Issue no. 13, 2008 Published: Apr 25, 2008 |
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New source for biofuels discovered |
'Planetary sunshade' could strip ozone layer by 76% |
'Flammable ice' could be mined for fuel |
Researchers take the long view on digital storage |
Bionic eye returns sight to blind |
High-tech armband puts your fingers in control |
Microsoft unveils cloud computing platform |
LED lightbulbs: Are you ready to make the switch? |
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| New source for biofuels discovered |
A newly created microbe produces cellulose that can be turned into
ethanol and other biofuels, report scientists from the University of
Texas at Austin who say the microbe could provide a significant portion
of the nation's transportation fuel if production can be scaled up.
Along with cellulose, the cyanobacteria secrete glucose and sucrose.
These simple sugars are the major sources used to produce ethanol. The
researchers say their cyanobacteria can be grown in production
facilities on non-agricultural lands using salty water unsuitable for
human consumption or crops. The new cyanobacteria use sunlight as an
energy source to produce and excrete sugars and cellulose. Glucose,
cellulose and sucrose can be continually harvested without harming or
destroying the cyanobacteria.
The researchers created the new cyanobacteria by giving them a set of
cellulose-making genes from a non-photosynthetic 'vinegar' bacterium,
Acetobacter xylinum, well known as a prolific cellulose producer. The
new cyanobacteria produce a relatively pure, gel-like form of cellulose
that can be broken down easily into glucose. The researchers think that
by using the new bacteria they would need an area half the size of the
surface needed to produce ethanol with corn. |
| PhysOrg / University of Texas
Apr 23, 2008 |
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| 'Planetary sunshade' could strip ozone layer by 76% |
Planetary engineering projects to cool the planet could backfire quite
spectacularly: a new model shows that a 'sulphate sunshade' would punch
huge holes through the ozone layer above the Arctic. To make matters
worse, it would also delay the full recovery of the Antarctic ozone hole
by up to 70 years.
Pumping tiny sulphate particles into the atmosphere to create a
sunshield that would keep the planet cool was first suggested as a
solution to global warming by Edward Teller. Simone Tilmes of the
National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado, US, used computer
models to see how a sulphate sunshade would affect the ozone layer,
which protects us from harmful UV rays.
Tilmes modelled two different scenarios: one in which 'large' particles
measuring 0.43 microns in diameter are used, and one where the particles
are two-and-a-half times smaller. She found that injections of small
particles over the next 20 years could thin the wintertime ozone layer
over the Arctic by between 22 and 76%. Large particles, which would have
less of a cooling effect, would still reduce Arctic ozone by 15 to 50%
during the winter. In the Antarctic, the injections would delay the
recovery of the existing ozone hole by 30 to 70 years. |
| New Scientist / Science
Apr 24, 2008 |
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| 'Flammable ice' could be mined for fuel |
They call it flammable ice, and it could be the world's last great
source of carbon-based fuel - assuming we can mine methane hydrates,
crystal lattices of ice that trap methane beneath ocean beds and
permafrost.
One problem with extracting this methane is that the ice must be melted
to bring the gas to the surface. A team of geologists from Canada and
Japan has succeeded in extracting methane by pumping air out of drill
holes in the frozen structures. This reduced the pressure, and so raised
the melting temperature of the ice so the methane could be removed.
The state-owned Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation, which
announced the test results, wants to extract the 7 trillion tonnes of
methane thought to be trapped in hydrates in Japanese coastal waters. It
hopes this will be the answer to Japan's century-long search for an
indigenous source of fuel. Last month, the government approved a plan to
commercialise the extraction of the fuel within a decade. |
| New Scientist
Apr 23, 2008 |
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| Researchers take the long view on digital storage |
There is a risk that an entire generation's cultural history could be
lost if people are not able to retrieve that data. Now, computer
scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, have unveiled
details of a project to develop technology for the long-term storage of
digital data. The group has come up with a new approach to replace
technologies such as tape libraries.
The Pergamum technology uses hard disk drives to provide
energy-efficient and cost-effective storage. The declining cost of hard
drives has made them competitive compared with tape, and they offer
numerous advantages for searching and retrieving data.
