Green Energy Projects in the Developing World
Posted on March 16, 2009 Comments (3)
5 Huge Green-Tech Projects in the Developing World: Leyte Geothermal Field, Leyte, Philippines with a current capacity of 708.5 megawatts
Location: Near Dhule, India
Current capacity: 650 megawatts
Planned capacity: 1,000 megawatts
Estimated completion date: 2010
Built by Suzlon, a homegrown Indian energy compay, the Suzlon wind farm near Dhule will be the world’s largest when it’s completed in 2010. Already, it’s creeping up on Florida Light and Power’s Horse Hollow Wind Energy Center, which has a capacity of 735 megawatts.
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Acme Solar Thermal Plants
Location: Haryana, India
Current capacity: 0 megawatts
Planned capacity: 1,000 megawatts
Estimated completion date: 2019
Acme, an Indian technology conglomerate, announced its intentions to build up to 1,000 megawatts of solar thermal power Tuesday. The company providing the technology, eSolar, makes 46-megawatt modular power plants that concentrate the sun’s rays onto a central boiler to generate steam to drive a turbine. ESolar’s Rob Rogan said that the companies would break ground on the first 100 megawatts of solar power within the year.
Qaidam Basin Solar PV Installaton
Location: Qinghai Province, China
Current capacity: 0 megawatts
Planned capacity: 1,000 megawatts
Estimated completion date: ?
Two local Chinese firms announced their intentions to install up to 1,000 megawatts of solar photovoltaic panels in northwestern China in January. The China Technology Development Group Corporation and Qinghai New Energy Company will start with a more modest 30 megawatts. They expect to break ground during 2009.
Related: Solar Thermal in Desert, to Beat Coal by 2020 – Wind Power Potential to Produce 20% of Electricity Supply by 2030 – Google.org Invests $10 million in Geothermal Energy
Home Engineering: Gaping Hole Costume
Posted on March 15, 2009 Comments (7)

This great Halloween costume by Evan Booth shows what a bit of imagination and engineering can do. A projection screen over his stomach displays a live video image of a camera on his back giving the illusion of a gaping hole. Photos via flickr. Very cool.
Related: home engineering posts – Home Engineering: Windmill for Electricity – Awesome Cat Cam – Automatic Cat Feeder – Engineering at Home
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Cactus Eating Bull Saving Kenyan Drylands
Posted on March 14, 2009 Comments (1)
Cactus eating bull saves Kenyan drylands
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During the drought of 1999 – 2000 grassy fields were reduced to bare earth and cows had nothing left to eat were dying of starvation leading to widespread famine. The story goes that one farmer persuaded his bull to eat the leaves after he had burned off the thorns. Opuntia are 80% water and if one can get past the thorns, the plant is quite nutritious . The other starving cows watched the bull and then followed suit thus saving the herd and the farmer who has never looked back. The thorns are burnt off using wood from another nasty invasive species, Prosopis juliflora – making this an eco-friendly project all round.
Related: Mobile Phone-based Vehicle Anti-theft System – Invasive Plants: Tamarisk – Curious Cat Kenya Travel photos
Ozone Pollution Taking Toll on American Lives
Posted on March 13, 2009 Comments (0)
Ozone Pollution Taking Toll on American Lives by Amanda Gardner
The greatest risk may for those living be in hot, dry cities such as Los Angeles, which has one of the highest concentrations of ozone. Residents of Los Angeles may face a 25 percent to 30 percent higher annual risk of dying from a respiratory ailment versus people in low-ozone areas such as the Great Plains, the researchers said.
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An estimated 240,000 people in the United States and 7.7 million people worldwide die of respiratory disease each year, according to data from the World Health Organization. Efforts to reduce ground-level ozone have stalled in recent years, Jarrett said, and now one in three Americans lives in an area that exceeds the national standard for ozone levels.
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Ozone is also a powerful greenhouse gas, Jerrett said, so measures to improve health might have the added benefit of slowing climate change.
