9.24.2010
9.21.2010
Yet another step towards a television free world
Miniature device could allow a cell phone to project images on a wall | KurzweilAI
A new one-cubic-centimeter projector head that can be integrated into a portable computer or mobile telephone has been developed by Lemoptix, a spin-off of Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), and the Maher Kayal Laboratory.
A new one-cubic-centimeter projector head that can be integrated into a portable computer or mobile telephone has been developed by Lemoptix, a spin-off of Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), and the Maher Kayal Laboratory.
The projector uses very little energy, requiring on average 30% less current than the matrix- or LED-based technology currently available on the market. It should be available in 2011 for industrial applications, and the following year for consumer electronics, according to Nicolas Abelé, Technical Director of the start-up.
Test tube babies are so 2009
Technology Review: Artificial Ovary Could Help Infertile Women
First time that a 3-dimensional environment containing the three main types of ovarian cells: theca cells, granulosa cells, and the eggs (oocytes) has been developed. Immediate importance in studying fertility, environmental and pharmaceutical impacts, contraceptive development, and ovarian cancer with future clinical potential in harvesting and maturing eggs safely for infertile women.
8.25.2010
8.15.2010
Weekend Chuckles



Job Descriptions
1. A banker is a fellow who lends you his umbrella when the sun is shining and wants it back the minute it begins to rain.
2. An economist is an expert who will know tomorrow why the things he predicted yesterday didn't happen today.
3. A statistician is someone who is good with numbers but lacks the personality to be an accountant.
4. An actuary is someone who brings a fake bomb on a plane, because that decreases the chances that there will be another bomb on the plane.
5. A programmer is someone who solves a problem you didn't know you had in a way you don't understand.
6. A mathematician is like a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat that isn't there.
7. A topologist is someone who doesn't know the difference between a coffee cup and doughnut.
8. A lawyer is a person who writes a 10,000-word document and calls it a "brief."
9. A psychologist is someone who watches everyone else when a beautiful girl enters the room.
10. A professor is one who talks in someone else's sleep.
11. A consultant is someone who takes the watch off your wrist and tells you the time.
12. A committee is a body that keeps minutes and wastes hours.
8.06.2010
Screw polysporin, give me some fibronectin for my owie
Harvard scientists have developed a fabric coated with a protein called fibronectin which has the potential for helping wounds heal quickly sans scarring or possibly as a scaffold for growing organs.
http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/25918/?nlid=3315
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Protein pattern: This computer rendering shows ripples on fabric made from protein. Such fabrics could be used as scaffolds for growing organs. Credit: ACS/ Nano Letters |
http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/25918/?nlid=3315
8.04.2010
TV Reporter Bloopers
Top 10 funniest news reporter bloopers
Here are the top 5 clips from the cnet news blog by Don Reisinger
8.03.2010
I hope none of these guys are getting behind the wheel of a car
Hilarious video of animals getting drunk from fermented fruit.
Good for a chuckle
A woman went to a pet shop and immediately spotted a large, beautiful parrot. There was a sign on the cage that said $50.00.
"Why so cheap?" she asked the pet store owner.
The owner looked at her and said, "Look, I should tell you first that this bird used to live in a house of prostitution, and sometimes it says some pretty vulgar stuff."
The woman thought about this, but decided she had to have the bird anyway. She took it home and hung the bird's cage up in her living room and waited for it to say something.
The bird looked around the room, then at her, and said, "New house, new madam." The woman was a bit shocked at the implication, but then thought, "That's really not so bad."
When her two teenage daughters returned from school, the bird saw them and said, "New house, new madam, new girls."
The girls and the woman were a bit offended but then began to laugh about the situation considering how and where the parrot had been raised.
Moments later, the woman's husband Eric came home from work The bird looked at him and said, "Hi, Eric."
8.02.2010
Worse than an oil spill...farming
The Other Gulf Stain - Dot Earth Blog - NYTimes.com
As if the BP oil spill didn't cause enough damage to the coastal areas of the Gulf of Mexico, large amounts of nitrogen and other nutrients from midwest agricultural lands has washed down the Mississippi river and entered the Gulf.
So...what are the repercussions of this?
The abundance of nutrients causes a dramatic increase in the plant life initially (e.g. algal bloom) but then creates what is known as a 'hypoxic zone' or 'dead zone' as all the oxygen dissolved in the water gets used up by the photosynthesizing plants. This has huge ramifications for the animal life in those areas, and could be costlier to the ecosystem and the Gulf fishing economy than the BP oil spill.
As if the BP oil spill didn't cause enough damage to the coastal areas of the Gulf of Mexico, large amounts of nitrogen and other nutrients from midwest agricultural lands has washed down the Mississippi river and entered the Gulf.
So...what are the repercussions of this?
The abundance of nutrients causes a dramatic increase in the plant life initially (e.g. algal bloom) but then creates what is known as a 'hypoxic zone' or 'dead zone' as all the oxygen dissolved in the water gets used up by the photosynthesizing plants. This has huge ramifications for the animal life in those areas, and could be costlier to the ecosystem and the Gulf fishing economy than the BP oil spill.
7.31.2010
The end of tv
A Portable Movie Theater - Gadgetwise Blog - NYTimes.com
I knew it was only a matter of time before televisions (even 100" plasma LCD HD ones) would go extinct and I think the beginning of the end has begun. A new portable projector from Tumi can be used on "most video-enabled MP3 players, the Apple iPhone and laptop computers." With the ever-expanding market of online viewing (Hulu, ESPN3, Netflix, etc...) it's only a matter of time before all you'll need for in-home entertainment is an internet connection, a laptop/iPhone, and a wall.
7.28.2010

