Technology Stocks | The *NEW* Frank Coluccio Technology Forum


Previous 10 | Next 10 
From: Frank A. Coluccio2/4/2012 4:21:42 PM
   of 42723
 
McKinsey Quarterly: How China is innovating

Chinese companies, well known for skillfully imitating competitors’ offerings, are increasingly creating innovative products in both the business-to-consumer and business-to-business sectors. “ A CEO’s guide to innovation in China” probes the intensifying competition in China’s markets for goods and services and offers a road map for navigating sectors where creativity counts. The automotive, semiconductor, and pharmaceutical industries provide front-row seats on the evolution of Chinese innovation. Read “ Three snapshots of Chinese innovation” to learn more about each from the president of General Motors’ China operation, semiconductor experts from McKinsey, and AstraZeneca’s head of R&D for Asia and emerging markets.

------

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Frank A. Coluccio2/4/2012 11:30:05 PM
1 Recommendation   of 42723
 
Why don't we bury our power lines in the Northwest?

[FAC: Be sure to view the second video: "Electric power: 'Looking Forward' (1930s), Produced for Puget Sound Power & Light Co."; hat tip to Erik Cecil, on the Cook Report list.]

Article: kpluwonders.org 

------

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Frank A. Coluccio2/5/2012 11:44:59 PM
   of 42723
 
The Next Frontier in IT: LED Lighting
by Matt Laherty | Jan 30, 2012

LED lighting is the next frontier for IT user services. IT is uniquely suited to establish and support the tools necessary to support a rich set of dynamic user profiles and policies. LEDs make it possible for building users to set light level, color, and intensity and conservation policies based on their needs. Though most office space today has white light, colored LEDs make it possible to create pathways that guide visitors to their meetings and first responders to emergency event locations. Colored lights coupled to fast response controllers also make it possible to create an immersive light experience. Other light services include room “mood settings”. Imagine that the conference room reserved for your next meeting was set to your preferred light intensity, color and tone the moment you enter. Other services could include surround light—this application uses color and intensity to create an experience like surround sound but using light. Ambx.com has solutions like this today.

Cont.: smartconnectedcommunities.org 


------

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

From: Frank A. Coluccio2/6/2012 8:24:44 AM
1 Recommendation   of 42723
 
Developing power-over-fiber communications cable: When total isolation is a good thing
January 18, 2012

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Sometimes total electrical isolation is a good thing — and that’s the idea behind a power-over-fiber (PoF) communications cable being developed by engineers at Sandia National Laboratories.

It’s common to isolate communications between systems or devices by using fiber optic cables, said Steve Sanderson of Sandia’s mobility analysis and technical assessment division. But when power also is required, sending it down a copper wire can at times be a safety issue, and substituting it with battery power may not be suitable or practical, he said.

Titus Appel, left, and Steve Sanderson of Sandia National Laboratories’ mobility analysis and technical assessment division display a first-generation power-over-fiber cable that converts a signal from electrical-to-optical-to-electrical, thus emulating an electrical cable in total isolation. Click on the thumbnail for a high-resolution image.

Sanderson, Titus Appel and Walter Wrye, a former Sandia intern, are co-inventors of a hybrid cable design that uses fiber to send and regulate optical power to the communications electronics integral to the cable. A patent is pending on the design.

The developers envision their cable replacing existing copper cables in applications related to safety, such as security, explosives, explosion-proof devices, aviation and medical devices.

“The PoF cable has power limitations,” Sanderson said. “It’s not to be construed as a means to power your house, for example, or handle the high speeds of a computer network.

“But because there are growing needs of low-power sensor/control applications related to safety, having convenient optically generated power available is a tremendous benefit.”

The PoF cable ends resemble a typical copper electrical cable with pin and socket connectors. However, optical interface circuits integrated into the connector housing, called a backshell, provide fiber optic transmission of both data communications and optical power.

To conserve energy, optical power is delivered only on demand, Sanderson said.

“The key issue here is to maintain total electrical isolation from any stray electrical energy and high-voltage electrical surges caused by such things as lightning strikes,” he said.

The first-generation PoF cable just delivers optical power to the cable’s internal electronics for data communication between devices. The researchers now are adding the capability to deliver electrical power externally to a connected low-power device, Sanderson said.

In the cable’s current version, the backshell encapsulates circular stacked circuit boards with LEDs coupled to plastic optical fibers for communications, and a laser diode and miniaturized photovoltaic-type cell coupled to the ends of a single glass fiber to deliver optical power.

In the next version, the team plans to use only glass fibers. “Although plastic fiber requires less preparation time than glass, it takes up more room,” Sanderson said.

The team recently tested a PoF low-energy detonator firing cable with fireset electronics built into the backshell. The optically powered fireset embeds a microcontroller that reports such things as detonator resistance, temperature and charging voltages, and receives command messages to fire the detonator. When it’s idle or powered down, the circuitry is designed to short the detonator input leads to prevent unwanted electrical energy from reaching it.

The researchers are working with next-generation microcontrollers, new packaging layouts and new optical devices to reduce the size. Team members also are developing a rugged, production-ready PoF cable and are working to reduce the backshell’s length, decrease the weight and lower costs.