Related: Scientists Denounce Global Warming Report ‘Edits’ – Rate of Cancer Detected and Death Rates Declines – The Pollution Magnet
Tags: green,human health,medical study,pollution
FreeWave’s Data Radios Bring Employee Bonuses
Posted on March 12, 2009 Comments (2)
It is easy with the existing economic news to think things are bleak everywhere. But even within the current climate companies find success. Founded in 1993, FreeWave Technologies is a world leader in the innovative design and manufacture of ISM Band radios and wireless data solutions. Their data-transmitting radios span the globe from the Middle East to Mount Everest; from the Amazon Rainforest to Antarctica to New York. They are used by defense contractors, oil and gas companies, city and county municipalities and industrial manufacturers.
Hedy Lamarr from the trailer for the film Boom Town, 1940FreeWave’s data radios are based on Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum Technology. Spread Spectrum was originally created for the U.S. Navy during World War II to prevent the Germans from “jamming” American radio transmissions for radio-guided torpedoes. The technology was invented by Hedy Lamar, a famous movie star of the 1940’s. The original radios contained a roll of paper slotted like a player piano to cause channel switching. Hedy’s close friend, Inventor/Musician George Antheil, designed the first successful synchronization device that brought Hedy’s idea to fruition. In 1941, Hedy and George were granted a U.S. patent for the first “Secret Communications System.” The original system used merely 88 frequencies. Today, the switching is controlled in embedded firmware code that enables a radio to change frequencies hundreds of times per second and use more than 100 channels.
Engineering these radios is something the company takes quite seriously. And hiring the best talent is part of this philosophy. Every single employee considers it his/her job to ensure that customers receive top-notch service seven days a week. This extends all the way through the organization up to senior management. FreeWave is so dedicated to making its customers front and center that it provides 24-hour technical support – even rotating senior management to be on call at nights and on the weekends.
The privately held company is based in Boulder, Colorado, the company offers network design, pre-installation engineering services and manufactures its own radios (manufacturing them in Boulder).
FreeWave’s increase in revenues of 112 percent from 2003 to 2007. The company has paid this bonus every six months since the first one was paid in July 1995. Over the past year, FreeWave has invested in expanding its facility to accommodate more staff; growing its manufacturing space and capabilities; dedicating more resources and technology to its product development; increasing its customer and partner training; and, investing in marketing and sales.
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Tags: Career,economy,engineers,innovation,manufacturing,Products,women
Very Cool Wearable Computing Gadget from MIT
Posted on March 11, 2009 Comments (6)
Pattie Maes presentation at TED shows a very cool prototype for wearable, useful computing spearheaded by Pranav Mistry (who received a standing ovation at TED). It’s a wearable device with a projector that paves the way for profound interaction with our environment.
The prototype of the system cost only $350. The software, created by them, obviously is the key, but how amazing is that, $350 for the hardware used in the prototype! There is a useful web site on the Sixth Sense project.
The software program processes the video stream data captured by the camera and tracks the locations of the colored markers (visual tracking fiducials) at the tip of the user’s fingers using simple computer-vision techniques. The movements and arrangements of these fiducials are interpreted into gestures that act as interaction instructions for the projected application interfaces. The maximum number of tracked fingers is only constrained by the number of unique fiducials, thus SixthSense also supports multi-touch and multi-user interaction.
Related: Awesome Cat Cam – Cool Mechanical Simulation System – Engineering a Better World: Bike Corn-Sheller – posts on cool gadgets
Tags: amazing,cool,Engineering,fun,gadgets,innovation,MIT,Popular,Technology,TED,university research,webcasts
Scientists Target Bacteria Where They Live
Posted on March 10, 2009 Comments (0)
Scientists Learning to Target Bacteria Where They Live
The answer, say researchers, is to find substances that will break up biofilms.
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Melander said “a throwaway sentence in an obscure journal” — the Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan — gave them another clue. They isolated a compound from the sponge that disperses biofilms and figured out how to synthesize it quickly and cheaply.
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But dispersing biofilms without understanding all the ramifications could be a “double-edged sword,” Romeo warned, because some bacteria in a biofilm could wreak worse havoc once they disperse.
