środa, 13 lipca 2011

Blog - Tracking Attention, Social Activity, and Our Environment

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wtorek, 12 lipca 2011

Blog - Would you Take Medical Advice from An iPhone?

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Blog - Sulphur Breakthrough Significantly Boosts Lithium Battery Capacity

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poniedziałek, 11 lipca 2011

Virtual Grocery Shopping

International supermarket giant brings virtual goods to subway commuters in South Korea, eliminating the need for a physical store.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011By Kristina Bjoran Audio »

TechNewsWorld

Wednesday - July 6, 2011It's difficult enough for most humans to grasp the idea that our planet is just one of countless others in our galaxy -- and a pretty small one, at that. Then, of course, there's the concept that our galaxy is just one of billions of others in the universe -- sure to compound any confusion considerably. It seems safe to say, however, that neither of those notions can compete on the mind-bending scale, so to speak, with an idea that's currently being investigated: The U.S. Department of Energy's Fermilab is working on a device to test the theory that our whole universe is simply a hologram.

A Futures Market for Computer Security

A predictions market could help companies prepare for major security incidents before they happen.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011By Brian Krebs Audio »

niedziela, 10 lipca 2011

A Less Wasteful Way to Deal with Wastewater

An Israeli company called Emefcy has developed a process that promises to decrease the energy drain of wastewater treatment. This week, Energy Technology Ventures—a joint venture between GE, NRG Energy, and ConocoPhillips—invested in the company, marking the venture's first-ever investment in a non-U.S. company.

Conventional wastewater treatment consumes 2 percent of global power capacity, some 80,000 megawatts, at a cost of $40 billion per year.

Using conventional microbial fuel-cell technology and its own proprietary engineering, Emefcy harvests energy from wastewater, generating enough to power the entire treatment process. In the treatment of particularly carbon-rich industrial wastewater, the company says, the process produces excess electricity that can be fed back into the grid at a profit.

In microbial fuel cells, naturally occurring microorganisms oxidize wastewater. An anode and cathode, placed a critical distance apart in the water, create an electrical circuit from the electrons gained from this oxidation.

Ely Cohen, Emefcy's vice president of marketing, says the company's process reduces the total cost of wastewater treatment by 30 to 40 percent by eliminating spending on energy, and also reduces the amount of sludge that must be trucked away afterward by up to 80 percent.

Traditional wastewater treatment involves forcing air through the water to aerate it. This is also important to the activity of the microbial cells. Emefcy exposes more wastewater to air but without the energy-intensive process of pumping air through water. Instead, the wastewater flows through a "biogenic reactor" made of tubes 1.7 meters in diameter and four meters high. Inside the tubes, water and air flow alongside each other separated by a membrane.

"The reactor is split into two areas," says Emefcy CEO Eytan Levy. "In one area there is a lot of wastewater but there is no air. In the other area there is air but no wastewater. These two areas are separated by a membrane wall and both areas are connected to an electrically-conductive surface on which the bacteria grows."

The electrons produced by the bacteria flow towards the oxygen in the air through nanowires made of naturally-occurring hair-like projections found on the surface of the microbes. "Under these reactor conditions the bacteria develop the ability to convert these pili to become electrically conductive and it behaves just like a metallic wire," says Levy.

The electrodes used are made of a coated plastic, which makes them cheaper, and easier to maintain.

Each stack can process 10 cubic meters of wastewater a day, and has a planned lifespan of 15 years. Stacks can be added on a modular basis, avoiding the need for a large up-front investment in infrastructure. Emefcy hope to begin industrial production this month, with first sales targeted for early 2012.

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Blog - Chinese Competitor for Android Doubles Down on Web Apps

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sobota, 9 lipca 2011

Blog - Virtual World Study Reveals the Origin of Good and Bad Behavior Patterns

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Chinese Solar Companies Thrive on Manufacturing Innovations

Suntech Power's CTO argues that the secret to China's success is not cheap labor but advanced equipment for making solar cells.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011By Kevin Bullis Audio »

piątek, 8 lipca 2011

Was the Space Shuttle a Mistake?

The program's benefits weren't worth the cost—and now the U.S. is in jeopardy of repeating the same mistake, says a leading space policy expert.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011By John M. Logsdon Audio »

Facebook adds Skype video chat feature

Skype CEO Tony Bates listens Wednesday as Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg describes his site's new video chat feature. STORY HIGHLIGHTSFacebook announces a video chatting feature with SkypeFeature begins rolling out on WednesdayFacebook: We have 750 million usersNew video feature is seen as a response to Google

czwartek, 7 lipca 2011

Beware, some Google+ 'invites' are spam

'invite' e-mails lead to spam for unsuspecting users
The e-mails mimic actual messages from the new social network, Sophos security says
Links don't appear to upload viruses or other malwareRELATED TOPICSSpam EmailGoogle Inc.Viruses and Worms (CNN) -- OK, Google

Microsoft strikes search deal with Baidu

A billboard for Microsoft Vista is pictured in Liaoning Province, China, during Bill Gates' visit to China on April 21, 2007. STORY HIGHLIGHTSBing's search results to be integrated into Baidu's later this yearDeal will help Microsoft promote Bing in the world's biggest internet marketBaidu to expand beyond its traditional strength in Chinese-language searchesRELATED TOPICSBaidu.com Inc.ChinaMicrosoft CorporationBing.com (FT) -- Baidu, China's biggest search engine by revenue, on Monday announced a partnership with Microsoft that would allow its users to see English-language search results generated by Bing, the US company's search engine.