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
I started this book after having watched the HBO mini-series of the same name produced by the same guys who wrote 'The Wire'. There are a lot of characters introduced and missions undertaken by the First Recon Marines during the initial assault of Iraq and it was really helpful for me to picture the real-life men in the book with the actors who portray them so accurately.
View all my reviews >>
7.27.2010
Have humans evolved to love medicine?

Neurobiology and immunobiology of the placebo effect. Adapted from Pacheco-Lopez et al (2006).
Why do we love medicines so much?
Richard Sullivan, Isabel Behncke & Arnie Purushotham
- EMBO reports (2010) 11, 572 - 578
- doi:10.1038/embor.2010.108
Algae to energy, seems simple enough

Schematic drawing of an algae farm for the production of biofuels.
The tide turns towards microalgae
Philip Hunter- EMBO reports (2010) 11, 583 - 586
- doi:10.1038/embor.2010.103
7.21.2010
It's like the 70's all over again, tree-hugging hippies working with military veterans
Iraq War Veterans Join Environmentalists in the Oiled Gulf of Mexico
-Really interesting article written by Bryan Walsh for TIME.com connecting the wars raging in The Middle East with the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
-Really interesting article written by Bryan Walsh for TIME.com connecting the wars raging in The Middle East with the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Wait a second, can you repeat that?...Did you say the atmosphere almost collapsed?
NASA-funded researchers are monitoring a big event in our planet's atmosphere. High above Earth's surface where the atmosphere meets space, a rarefied layer of gas called "the thermosphere" recently collapsed and now is rebounding again. One possible explanation is carbon dioxide (CO2). When carbon dioxide gets into the thermosphere, it acts as a coolant, shedding heat via infrared radiation. It is widely-known that CO2 levels have been increasing in Earth's atmosphere. Extra CO2 in the thermosphere could have magnified the cooling action of solar minimum (Lately, solar activity has been very low. In 2008 and 2009, the sun plunged into a century-class solar minimum).
You mean stuff actually gets done at the Pentagon

http://www.physorg.com/news198221258.html
So that's why the Arizona desert is so damn hot...

http://www.physorg.com/news198434180.html
Radio waves & vibrations... what's the first thing that comes to mind? Batteries, duh
Using only radio waves for its electrical power, the SmartHat has a beeper that alerts the wearer to dangerous construction equipment nearby.
Vibration-powered Generators Replace AA, AAA Batteries
For example, when the generator, which the company calls "Vibration-powered Generating Battery," is set inside a remote control, it is possible to use the remote by shaking it to generate power.
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