“One of our ongoing objectives is to reduce the physical size so that it’s more widely used,” said Sanderson.

Sandia National Laboratories is a multiprogram laboratory operated and managed by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration. With main facilities in Albuquerque, N.M., and Livermore, Calif., Sandia has major R&D responsibilities in national security, energy and environmental technologies, and economic competitiveness.


--

fac: a case where acronyms collide... POF also stands for plastic optical fiber...

PR: share.sandia.gov 

------

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

From: ig2/6/2012 11:28:15 AM
   of 42723
 
Snowboarder saved during avalanche thanks to airbag.

Meesh Hytner, a professional snowboarder, was caught in a Class 3 avalanche during a back-country competition in Colorado on what it describes as “virgin slopes”. The Avalanche Center describes a Class 3 avalanche as having the ability to “bury a car, destroy a small building, or break trees.” Fortunately, she was wearing a Backcountry Access Float 30 backpack.

See actual footage of the save:

youtube.com 



It reduces the depth the wearer could get buried in during an avalanche. According to its website, will keep the wearer at or near the surface, minimizing excavation time.

Hytner described wearing the pack during the avalanche as "riding down the stairs on a mattress." She credits the airbag system with saving her life.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Frank A. Coluccio who wrote (40463)2/6/2012 1:52:05 PM
From: Lazarus   of 42723
 
Frank, I have a son who just graduated with a degree in electrical engineering....

He's smart... meaning a straight A student and would like to work in an environment where he is able to draw from his education and build upon it.

any suggestions as to where you feel the best opportunities in that field might be???

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Lazarus who wrote (40466)2/6/2012 1:55:03 PM
From: LindyBill   of 42723
 
My son-in-law had exactly that BG. Went to work for a major Cell Phone co. They paid his way though Law school and he is now, 20 years later, one of their chief Patient Lawyers. You never know.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: axial who wrote (40439)2/6/2012 7:02:57 PM
From: axial3 Recommendations   of 42723
 
Transplant jaw made by 3D printer claimed as first



' The implant is a complex part - involving articulated joints, cavities to promote muscle attachment and grooves to direct the regrowth of nerves and veins. However, once designed, it only took a few hours to print.

"Once we received the 3D digital design, the part was split up automatically into 2D layers and then we sent those cross sections to the printing machine," Ruben Wauthle, LayerWise's medical applications engineer, told the BBC. "It used a laser beam to melt successive thin layers of titanium powder together to build the part. This was repeated with each cross section melted to the previous layer. It took 33 layers to build 1mm of height, so you can imagine there were many thousand layers necessary to build this jawbone."

Once completed, the part was given a bioceramic coating. The team said the operation to attach it to the woman's face took four hours, a fifth of the time required for traditional reconstructive surgery.

"Shortly after waking up from the anaesthetics the patient spoke a few words, and the day after the patient was able to swallow again," said Dr Jules Poukens from Hasselt University, who led the surgical team. "The new treatment is a world premiere because it concerns the first patient-specific implant in replacement of the entire lower jaw."

bbc.co.uk 

Jim

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: ig who wrote (40465)2/6/2012 11:41:15 PM
From: Webster Groves   of 42723
 
Seems like the bag really works.

However, as pointed out in a comment on Youtube,
one can hear automated
shutter clicks every second from 0.11 to 0.26
at the peak of the action.
"Ready. camera, action -- it's in the can = staged demo
(don't try this at home. kids).

wg

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: axial2/7/2012 7:47:39 AM
   of 42723
 
Why Cognitive Enhancement Is in Your Future (and Your Past)

' It could be that we are on the verge of a great deluge of cognitive enhancement. Or it's possible that new brain-enhancing drugs and technologies will be nothing compared to how we've transformed our minds in the past. If it seems that making ourselves "artificially" smarter is somehow inhuman, it may be that similar activities are actually what made us human.

Let's look at the nature of the new technology. Last week a team of ethicists from Oxford released a paper on the implications of using Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (TDCS) to improve cognition in human beings. Recent years have seen some encouraging, if preliminary, lab results involving TDCS, a deep brain stimulation technique that uses electrodes placed outside the head to direct tiny painless currents across the brain. The currents are thought to increase neuroplasticity, making it easier for neurons to fire and form the connections that enable learning. There are signs that the technology could improve language acumen, math ability, and even memory. The Oxford paper argues that TDCS has now reached a critical stage where its risks must be carefully considered before the research goes further.

Of course, not everyone is convinced that the technology will pan out. Some remain skeptical of TDCS, calling it a fad, the latest in a long series of "neuro-myths" that bubble up when scientists distort or embellish their findings in the name of publicity. But even if brain stimulation fizzles, the questions raised by the Oxford paper are going to be with us for a long time. That's because TDCS is just one of many promising new technologies that neuroscientists hope will enhance cognition, including smart pills, genetic engineering, and brain-to-computer interfacing. As deep brain stimulation has become the flavor du jour in neuroscience, bioethicists have increasingly given it a starring role in the thought experiments they use to tease out the philosophical dilemmas posed by cognitive enhancement. '

theatlantic.com 

Jim

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read
Previous 10 | Next 10 

Copyright © 1995-2013 Knight Sac Media. All rights reserved.