“Simply inducing biofilm dispersion without understanding exactly how it will impact the bacterium and host could be very dangerous, as it might lead to spread of a more damaging acute infection,” he said.
Related: Entirely New Antibiotic Developed – Soil Could Shed Light on Antibiotic Resistance – How Antibiotics Kill Bacteria
Tags: Antibiotics,bacteria,Health Care,medical research,Research,scientific inquiry
First Flowers of Spring
Posted on March 9, 2009 Comments (2)

The first flowers of Spring in my yard.
Related: What Sparks Plant Growth – What Are Flowers For? – Curious Cat Science Search
Eric Schmidt on Google, Education and Economics
Posted on March 9, 2009 Comments (3)
Eric Schmidt, March 6th, 2009 interview by Charlie Rose:
- “From our perspective, I think the YouTube acquisition and the Doubleclick acquisition, which are the two large acquisitions we did last year, and the year before, have been phenomenally successful.”
- He also mentioned the idea of teachers today creating online hubs of information on educational areas, as well as lesson plans. See our Education Resources for Science and Engineering
- And Flu Trends
- “We needed the stimulus package, because the stimulus package had, among other things, $20 billion for science and education funding… Real wealth is created by businesses, not by financial engineering, and by businesses that provide new products that solve new problems.”
- Why do you assume the best students in the world are going to come to America? “Because they choose to come here right now… That is a brilliant [actually not brilliant at all] strategy take the best people hire them in American universities and then kick them out” It happens. “Its shocking.” It happens. “I know we are fighting against it.” “We America remain, by far the place of choice for education, particularly higher education.“
- Technologists as a group tend to be more analytical, more data driven, more personally liberal (more willing to tolerate the differences among people, more global in their focus… [technologists] as a group believe you can literally change the world from technology.”
Related: Eric Schmidt on Management at Google – Eric Schmidt Podcast on Google Innovation and Entrepreneurship – Larry Page and Sergey Brin Interview – Marissa Mayer Webcast on Google Innovation – Larry Page on How to Change the World
Tags: economy,Engineering,Google,investing in science,management,university,webcasts
Presidential Memo to Insulate Science From Politics
Posted on March 8, 2009 Comments (0)
Presidential Memo to Insulate Science From Politics
“The president believes that it’s particularly important to sign this memorandum so that we can put science and technology back at the heart of pursuing a broad range of national goals,” said Melody Barnes, director of Obama’s Domestic Policy Council.
While officials would not go into details, the memorandum will order the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) to “assure a number of effective standards and practices that will help our society feel that we have the highest-quality individuals carrying out scientific jobs and that information is shared with the public,” said Harold Varmus, who co-chairs Obama’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology.
The decision by President George W. Bush to restrict funding for stem cell research was seen by critics as part of a pattern of allowing political ideology to influence scientific decisions, affecting issues including whether to approve the morning-after pill Plan B for over-the-counter sales and climate change.
Related: Scientists Denounce Global Warming Report ‘Edits’ – 76 Nobel Laureates in Science Endorse Obama – Science and Engineering in Politics – The A to Z Guide to Political Interference in Science
Resurrection of the Human IRGM Gene
Posted on March 8, 2009 Comments (0)
Interesting open access paper on Death and Resurrection of the Human IRGM Gene. Author summary:
Phylogenetic analyses support a model where the gene has been “dead” for at least 25 million years of human primate evolution but whose ORF became restored in all human and great ape lineages. We suggest that the rebirth or restoration of the gene coincided with the insertion of an endogenous retrovirus, which now serves as the functional promoter driving human gene expression. We suggest that either the gene is not functional in humans or this represents one of the first documented examples of gene death and rebirth.
Related: 8 Percent of the Human Genome is Old Virus Genes – Old Viruses Resurrected Through DNA – One Species’ Genome Discovered Inside Another’s – posts on genes – Gene against bacterial attack unravelled – Gene Duplication and Evolution
Tags: bacteria,evolution,genes,open access paper,protein,university research,virus

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