David Kirkpatrick

June 4, 2009

Flexible memory

Via KurzweilAI.net– Flexible electronics are a hot development item and this flexible memory chip from NIST look like a promising addition to the field.

Electronic Memory Chips That Can Bend And Twist
Science Daily, June 3, 2009

A flexible memory switch that operates on less than 10 volts, maintains its memory when power is lost, and still functions after being flexed more than 4,000 times has been developed by National Institute of Standards and Technology(NIST) researhers.


(NIST)

The switchcan be built out of inexpensive, readily available materials and it performance is similar to that of a memristor (changes its resistance depending on the amount of current that is sent through it and retains this resistance even after the power is turned off).

 
Read Original Article>>

June 3, 2009

Wednesday video fun — Captain Kirk loop

Bill Shatner’s graced the “video fun” post before, and here’s an interesting and unusual entry.

I’ll let the text from the boing boing post where I found this video do the explaining:

LA Weekly reviews the screening of a Daniel Martinico’s 15-minute movie, Khaan!, which is a loop of James Kirk winding up to scream the name of his nemesis in The Wrath of Khan. The two-minute clip above, according to reviewer Mark Mauer, “doesn’t begin to do justice to the size, sound and hypnotic power of the real thing.”

Last week Machine Project in Echo Park showed Martinco’s 15-minute meticulously re-spliced creation in a never-ending loop that transforms the moment from one of anguish (or snickering for the the audience) into a meditation, maybe even a mantra.

United Socialist States of America?

Filed under: Business, Politics — Tags: , , , , , — David Kirkpatrick @ 9:01 pm

Not so much.

Socialism chart

Beyond the wii

Filed under: Arts, Business, Media, Technology — Tags: , , , , , — David Kirkpatrick @ 4:56 pm

Via KurzweilAI.net — There’s a lot of development going on to take the Nintendo’s wii concept to the next stage — pure guesture, no controller.

Here’s links to Sony’s offering as introduced at E3:

Sony latest to demo videogame motion-sensing controller
PhysOrg.com, June 3, 2009

Sony on Tuesday demonstrated a prototype motion-sensing videogame controller.

A camera tracks the player’s movements, and software translates their movements to those of onscreen characters.

 
Read Original Article>>

Smartbooks are coming

Filed under: Business, Technology — Tags: , , , , — David Kirkpatrick @ 4:34 pm

What? You’re just getting used to smartphones and netbooks are still something of a tiny little mystery computer? Look out because synergy is ongoing and the smartbook is the next device in the pipeline.

All joking aside price- and feature-wise smartbooks look interesting. With a port to plug in an external drive I can see these being decent alternatives to full-on laptops.

From the link:

What exactly is a smartbook, aside from a term drawn from the the obvious blend of “smartphone” and “netbook”?

Slideshow: 10 Hot Netbooks – From Pricey to Dirt Cheap

First mentioned last November in a speech by a marketing executive from hard drive maker Western Digital, a smartbook will be a computing device similar in size or slightly smaller than today’s netbook with smartphone-like features.

Glen Burchers, consumer marketing director at Freescale Semiconductor Inc., says those features could include all-day battery life, instant-on capability and “persistent connectivity,” and specs such as an ARM-based chip core, a Linux OS version like Google Inc.’s Android, and, most importantly to consumers, a price point significantly lower than today’s netbooks.

“We fully expect $199 devices with 8.9-inch screens, Wi-Fi, full-sized keyboard, 8-hour battery life, 512MB of RAM and 4-8 Gigabytes of [solid-state] storage by the end of the year,” Burchers said.

By comparison, the cheapest netbooks based on Intel Corp.’s Atom CPU, such as Hewlett-Packard Co.’s just-announced Mini 110, sell for under $300.

June 2, 2009

Nantotech may end injections

Scared of needles? Nanotech may come to your salvation someday. Scientists at the Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology at the University of Queensland are working on a vaccine patch using nanotech in lieu of the traditional injected vaccination.