No financial considerations were involved in the deal, which will see Bing's search results labeled and integrated into Baidu's search results from later this year.

Any advertising revenue generated as a result of the improved search results will go to Baidu as it controls the site. However, the deal will help Microsoft promote Bing in the world's biggest internet market, where it has less than a 1 per cent market share, according to research firm Analysys International.

By contrast, Baidu controls more than three-quarters of the Chinese market while Google still holds 19.6 per cent, despite losing market share after the US company partially retreated from China last year. Google moved its China web search to its Hong Kong site last March after confronting Beijing over censorship issues.

The partnership between Baidu and Bing highlights Microsoft's different approach to the Chinese market compared with Google. Unlike Google, which had operated its own search engine independently in China, Microsoft had sought out local partners to help promote Bing.

Microsoft had earlier entered into an agreement with Alibaba Group, the business-to-business website, to offer Bing search results on Alibaba's eTao search engine. However, that partnership ended earlier this year..

Samuel Shen, senior vice-president of Microsoft China, said the partnership "would give Baidu's many users better results and a better English search experience. At the same time, it will allow more Chinese users to experience Bing".

For Baidu, the partnership helps it expand beyond its traditional strength in Chinese-language searches. English-language searches were becoming more common in China as more people there learnt English as a second language, a Baidu spokesperson said, adding that there were already more than ten million English searches on Baidu every day.

The bolstering of its English-language search is part of Baidu's quest to transform its search function into a sort of computing platform that could handle anything that future internet users will need to do online. Two weeks ago Baidu announced plans to acquire a majority stake in Qunar, China's biggest online travel agency by revenue.

While the agreement with Microsoft will initially apply only to Baidu services in China, the partnership will also "help Baidu expand its presence in the international search market," Baidu said in a statement.

Shen Haoyu, senior vice-president at Baidu was earlier quoted as saying that the Chinese search engine was developing products in 12 foreign languages.

© The Financial Times Limited 2011

środa, 6 lipca 2011

What if Generation Dora overruns Facebook?

About 7.5 million children younger than age 13 have Facebook accounts. Are you terrified yet? STORY HIGHLIGHTSFacebook's guidelines say it is intended for those older than 13People should be aware of what the presence of 5-12 year olds could do to FacebookImagine the Dora generation discovering game invites -- get ready to receive thousandsRELATED TOPICSFacebook Inc.Social Software and TaggingInternetCulture and LifestyleOmar L. Gallaga writes about technology for the Austin American-Statesman and the newspaper's tech blog, Digital Savant. He sometimes contributes to NPR's All Tech Considered segment on "All Things Considered."

(CNN) -- By now, we all know the story of how Facebook started young by channeling the desires and delusions of smart Harvard students and spreading across college campuses.

Then it got older and older, pulling along in its oceanic wake young professionals, their friends, their parents and their grandparents.

Recently, though, there have been fears that the site is getting too young. While Facebook's guidelines say the site is meant for those 13 and older, evidence suggests many younger kids are using the social network.

According to a study released by Consumer Reports, about 7.5 million children under 13 are members. How did they get there? What do they want? Are you terrified yet?

Facebook itself may not consider its underage users to be a problem. Founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has suggested the company may wage a legal fight to change or repeal the federal Children's Online Privacy Protection Act, which restricts what private information a website can collect from kids younger than 13 without a parent's permission. (Zuckerberg, by the way, doesn't have kids.)

If Facebook is successful, it could create a much larger problem for all of-age Facebook users. Any parent who has ever been to a pizza party knows how quickly children can overrun a desired destination and turn it into a screamy, sticky, Day-Glo disaster area for everyone else in the vicinity. They are like locusts -- cute ones -- in Hello Kitty shirts and light-up Velcro shoes.

Kids are wonderful. They are, I'm led to believe in song, the future. But before we teach them well and let them lead the way (a plan fraught with pitfalls), we should be aware of what the constant, sanctioned presence of, say, 5- to 12-year-olds on Facebook will do to the service.

Here are just a few ways Facebook could change if it is overrun by the Dora generation:

Game invites

Remember when all your friends were playing "Mafia Wars," "FarmVille" and "Bejeweled Blitz," updating you constantly about their new pear tree or their cornering of the (virtual, we hope) crack cocaine market?

Get ready for thousands of invites to play "The Backyardigans in Space!" dozens of puzzle games based on Silly Bandz and other entertainment options you'd otherwise successfully avoid. Hope you like "Cars 2!"

