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2:10
What’s wrong with Indonesia’s contact tracing?
1:43
Blastoff: Billionaires compete in space tourism
1:14
US and French astronauts make ISS spacewalk
6:54
Bumpy road to Indonesia’s ‘Silicon Valley’
00:30
Amman Introduces a New Corporate Identity [Ad]
Why are we seeing fewer Indonesian LGBT films?
2:35
Tokyo residents support 'unavoidable' ban on oversea fans
1:27
‘Like the end of the world’: Beijing faces worst sandstorm in decade
2:20
Artists turn to Times Square ahead of Broadway’s comeback in April
3:00
Japan's children of the tsunami shaped by tragedy
The Interceptor has been developed by Dutch entrepreneur Boyan Slat through his nonprofit organization The Ocean Cleanup. The 13-meter-long and 7-m-wide Interceptor is stationed near the mouth of Cengkareng drainage canal to receive drifting debris and waste channeled through 50-m barriers on one riverbank into the device. Powered by solar panels, it can lift the collected waste on a conveyor belt and then dump it into one of six dumpsters with a total capacity of 50 cubic meters. (JP/Donny Fernando)
(JP/A. Muh. Ibnu Aqil)