I’m no fan of being stabbed so this sounds like a pretty cool utilization of medical nanotechnology.

From the link:

The end of deep, painful vaccine injections is in sight. One of the first widespread applications of nanotechnology in medicine could be a painless, needle-free vaccine “nanopatch” being developed by Australian scientists.

It also promises to bring much-needed protection against deadly diseases to people in remote areas where there is a lack of refrigeration or disposable syringes for traditional vaccines. A nanopatch could be sent by post.

It will still pierce the skin. The centimetre-square silicon device has thousands of ultra-sharp microscopic spikes coated with dried vaccine. When applied lightly, it would cause no pain because it penetrates less than a hair’s thickness below the surface.

This may not sound far, but it is another of the nanopatch’s benefits, says Professor Peter Gray, the director of the Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology at the University of Queensland.

The tiny spikes deliver vaccine close to where immune cells, known as dendritic cells, are found. Hypodermic injections, on the other hand, inject most of the vaccine too deep to activate these disease-fighters, making the vaccine less effective.

Capital not key to ventures

Interesting business research on start-up capital and business success.

The release:

Study: Lack of capital not a ‘death sentence’ for start-ups

A new study from North Carolina State University is turning the conventional wisdom about technology start-up companies on its head, showing that ventures with moderate levels of undercapitalization can still be successful and that a great management team is not more important than a top-notch technology product when it comes to securing sufficient amounts of capital.

“Our research shows that undercapitalization is not a death sentence for start-up ventures,” says Dr. David Townsend, an assistant professor of management, innovation and entrepreneurship at NC State who co-authored the study. “There are things a venture can do to survive and succeed.” Basically, Townsend says, start-ups that fall short of their fund-raising goals can take steps to minimize their cash outflows in order to stay viable.

Undercapitalized ventures “need to engage in management strategies focused on reducing their costs. For example, outsourcing certain development tasks and accounting responsibilities or exchanging services with other companies – saying we’ll build your Web site in exchange for a year’s worth of accounting services, etc.,” Townsend says.

The study also found that there is little evidence to support the long-standing tenet that a great management team is the most important part of a venture company when it comes to securing investment in a start-up. The study shows that a venture with an “A,” or top notch, management team and an A technology is likely to meet its capitalization goal. But the researchers were surprised to find that the combination of a “B,” or less than ideal, management team with a B technology was also quite successful in meeting capitalization goals. Ventures that had an A management team but a B technology, or vice versa, were usually underfunded.

Townsend explains that B management teams with B technologies are probably more successful at meeting their capitalization goals because they are aware of their shortcomings, and modify their capitalization targets accordingly. For example, these B teams may minimize management salaries or restrict their marketing budgets.

Similarly, Townsend says the evidence implies that A management teams with B technologies, or vice versa, often fall short of their capitalization targets because they have not modified their fund-raising goals – and as a result investors don’t buy in at a sufficient level to fully fund the venture’s intended strategies.

 

###

 

The study, “Resource Complementarities, Trade-Offs, and Undercapitalization in Technology-Based Ventures: An Empirical Analysis,” was co-authored by Townsend and Dr. Lowell W. Busenitz of the University of Oklahoma. The study will be presented June 5 at the Babson College Entrepreneurship Research Conference in Boston and at the Brown International Advanced Research Institutes in Providence, R.I., on June 18.

The research was supported by North Carolina State University, The University of Oklahoma, and i2E – a non-profit corporation focused on wealth creation by growing the technology-based entrepreneurial economy in Oklahoma.

Making water run uphill …

… through lasers and nanostructures. Lots of possible apps here, plus it’s just freaking cool.

The release:

Scientists create metal that pumps liquid uphill

Ultra-fast laser makes metal that attracts, repels and guides liquids

IMAGE: Chunlei Guo uses the femtosecond laser (behind him) to create nanostructures in metal that can move liquid uphill.

Click here for more information. 

