generated is better than vendor in this case
[gofetch.git] / test / expected / SLASHDOT / 0102640424.header.html
CommitLineData
299a08f3
NR
1<!DOCTYPE html>
2<html>
3<head>
4 <meta http-equiv='content-type' content='text/html; charset=utf-8'>
5 <meta name='viewport' content='width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0'>
6 <style type='text/css'>
7 body { margin: 1em 15%; }
8 </style>
9</head>
10<body>
11<div class='story-header'>
c715ea02 12 <h2><a href='0102640424.html'>MIT Graduate Creates Robot That Swims Through Pipes To Find Out If They're Leaking (fastcompany.com)</a></h2>
299a08f3
NR
13 <div class='details'>(Thursday September 06, 2018 @11:30PM (BeauHD)
14from the leak-detecting dept.)</div>
15 <br/>
16 <div class='content' style='text-align: justify'>
e818d449 17 A 28-year-old MIT graduate named You Wu spent six years [1]developing a low-cost robot designed to find leaks in pipes early , both to save water and to avoid bigger damage later from bursting water mains. &quot;Called Lighthouse, the robot looks like a badminton birdie,&quot; reports Fast Company. &quot;A soft &#x27;skirt&#x27; on the device is covered with sensors. As it travels through pipes, propelled by the flowing water, suction tugs at the device when there&#x27;s a leak, and it records the location, making a map of critical leaks to fix.&quot; From the report:<br/><br/>&gt; MIT doctoral student You Wu spent six years developing the design, building on research that earlier students began under a project sponsored by a university in Saudi Arabia, where most drinking water comes from expensive desalination plants and around a third of it is lost to leaks. It took three years before he had a working prototype. Then Wu got inspiration from an unexpected source: At a party with his partner, he accidentally stepped on her dress. She noticed immediately, unsurprisingly, and Wu realized that he could use a similar skirt-like design on a robot so that the robot could detect subtle tugs from the suction at each leak. Wu graduated from MIT in June, and is now launching the technology through a startup called [2]WatchTower Robotics . The company will soon begin pilots in Australia and in Cambridge, Massachusetts. One challenge now, he says, is creating a guide so water companies can use the device on their own.<br/><br/><br/><br/>[1] https://www.fastcompany.com/90232363/this-leak-seeking-robot-just-won-the-u-s-james-dyson-award<br/><br/>[2] http://watchtowerrobotics.com/
299a08f3
NR
18 </div>
19<hr/>
20</div>
21</body>