Award for Us :-)
Posted on May 24, 2007 Comments (1)
Best Web Site Name of the Week
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High-efficiency Power Supplies
Posted on May 24, 2007 Comments (0)
High-efficiency power supplies for home computers and servers (pdf) by Urs Hoelzle and Bill Weihl – Google:
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The opportunity for savings is immense — we estimate that if deployed in 100 million PCs running for an average of eight hours per day, this new standard would save 40 billion kilowatt-hours over three years, or more than $5 billion at California’s energy rates.
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The net result of these changes is a dramatic improvement in efficiency (including the power supply and the regulators) to about 85%, at virtually no cost. In other words, you won’t have to pay more for a higher-efficiency PC, because the power supply is actually getting simpler, not more complicated. By spending another $20 or so extra, it is possible to use higher-quality components and achieve efficiencies well over 90%.
Related: Cost of Powering Your PC – Engineers Save Energy – Electricity Conservation Works Best – Smokeless Stove Uses 80% Less Fuel
Female Sharks Can Reproduce Alone
Posted on May 23, 2007 Comments (3)
Female Sharks Can Reproduce Alone, Researchers Find
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Though the three females had been caught before they reached sexual maturity and held in captivity for more than three years, researchers initially thought one had stored sperm from a male shark before fertilizing an egg. But the team — which included scientists at Nova Southeastern University in Florida, Queen’s University Belfast and the zoo — determined that the baby shark’s genetic makeup perfectly matched one of the females in the tank, with no sign of a male parent.
Mahmood Shivji — Nova Southeastern’s Guy Harvey Research Institute director and one of the paper’s authors — said that he and his colleagues determined that a byproduct formed when sharks produce eggs, known as a sister polar body, had fused with an unfertilized egg to produce the baby shark, whose DNA had only half as much genetic variability as the mother.
Related: Sex and the Seahorse – 50 New Species Found in Indonesia Reefs – Arctic Sharks – Bdelloid Rotifers Abandoned Sex 100 Million Years Ago
Programming with Pictures
Posted on May 23, 2007 Comments (1)
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About 10 percent of the nation’s colleges now use Alice, an open-source, graphical software program available free online that allows users to learn the very basics of programming — concepts like iteration, if statements and methods — while making 3-D animations. Alice’s growth within college computer science departments has been impressive: Most colleges only began incorporating Alice in their introductory CS0 or CS1 courses within the past 18 months, since the release of an accompanying textbook.
But the software, currently readable to users in plain old English (a major drawback for many faculty who of course teach programming in standard computer languages like Java and C++), is potentially poised to penetrate far more colleges in 2008, when Alice 3.0 comes out in Java — featuring, this time around, sophisticated graphics, made available free by Electronic Arts Inc., from “The Sims,” the best-selling PC video game of all time. (And significantly, Pausch adds, one of the few games more popular with girls than boys. Computer science, he notes drily, has the unfortunate distinction of being the only discipline in the sciences to actually face declining female enrollments percentage-wise in the last 25 years).
Interesting. Related: Computer Science Education – A Career in Computer Programming – Microsoft Wants More Engineering Students – So You want to be a Computer Game Programmer? – software development posts on our management blog
Update: The Last Lecture Book by Randy Pausch
Tags: Carnegie Mellon,computer science,programming,software
Remote-Controlled Submarines
Posted on May 22, 2007 Comments (0)
Remote-Controlled Omnidirectional Submarines:
Fun looking toy. Via: Remote-Controlled Submarines. Related: Science and Engineering Gadgets and Gifts – Lego Autopilot Project Update – Underwater Robots Collaborate
Water Buffaloes, Lions and Crocodiles Oh My
Posted on May 22, 2007 Comments (4)
Pretty amazing video. A look at real wild life with lots of excitement, a bit violence and some surprising turns. On my trip to Kenya I saw an interaction between lions and one water buffalo but it was without much of this action. Basically there was a standoff for like half an hour with half charges and the like. Even that was very interesting.
Related: Big Big Lions – The Cat and a Black Bear – Jaguars Back in the Southwest USA
Building Engineering Outside the Box
Posted on May 21, 2007 Comments (0)
Helix — a 1D skyscraper with a single corridor:
The floor of each office is made horizontal, so that your chair does not roll down and hit the separation. But if you take your chair in the corridor, be careful not to let go of it. All things rolling naturally find their way to the lost+found in the lobby.
Ok, this doesn’t seem really practical for a skyscaper but it still is a cool thought experiment. And as they mention it works fine for the Guggenheim Museum in NYC.
International Student Collaboration
Posted on May 21, 2007 Comments (0)
Contest links high school students worldwide:
“The most important goal is to engage U.S. students in international collaboration using science and technology,” said David Gibson, executive director of the Global Challenge and a research assistant professor in computer sciences at the University of Vermont. The idea for the contest came to management consultant Craig DeLuca two years ago as one of his clients planned to outsource design and manufacturing, and his community in Stowe considered putting off buying science textbooks.
“I’ve got to do something so that our kids have a shot in the global economy,” he said then. He launched the contest in Vermont, and last fall it was awarded a $900,000 National Science Foundation Grant and expanded worldwide. Winners will be announced in June.
Not only does the contest encourage interaction between students across the globe to solve problems, it also exposes them to opportunities in science, technology, engineering and math, Gibson said. “We need projects like this across the nation, so we can scoop these kids up because schools don’t do it for them,” he said.
Chemistry of Common Items
Posted on May 21, 2007 Comments (1)
The American Chemistry Society offers interesting articles on the chemistry of everyday products including: amber, henna, catnip and honey:
Bee enzymes also show up in the finished product. Invertase is the most critical. It splits the sucrose in the nectar into fructose and glucose and also produces some erlose. Another enzyme, glucose oxidase, converts glucose to gluconolactone, which is then hydrolyzed to give gluconic acid, the principal acid in honey. Formic, acetic, butyric, and lactic acids are also found in honey, which explains why its pH typically measures 3.8-4.0 and bacteria have a hard time growing in it.
Related: Science Topics Explained on One Page – Physics Concepts in 60 Seconds
Engineering, Math and Physics Applets
Posted on May 20, 2007 Comments (0)
Java applets illustrating concepts in math, physics and engineering including: Coupled Oscillations, Digital Filters, 3-D Magnetostatic Fields and Ordinary Differential Equations.
Related: Satellite Tracker from NASA – Non-Newtonian Fluid Demo
Deep-Sea Alien Abode Discovered
Posted on May 18, 2007 Comments (2)
Deep-Sea Alien Abode Discovered by Jeanna Bryner:
Scientists had assumed that the deep sea of the South Pole would follow similar trends in biodiversity documented for the Arctic. “There are less species in the Arctic than around the equator,” said one of the study scientists, Brigitte Ebbe, a taxonomist at the German Center for Marine Biodiversity Research. “People assumed that it would be the same if you went from the equator south, but it didn’t prove to be true at all.”
Very interesting stuff. Related: Altered Oceans, the Crisis at Sea – Ocean Life – Antarctic Robo-sub

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