I'm taking a position as senior fellow
for environmental understanding at Pace University, situated in the school's young Academy for Applied Environmental Studies.
SEJ member, reporter and author Andrew Revkin is the senior fellow for
environmental understanding at Pace University's Academy for Applied Environmental Studies and writes the award - winning Dot Earth blog for the Op - Ed side of The New York Times.
Developers will now be able to publish AR apps to the Play Store, and Google is encouraging creators to get the ball rolling with new features such as
improved environmental understanding when a user places virtual assets on textured surfaces like posters, furniture, toy boxes, books, cans, etc..
But we're in total sync on most points, particularly in the value of focusing less on the «woe is me, shame on you» approach to pursuing environmental progress and more on
building environmental understanding, engagement and the capacity to make a difference.
Andrew Revkin, the Senior Fellow for
Environmental Understanding at Pace University, has been writing about environmental and social sustainability for more than three decades, from the Amazon to the White House to the North Pole, mainly for The New York Times.
Outdoor activities are often used during residentials as vehicles for the development of personal, social and
environmental understanding.
Disclosure note In my role as Pace University's Senior Fellow for
Environmental Understanding, I was a participant in last year's related Vatican meeting, «Sustainable Humanity, Sustainable Nature: Our Responsibility.»
Hey, this is one reason I left daily journalism to join Pace University as senior fellow for
environmental understanding (I proposed the name).
I discuss humanity's «capacity to surprise ourselves in positive ways,» which so far has gotten us out of a variety of jams; the ideological blog wars; the intended meaning of my Pace University title, «senior fellow for
environmental understanding»; how a scallop's underwater dance inspired me to dive into science; and much more.
The course, created by Professor Maria Luskay some 15 years ago, has made films about efforts to conserve natural resources since 2011, when she was joined by the veteran New York Times journalist Andrew Revkin, the Pace Academy Senior Fellow for
Environmental Understanding.
He's also a senior fellow for and
environmental understanding at Pace University.
We also have from the studios of NPR, New York, Andrew Revkin, who writes the Dot Earth blog for The New York Times and he's a senior fellow for
Environmental Understanding at Pace University.
He writes the Dot Earth blog for The New York Times, and he is a senior fellow for
Environmental Understanding at Pace University.
He's also senior fellow for
environmental understanding at Pace University.
Since 2010, he has been the Senior Fellow for
Environmental Understanding at Pace University, where he teaches courses on blogging, environmental - science communication and documentary video with a focus on sustainable development.
He is also the Senior Fellow for
Environmental Understanding at Pace University's Pace Academy for Applied Environmental Studies.
Production for the 15 - minute film, «Linda Thornton: Seeking Sustainability One Shrimp At A Time», was aided by NY Times climate writer Andrew Revkin, who's also the Senior Fellow for
Environmental Understanding at the Pace Academy for Applied Environmental Studies.
Google said that it improved ARCore's
environmental understanding, which makes placing virtual assets easier and more reliable than in previous builds.
ARCore is focusing on three areas in its efforts to bring augmented reality to Android phones: motion tracking,
environmental understanding, and light estimation.
According to Google, ARCore focuses on three things: motion tracking,
environmental understanding, and light estimation.
The platform focuses on three things: motion tracking,
environmental understanding, and light estimation, and drops the requirement of specialized hardware.
ARCore concentrates on three things: motion tracking,
environmental understanding and light estimation.
ARCore 1.0 also now features improved
environmental understanding.
Through improved
environmental understanding, ARCore apps will have the ability to place graphics onto textured surfaces.
The second is
environmental understanding, which uses the camera to detect flat surfaces.
ARCore has three elements: motion tracking, which figures out a phone's location based on internal sensors and video, allowing you to pin objects and walk around them;
environmental understanding, which uses a phone's camera to detect flat surfaces; and light estimation, which helps virtual objects in an AR experience have accurate shadows, and thus, fit in with their real - life surroundings.