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Outside In
Topic: Science 4:33 pm EST, Nov  8, 2007

This is a sphere turning inside out.

Math is fun!

Outside In


World's First Nanoradio Could Lead to Subcellular Remote-Control Interfaces
Topic: Technology 5:49 pm EST, Nov  5, 2007

Less than two weeks after a team of scientists created a nanoscale radio component, scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have gone one better -- announcing the creation of the world's first complete nanoradio.

The breakthrough nanoradio consists of a single carbon-nanotube molecule that serves simultaneously as all the essential components of a radio -- antenna, tunable band-pass filter, amplifier and demodulator. Physicist Alex Zettl led the development team, and graduate student Kenneth Jensen built the radio.

"I'm totally amazed that it works so well," says Zettl. "Making individual components are good breakthroughs, but the holy grail was putting it all together. So we're ecstatic that we were able to achieve that full integration."

The radio opens the possibility of creating radio-controlled interfaces on the subcellular scale, which may have applications in the areas of medical and sensor technology.

Nanoelectronic systems are considered crucial to the continued miniaturization of electronic devices, and it's becoming a hot research and investment arena. Two weeks ago, a team at the University of California at Irvine announced the development of a nanoscale demodulator, an essential component of a radio.

The number of consumer products using nanotechnology -- from the iPhone to home pregnancy testing kits -- has soared from 212 to well over 500, according to the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies' online inventory of manufacturer-identified nanotech goods in March 2006.

The nanoradio is less than one micron long and only 10 nanometers wide -- or one ten-thousandth the width of a human hair -- making it the smallest radio ever created.

The researchers' paper was published at the American Chemical Society's Nano Letters website.

The first transmission received by the nanoradio was an FM broadcast of Eric Clapton's "Layla." (The lab has posted video of that moment.) The Clapton classic was quickly followed by the Beach Boys' "Good Vibrations" and Handel's Largo from the opera Xerxes -- the first piece of music broadcast by radio, on Dec. 24, 1906.

The nanoradio's amplifier operates on the same principles as vacuum-tube radios from the 1940s and early '50s, says Zettl.

"We've come full circle. We're using the old vacuum-tube principle of having electrons jump off the tip of the nanotube onto another electrode, rather than the conventional solid-state transistor principle," says Zettl.

The electronic properties of this electron-emitting nanotube function as the radio's demodulator -- making a complete radio possible within a single molecule.

The audio quality "can be very good," says Zettl, but if you listen closely, some unique effects of the radio's tiny size can be heard: an old-fashioned "scratchiness" that occurs because the device is working in the quantum regime.

"The amazing thing is that since we have such a sensitive nanosc... [ Read More (0.2k in body) ]

World's First Nanoradio Could Lead to Subcellular Remote-Control Interfaces


Google dials into the cell phone market - Yahoo! News
Topic: Miscellaneous 2:21 pm EST, Nov  5, 2007

Confirming its long-rumored foray into the mobile market, Google said Monday it is developing a free cell phone software package so the Internet search leader can more easily peddle ads and services to people who aren't in front of a PC.

Google's system will also be based on computer code that can be openly distributed among programmers. That, Google hopes, will encourage developers to create new applications and other software improvements that could spawn new uses for smart phones. A development tool kit for working on the new platform will be released next week.

The list of wireless carriers that have agreed to provide service for the Google-powered phone in the United States include Sprint Nextel Corp. and Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile in the United States. China Mobile, Telefonica in Spain and Telecom Italia are among the carriers that have signed on to provide service outside the United States.

They are among a Google-led group of 34 companies that have formed the Open Handset Alliance. Other key players include major chip makers like Intel Corp., Qualcomm Inc., Texas Instruments Inc., Broadcom Corp. and Nvidia Corp.

Google dials into the cell phone market - Yahoo! News


Wal-Mart sells $199 Linux computer - Yahoo! News
Topic: Miscellaneous 3:16 pm EDT, Oct 31, 2007

[Walmart] was taking orders online Wednesday for a computer called the "Green gPC" that is made by Everex of Taiwan, costs $199 and runs Linux.

A comparable Everex PC that comes with Windows Vista Home Basic and more memory costs $99 more, or $298, partly because the manufacturer has to pay Microsoft Corp. for a software license. Both computers come with keyboard, mouse, and speakers, but no monitor.

The variant of Linux on the gPC is called gOS and is derived from the popular Ubuntu variant. It's heavily oriented toward Google's Web sites and online applications, like YouTube, Gmail and the company's word processing program, all of which can be used only when the computer is connected to a broadband line.

The gPC has a low-end processor from VIA Technologies, plus 512 megabytes of internal memory, an 80-gigabyte hard drive and a combination DVD drive and CD burner.

But ... get this bonehead move:

The PC comes with a dialup modem, but gOS doesn't support it. So most users likely will get online other ways.

Wal-Mart sells $199 Linux computer - Yahoo! News


Slashdot | Call For Halt To Wikipedia Webcomic Deletions
Topic: Miscellaneous 11:23 am EDT, Oct 31, 2007

"Howard Tayler, the webcomic artist of Schlock Mercenary fame, is calling on people not to donate money during the latest Wikimedia Foundation fund-raiser. This is to protest the 'notability purges' taking place throughout Wikipedia, where articles are being removed en-masse by what many see as overzealous admins.

Apparently people around here aren't the only ones grumbling about deletionism.

Slashdot | Call For Halt To Wikipedia Webcomic Deletions


MIT researchers improve `tractor beam' - Yahoo! News
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:55 am EDT, Oct 31, 2007

Taking up the sci-fi staple of "tractor beams," scientists have developed a way to use light to grab and move minuscule particles on a microchip

The work by Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers could extend the possibilities for "optical tweezers" — super-focused beams of light that have been used for years to study and manipulate tiny biological structures or even individual atoms.

Lang and Appleyard proved their technique by getting 16 live E. coli cells to spell out "MIT" on a [microchip surface].

MIT researchers improve `tractor beam' - Yahoo! News


5 Scientific Reasons a Zombie Apocalypse Could Actually Happen | Cracked.com
Topic: Miscellaneous 8:22 pm EDT, Oct 29, 2007

#5. Brain Parasites
#4. Neurotoxins
#3. The Real Rage Virus
#2. Neurogenesis
#1. Nanobots

5 Scientific Reasons a Zombie Apocalypse Could Actually Happen | Cracked.com


RE: Walgreen sees movie-burning DVD kiosks at stores | Technology | Reuters
Topic: Miscellaneous 7:31 pm EDT, Oct 29, 2007

I Love Lamp wrote:
This seems interesting. Has anyone seen anything like this in the ATL area yet?

I've seen them at Kroger. Typically sandwiched between the coin counter machine and the scratch off lottery machine. It claims to be a buck a day a movie, though I have not yet tried it out.

RE: Walgreen sees movie-burning DVD kiosks at stores | Technology | Reuters


RE: "Terrorist Buster" Logo — Central Intelligence Agency
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:25 am EDT, Oct 26, 2007

Rattle wrote:

Does anyone know where I can get a t-shirt with this?

Get me a higher res picture and some T-Shirt sizes, and I can pass it along to a friend in NC with a multi-color cheap-price press.

RE: "Terrorist Buster" Logo — Central Intelligence Agency


My other VAX is a VAXbar
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:12 am EDT, Oct 26, 2007

I love it when I see old shit turned into functional gear again...

Hope you enjoy it...

A Vax 11/780... converted to a bar... complete with Sink... Amazing.

My other VAX is a VAXbar


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