In nature, trees pull vast amounts of water from their roots up to their leaves hundreds of feet above the ground through capillary action, but now scientists at the University of Rochester have created a simple slab of metal that lifts liquid using the same principle—but does so at a speed that would make nature envious.

The metal, revealed in an upcoming issue of Applied Physics Letters, may prove invaluable in pumping microscopic amounts of liquid around a medical diagnostic chip, cooling a computer’s processor, or turning almost any simple metal into an anti-bacterial surface.

“We’re able to change the surface structure of almost any piece of metal so that we can control how liquid responds to it,” says Chunlei Guo, associate professor of optics at the University of Rochester. “We can even control the direction in which the liquid flows, or whether liquid flows at all.”

Guo and his assistant, Anatoliy Vorobyev, use an ultra-fast burst of laser light to change the surface of a metal, forming nanoscale and microscale pits, globules, and strands across the metal’s surface. The laser, called a femtosecond laser, produces pulses lasting only a few quadrillionths of a second—a femtosecond is to a second what a second is to about 32 million years. During its brief burst, Guo’s laser unleashes as much power as the entire electric grid of North America does, all focused onto a spot the size of a needlepoint, he says.

The wicking process, which on Guo’s metal moves at a quick one centimeter per second speed against gravity, is very similar to the phenomenon that pulls spilled milk into a paper towel or creates “tears of wine” in a wineglass—molecular attractions and evaporation combine to move a liquid against gravity, says Guo. Likewise, Guo’s nanostructures change the way molecules of a liquid interact with the molecules of the metal, allowing them to become more or less attracted to each other, depending on Guo’s settings. At a certain size, the metal nanostructures adhere more readily to the liquid’s molecules than the liquid’s molecules adhere to each other, causing the liquid to quickly spread out across the metal. Combined with the effects of evaporation as the liquid spreads, this molecular interaction creates the fast wicking effect in Guo’s metals.

Adding laser-etched channels into the metal further enhances Guo’s control of the liquid.

“Imagine a huge waterway system shrunk down onto a tiny chip, like the electronic circuit printed on a microprocessor, so we can perform chemical or biological work with a tiny bit of liquid,” says Guo. “Blood could precisely travel along a certain path to a sensor for disease diagnostics. With such a tiny system, a nurse wouldn’t need to draw a whole tube of blood for a test. A scratch on the skin might contain more than enough cells for a micro-analysis.”

Guo’s team has also created metal that reduces the attraction between water molecules and metal molecules, a phenomenon called hydrophobia. Since germs mostly consist of water, it’s all but impossible for them to grow on a hydrophobic surface, says Guo.

Currently, to alter an area of metal the size of a quarter takes 30 minutes or more, but Guo and Vorobyev are working on refining the technique to make it faster. Fortunately, despite the incredible intensity involved, the femtosecond laser can be powered by a simple wall outlet, meaning that when the process is refined, implementing it should be relatively simple.

Guo is also announcing this month in Physical Review Letters a femtosecond laser processing technique that can create incandescent light bulbs that use half as much energy, yet produce the same amount of light. In 2006, Guo’s team used the femtosecond laser to create metal with nanostructures that reflected almost no light at all, and in 2008 the team was able to tune the creation of nanostructures to reflect certain wavelengths of light—in effect turning almost any metal into almost any color.

 

###

 

This research funded by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the National Science Foundation.

S&P and Dow dump GM

General Motors is no longer part of the Standard & Poor’s index and the Dow Jones Index.

Here’s more news from S&P on that and additional changes.

The release:

Standard & Poor’s Announces Changes to U.S. Indices
     

NEW YORK, March 5 /PRNewswire/ — Standard & Poor’s will make the following changes to the S&P 100, S&P 500, S&P MidCap 400 and S&P SmallCap 600 indices:

 

 

  • S&P 500 constituent Monsanto Co. (NYSE: MON) will replace Tyco International Ltd. (NYSE: TYC) in the S&P 100, S&P MidCap 400 constituent Northeast Utilities (NYSE: NU) will replace Tyco International in the S&P 500, S&P SmallCap 600 constituent Watson Wyatt Worldwide Inc. (NYSE: WW) will replace Northeast Utilities in the S&P MidCap 400, and ESCO Technologies Inc. (NYSE: ESE) will replace Watson Wyatt in the S&P SmallCap 600, all after the close of trading on a date to be announced. Tyco is in the process of redomesticating to Switzerland, which will render it ineligible for continued inclusion in the S&P 100 & 500 indices.