Pergamum, named after the ancient Greek library that made the transition
from fragile papyrus to more durable parchment, is a distributed network
of intelligent, disk-based storage devices. The researchers designed the
system to provide reliable, energy-efficient data storage using
off-the-shelf components. It also has the ability to evolve over time as
storage technologies change. |
| VNUnet UK
Apr 22, 2008 |
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| Bionic eye returns sight to blind |
A 'bionic eye' may hold the key to returning sight to people left blind
by a hereditary disease, experts believe. A team at London's Moorfields
Eye Hospital have carried out the treatment on the UK's first patients
as part of a clinical study into the therapy.
The bionic eye, known as Argus II, works via the camera on a pair of
glasses, which transmits a wireless signal to an ultra-thin electronic
receiver and electrode panel that are implanted in the eye and attached
to the retina. The electrodes stimulate the remaining retinal nerves
allowing a signal to be passed along the optic nerve to the brain.
The trial aims to help people who have been made blind through retinitis
pigmentosa, a group of inherited eye diseases that affects the retina.
The disease progresses over a number of years, normally after people
have been diagnosed when they are children. |
| BBC News
Apr 21, 2008 |
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| High-tech armband puts your fingers in control |
A novel way of interacting with computers and other gadgets could make
twiddling your thumbs a productive activity. Microsoft researchers are
developing an armband worn on the forearm that recognises finger
movements by monitoring muscle activity. They have called it MUCI, which
stands for muscle-computer interface. The aim is to make controlling
computers and gadgets easier in situations where the user is otherwise
engaged - for example, when driving a car or taking part in a meeting.
Hands-free alternatives like speech recognition or cameras that
recognise gestures are still too error-prone and indiscreet, say
researchers at the University of Washington in Seattle, and Microsoft's
lab. Their alternative is to use MUCI to detect and decode the voltages
generated by twitching forearm muscles that move a person's fingers.
Users of MUCI just slip the armband onto their forearm, without worrying
about how its 10 sensors are positioned. Instead, a series of
calibration exercises teach the device's software how to recognise
different movements. Tests on 10 volunteers showed that, after
calibration, the system can recognise the position and pressure of all
10 digits with 95% accuracy. It can even detect three different degrees
of pressure exerted by a finger. |
| New Scientist
Apr 24, 2008 |
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| Microsoft unveils cloud computing platform |
Forget monster hard drives, backing up your PC and shrink-wrapped
software - the future of computing is up in the 'cloud'. Microsoft this
week brought the cloud computing concept - whereby all of our data and
applications are stored on the internet as opposed to on the PC - a step
closer to reality with the unveiling of its Live Mesh platform.
Live Mesh is essentially a web-based operating system, letting users
connect all of their devices into their own personal mesh. Files and
applications can be placed into a 'Mesh folder', which lives on the
internet and can be accessed by all devices. The Mesh is updated with
any changes made to the files or folders the next time the users is
connected to the web.
As the internet supplants the PC as the centre of our digital world,
Microsoft suddenly appears far more capable of tackling the Google
juggernaut than ever before. The platform - part of Microsoft's
concerted push into the web as its software stranglehold on PC users
loosens - is still in beta, but will soon allow users to work with
online applications while offline and house their regular offline
applications on the web, to be accessed by multiple devices. |
| Sydney Morning Herald
Apr 24, 2008 |
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| LED lightbulbs: Are you ready to make the switch? |
LED bulbs for household use have already been around for some time, but
their success has been limited. The main obstacles have been that they
cost more than incandescent lightbulbs and emit a sometimes unnerving
colour of light.
Lighting Science Group this week plans to introduce a portfolio of LED
replacement white lightbulbs that it hopes will attract more consumer
interest. The product line uses the same sockets as Edison bulbs. The
bulbs perform well on a warmth and colour rendering index, they have a
long life cycle, and consume 80% less energy than incandescent bulbs.
At USD 40 to USD 110 apiece, the LED 'in-screw' bulbs may still seem too
pricey for a lot of consumers. But Lighting Science Group's pitch is
that a 50 cent Edison bulb will last for 750 to 3,000 hours, while an
LED has to be replaced only every 50,000 hours (or 10 to 30 years). The
company says the cost savings is almost USD 740 over a lifetime due to
much lower energy consumption. |
| CNET News
Apr 22, 2008 |
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