Virtual horseplay

Facebook's Poke feature never really got much traction; it remains a relic of the early days. But don't tell that to the kids. Their increasingly vocal demands (they're great at whining) would pressure the social network into expanding the Poke option to include Shove, Gleek, Wet Willie and Pull Hair.

Most of these will be used to communicate that a kid likes someone, but, you know, not necessarily "like" likes them. For that there's already a Like button.

Dubious profile pictures

There's always something a little sad about someone pushing 40 or 50 using a 20-year-old photo of themselves as their avatar. When kids on Facebook start hitting their awkward stages, they'll shield themselves by replacing their profile pictures with images of themselves as infants. It will be disturbing for everybody.

Promise of birthday cake

Sixty percent of Facebook events will be related to Chuck E. Cheese or Gymboree. In a brilliant bit of cross-marketing, Facebook credits will be redeemable for virtual versions of Chuck E. Cheese's ticket prizes, including erasers, colorful silly straws and large, full-screen-sized stuffed animals which no one will ever earn enough prize tickets to claim.

Language gap

The at-one-time indecipherable leetspeak written language, made popular with online forums and texting, will give way to an even more impenetrable shorthand used by kids. It will be made up of ones and zeroes, binary coding that refers to specific scenes, situations and dialogue in "iCarly" episodes. Facebook will be forced to offer its service in this new language, iCarlyrillic.

An exodus of twentysomethings

Childless social media addicts in their 20s will find Facebook's sudden population shift to be such a buzzkill they will exit the social network en masse to escape the suffocating feeling that aging is a real thing -- and that they might one day be charged with taking care of one of these tiny, voracious creatures.

There will be a sharp drop in tinted, overprocessed Instagram photos posted on Facebook and fewer posts urging other Facebook users to go download the new Bon Iver album. It might not be so bad, actually. Disaffected former Facebookers will post snarky thoughts about generation Dora in their Tumblr blogs.

Please don't misunderstand me. I like kids. I have two of my own and soon they'll be old enough to bluff their way into Facebook and start posting things that will make me age even more rapidly.

Do I want to socialize with them on Facebook? Absolutely not. And neither should you. Every time the subject of "Facebook" comes up, I plan to change the subject with a quick offer of ice cream. It's going to cost me a lot of money, but it might buy me a few months, at least.

Israel to Get Electric Car Battery Swap Stations

Next month, Better Place, a startup based in California, will begin selling electric cars in Israel that come with subscription packages that include a leased battery and the cost of recharging it. Gasoline is expensive and taxes on gas-powered cars are high in Israel, and the company says the packages could make owning an electric car 20 percent cheaper than owning a gasoline-powered car.

Better Place is trying to solve the biggest challenge to the widespread adoption of electric cars: the limitations imposed by battery chemistry. A battery big enough to give an electric car the same range as the average gas car would be far too large and expensive; and recharging battery packs takes hours at standard outlets, compared to the minutes it takes to refuel a conventional car.

Better Place will sell a new electric sedan made by Renault that has a range of just over 100 miles on a charge—enough for most daily commutes. For longer trips, Better Place provides battery swap stations, where an automated system switches out a depleted battery for a fully-charged one in less than five minutes. Instead of owning the batteries, the car owners buy subscriptions for a certain number of kilometers of driving per year. They can choose from several plans, much the same way mobile phone owners subscribe to minutes.

The size of Israel limits the number of swap stations needed. What's more, high taxes on gas-powered cars, as well as high prices for gasoline (about $8 a gallon), should help make electric cars more attractive.

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Building Bigger, Better Wind Turbines

Wind power is one of the fastest-growing forms of power generation in the United States, with more capacity added onshore than coal and nuclear generation combined over the past four years. But to sustain that high growth rate into the next decade, the industry will have to start tapping offshore wind resources, creating a need for wind turbines that are larger, lower-maintenance, and deliver more power with less weight.

To support research in this area, the U.S. Department of Energy has awarded $7.5 million to six projects, each aiming to develop advanced drivetrains for wind turbines up to 10 megawatts in size. Five of the projects use direct-drive, or gearless, drivetrain technology to increase reliability, and at least two use superconductivity technologies for increased efficiencies and lower weight.

Current designs can't be scaled up economically. Most of the more than 25,000 wind turbines deployed across the United States have a power rating of three megawatts or less and contain complex gearbox systems. The gearboxes match the slow speed of the turbine rotor (between 15 to 20 rotations per minute) to the 2,000 rotations per minute required by their generators. Higher speeds allow for more compact and less expensive generators, but conventional gearboxes—a complex interaction of wheels and bearings—need regular maintenance and are prone to failure, especially at higher speeds.

On land, where turbines are more accessible, gearbox maintenance issues can be tolerated. In rugged offshore environments, the cost of renting a barge and sending crews out to fix or maintain a wind-ravaged machine can be prohibitive. "A gearbox that isn't there is the most reliable gearbox," says Fort Felker, direct of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory's wind technology center.

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