 

  • OSI Pharmaceuticals Inc. (Nasdaq: OSIP) will replace Ferro Corp. (NYSE: FOE) in the S&P MidCap 400 after the close of trading on Thursday, March 12. As of today’s close of trading, Ferro had a market capitalization of approximately $40 million ranking it 400th in the index.

 

 

 

  • eHealth Inc. (Nasdaq: EHTH) will replace Champion Enterprises Inc. (NYSE: CHB), and American Public Education Inc. (Nasdaq: APEI) will replace Georgia Gulf Corp. (NYSE: GGC) in the S&P SmallCap 600, after the close of trading on Thursday, March 12. As of today’s close of trading, Champion Enterprises and Georgia Gulf had market capitalizations of approximately $16 million and $12 million respectively, whereas the minimum market cap needed to be admitted to the index is currently $200 million.

 

 

 

  • Neutral Tandem Inc. (Nasdaq: TNDM) will replace Interwoven Inc. (Nasdaq: IWOV) in the S&P SmallCap 600 after the close of trading on a date to be announced. Autonomy Corporation plc is acquiring Interwoven in a deal that is still pending final approvals.

 

 

 

Standard & Poor’s will monitor these transactions, and post any relevant updates on its website: www.standardandpoors.com.

  (more…)

Nanotube heatsink

Via KurzweilAI.net — This is just very cool nanotech.

Biomimetic-engineering design can replace spaghetti tangle of nanotubes in novel material
PhysOrg.com, June 1, 2009

An arrangement of carbon nanotubes similar to those found in the cytoskeleton of cells will create a heat sink (effectively dissipating heat), which could prevent a Nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS)device from failing or melting, scientists in MIT’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering have found.

 
Read Original Article>>

GM’s bankruptcy and Ford

To anyone who’s been paying attention General Motors’ bankruptcy comes as no no surprise, but the repercussions are still a mystery. Cato’s Daniel Ikenson brings up a very salient point — now that the government is the de facto owner of GM what’s going to happen to Ford.

Of the big three Ford has remained in a fairly strong position in a very weak industry. Most importantly it hasn’t been forced to take federal bailout money. Ikenson wonders if the fed may not put a thumb on the scales a little to help its latest property, namely GM, out a bit.

From Cato Today:

BANKRUPTCY FOR GM – FORD NEXT?

General Motors on Monday filed for bankruptcy protection, even after $19.4 billion in federal bailout money. Cato scholar Daniel Ikenson has long suggested bankruptcy as the best course for GM, and now worriesabout Ford’s future: “The government has a 60 percent stake in GM. Who’s going to want to own Ford stock—and therefore, will Ford be able to raise capital—when the U.S. government has an incentive to tip the balance in GM’s favor wherever it can?”
- Full statement from Ikenson
- “An Overdue Reckoning in the Auto Sector,” by Daniel Ikenson
- “Don’t Bail Out the Big Three,” by Daniel Ikenson
- “GM’s Last Capitalist Act: Filing for Bankruptcy Protection,” by Daniel Ikenson

June 1, 2009

Massive privacy violation in Colorado

Filed under: Politics — Tags: , , , , , — David Kirkpatrick @ 3:46 pm

Astounding investigative overreach in Colorado while looking for illegal immigrants. Glad to see the judges in the case see things the same way. Fourth Amendment anyone?

