids Watch Online
    SAN FRANCISCO — YouTube is going to release a mobile app that will only show video clips suitable for young children to help parents control what their kids are watching on the Internet.

    YouTube's New Mobile App To Help Parents Control What Their Kids Watch Online

    Nearly 1 In 10 Anglophone Canadians No Longer Watch Any TV, Just Web Video

    Nearly 1 In 10 Anglophone Canadians No Longer Watch Any TV, Just Web Video
    Nearly one in 10 anglophone Canadians say they no longer watch any TV shows the old-fashioned way and only stream or download content online, according to a new study.

    Nearly 1 In 10 Anglophone Canadians No Longer Watch Any TV, Just Web Video

    Nomophobic? Calgary Company Hopes App Will Become New Weapon Against Distracted Driving

    Nomophobic? Calgary Company Hopes App Will Become New Weapon Against Distracted Driving
    CALGARY — An Alberta company hopes a new smartphone app will help so-called nomophobia sufferers who can't put their devices down while behind the wheel.

    Nomophobic? Calgary Company Hopes App Will Become New Weapon Against Distracted Driving

    Allowing For Disturbing Online Behaviour Can Be A Good Thing, Says Expert

    Allowing For Disturbing Online Behaviour Can Be A Good Thing, Says Expert
    Keeping troubling online behaviour open to public scrutiny provides a valuable tool for staging an effective intervention, said the University of Waterloo professor in an interview on Monday.

    Allowing For Disturbing Online Behaviour Can Be A Good Thing, Says Expert