Science, Education and Community
Posted on June 22, 2006 Comments (1)
Science, Education and Community: Organically Grown
Garden Mosaics web site, including a cartoon explanation of the scientific process. Read more
K-12 Engineering Outreach Programs
Posted on June 21, 2006 Comments (1)
Interview, K12 Summer Outreach Programs Interview of Dr. Andrew Gerhart, author of K12 Summer Outreach Programs–Curriculum Comparisons Between Ages, Minorities, and Genders, by Sean Stickle.
I will point out that I, John Hunter, work for ASEE as an Information Technology Program Manager: my work on this blog is not associated with ASEE and the opinions I express are mine and not those of ASEE. This interview was done at the ASEE annual conference. The paper was an award winning paper from the ASEE conference last year. This paper and interview provide some good information for teachers interested in introducing engineering education to k-12 students.
Abstract of the paper:
Read more
The Art and Science of Imaging
Posted on June 21, 2006 Comments (2)

The Art of Imaging from Invitrogen (via Molecular Probes’ protocols for pretty pictures). See interesting images and details on exactly how to scientists create such images.
image: -catenin in HeLa human cervical cancer cells was labeled using mouse anti–catenin and visualized with Alexa Fluor 488 goat anti-mouse IgG (green). Filamentous actin was visualized using red-fluorescent Alexa Fluor 635 phalloidin. Nuclear DNA was stained with blue-fluorescent DAPI. Larger photo and more details
The image gallery includes many more images.
Drilling to the Center of the Earth
Posted on June 21, 2006 Comments (1)
The Deepest Hole by Alan Bellows:
In the 1960s the Soviet Union began a project to drill through the upper crust of the earth to reach the “mysterious area where the crust and mantle intermingle.” That project continued over 4 decades but they never were able to succeed. In order to drill at the depths they did reach they needed to engineer new drilling techniques.
Rare “Rainbow” Over Idaho
Posted on June 20, 2006 Comments (0)

Rare “Rainbow” Spotted Over Idaho by Victoria Gilman:
When light enters through a vertical side face of such an ice crystal and leaves from the bottom face, it refracts, or bends, in the same way that light passes through a prism. If a cirrus’s crystals are aligned just right, the whole cloud lights up in a spectrum of colors.
Arctic Seed Vault
Posted on June 19, 2006 Comments (0)
Work begins on Arctic seed vault:
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The vault’s purpose is to ensure survival of crop diversity in the event of plant epidemics, nuclear war, natural disasters or climate change; and to offer the world a chance to restart growth of food crops that may have been wiped out.
At temperatures of minus 18C (minus 0.4F), the seeds could last hundreds, even thousands, of years. Even if all cooling systems failed, explained Mr Riis-Johansen, the temperature in the frozen mountain would never rise above freezing due to the permafrost on the mountainside.
Bill Gates Interview from 1993
Posted on June 19, 2006 Comments (1)
Bill Gates Interview by David Allison, Smithsonian Institution, 1993. For those interested in the early development of the personal computer and Microsoft this is an interesting interview. Bill Gates:
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There was another interpretive language called FOCAL that we’d written a version of for the 8080 and 6502. Having two interpretive languages like that was not a good approach. That was a dead-end project. Everything else, COBOL, FORTRAN, the way we selected the various chips…
Multiplan, targeting the 8-bit machines instead of just relying on the next generation to come, the IBM PC generation, that was a huge error. When we talk about, “Are we aiming too low, in terms of system requirements, we often think, is this another case like Multiplan?” Because it was a great product, but it was the basic strategy that was wrong. And, in fact, to some degree that allowed me to make one of the best decisions I ever did, which was later, when we had to compete with 1-2-3. There was a question of whether to do it in the character-mode environment, or whether to move up to the next generation, which was graphical. And we said, “Okay, we’ll let them dominate the DOS-character world. We are going after Mac and Windows. We are going to be a generation ahead.” And that worked out very well. Multiplan was certainly an experience that was helpful there.
Robot Football (Soccer)
Posted on June 19, 2006 Comments (4)
In addition to the World Cup another international football event is taking place in Germany this month: RoboCup 2006
Researcher Founds a Robot Soccer Dynasty (including video webcast):
Gecko Tape
Posted on June 19, 2006 Comments (2)
Sticking Around with Gecko Tape:
Also see, Caught on tape: Gecko-inspired adhesive is superstrong, for more details.
Photo: An array of tiny plastic pegs mimics the microscopic structure of a gecko’s sticky sole.
MIT Hosts Student Vehicle Design Summit
Posted on June 18, 2006 Comments (2)

Student summit set on vehicle design by Deborah Halbe
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An added goal for the June 13-Aug. 13 program is to lay a foundation for ongoing multidisciplinary transportation research involving all five MIT schools. “We hope to create a project-based, socially conscious engineering curriculum for the ’06-’07 academic year,” said Anna S. Jaffe, a junior in civil and environmental engineering and one of the summit student organizers.
Image by Mitchell Joachim and William Lark, sketch of a concept solar car was created for the MIT Vehicle Design Summit.
Tags: engineering education,green,MIT,science education,solar energy
Malaysia Looking to Learn from India
Posted on June 18, 2006 Comments (2)
Lessons from India’s Success in IT Industry
They will undergo a 14-month IT course designed to meet the current requirements of the relevant industries.
The numbers of new hires is amazing (update – see comments, in fact the numbers are not for Infosys. According to Bloomberg:

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