From the link:

Immigrant advocates say they’ve seen nothing like it before or since: A prosecutor looking for illegal immigrants seized thousands of confidential tax records from an income tax preparer popular with Hispanics in this northern Colorado city.The October seizures led to identity theft and criminal impersonation charges against more than 70 people, and prosecutors allege that as many as 1,300 suspected illegal immigrants were working using false or stolen Social Security numbers.

But the American Civil Liberties Union said the documents of as many as 4,900 people were seized, many of them legal residents, and that the probe was the “equivalent of a house-by-house search of innocent homeowners in order to find a suspect believed to be somewhere in the neighborhood.”

Two judges have agreed, ruling that Weld County District Attorney Ken Buck had no probable cause to seize the records. Buck is appealing, however, and a ruling in his favor could open up a new avenue for prosecuting illegal immigrants.

Third version of Futures Research Methodology released

Via KurzweilAI.netFutures Research Methodology Version 3.0 is out and in the wild.

Futures Research Methodology v.3 published
KurzweilAI.net, June 1, 2009

Futures Research Methodology Version 3.0 is the largest, most comprehensive collection of internationally peer-reviewed methods and tools to explore future possibilities ever assembled in one resource, according to the Millennium Project.

Written by leading futurists Jerome C. Glenn and Theodore J. Gordon, the 39 chapters include methods such as prediction markets, real-time delphi, robust decisionmaking, structural analysis, state of the future index, wild cards, and normative forecasting. Version 3.0 has added new chapters and updated and improved previous ones.

More info: The Millennium Project

Scott Burns on retirement

If you’ve never read any of Scott Burns’ financial advice, you are in for a treat. For years I’ve read his very practical and accessible ideas on investing, retirement and other financial topics. His “couch potato portfolio” investment plan is a work of simplistic genius and is now made even easier to implement at his website AssetBuilder.com.

His latest column is on the problem of retirement income being eaten up by financial services industry fees. He offers a few novel solutions and points out the institutional hurdles any plan will face from industry lobbyists.

Financial planning and investment is not easy, but it can be made easier by leaps and bounds. Read a little more of Burns to see what I mean.

From the final link:

As I have shown in earlier columns, the high cost of some 401(k) and 403(b) plans can cut a worker’s lifetime accumulation by one-third— as much as a major market decline. Worse, when those high fees continue in retirement, the probability that workers will run out of money nearly doubles.

But that dismal reality has a big upside. If worker retirement incomes are reduced by as much as one-third by excessive fees, reducing those fees means retirement incomes could be increased by as much as 50 percent. Similarly, reducing fees could also mean that the risk of running out of money could be cut in half.

That makes investment fee reduction a high-stakes opportunity.

So how can government make it happen?

One notion is very simple: Open enrollment in the federal Thrift Savings Plan to all workers anywhere. This program has annual costs of only 0.03 percent. It provides workers with simple choices of ultra-low-cost index funds or portfolios of same. Workers could then choose between the plan, if any, offered by their employer and the low-cost plan offered by the federal government.

A 30-year-old worker could choose between accumulating as many as 11.5 years of final wages in the Thrift Savings Plan or as few as 7.7 years of final wages in his or her employer’s plan. I doubt that it would be a difficult choice.

Better still, employers could save money. Rather than wasting up to 3 percent of payroll to provide matching contributions that are consumed by fees, employers could create efficient plans. Or they could encourage workers to join the federal Thrift Savings Plan. Either way, employers could save up to 3 percent of payroll.

Think about this a bit and you see that workers and employers would both benefit. Only the financial services industry would be unhappy. But, as they say, “Two out of three ain’t bad.”

Could something this simple actually get done, since it would benefit millions of workers?

Get real. This is America, the land of the lobbyist and home of the vested interest. A proposal this simple would be attacked as anti-free enterprise by the Investment Company Institute, the entire insurance industry, the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), and benefit consultants of all shapes and sizes who make their livings off the complexity and expense of the current system. Some would say such a change would be ruinous to an already damaged financial services industry— the same industry that workers are supporting with hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars.

« Newer Posts

Theme: Silver is the New Black. Blog at WordPress.com.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.