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Mon Dieu! Citroën's Psychedelic Hynos Will Fry Your Brain   more similar news »
One look at the Hypnos concept vehicle has us convinced someone's tripping in Citroën's interior design department.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Simple Linq Sudoku Solver   more similar news »
A simple way to resolve a sudoku grid, in 10 lines of code.
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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One Laptop signs up with Amazon   more similar news »
Online retailer Amazon will help the One Laptop Per Child organisation with its plans to sell its XO laptop in the US.
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Use LatencyTOP to find out where process latency is coming from   more similar news »
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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JavaScript Expandable / Collapsable Panel Control   more similar news »
This article describes how to create an Expandable / Collapsable Panel Control using JavaScript.
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Poignant lion video inspires movie project   more similar news »
LOS ANGELES/TORONTO (Hollywood Reporter) - Millions have seen the YouTube video of "Christian the Lion" reuniting in Africa with the two men who bought him from a high-end London department store in 1969.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Dell plans to sell computer factories: report   more similar news »
(Reuters) - Dell Inc is trying to sell computer factories around the world in efforts to cut cost and improve profitability, the Wall Street Journal said.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Samsung Elec says mulling SanDisk options   more similar news »
SEOUL (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics Co Ltd said on Friday it was considering "various opportunities" regarding SanDisk, in response to reports it was interested in bidding for the U.S. flash memory maker.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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At ESPN, Play-by-Play Goes Virtual   more similar news »
ESPN is debuting new technology with Electronic Arts that would allow sports commentators to interact with three-dimensional virtual players.
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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PermaLinks for Fun and Profit   more similar news »
PermaLinks provide an easy way to redirect incoming traffic to specific pages, track hits and goals, and prevent external links from expiring.
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Bits: Google’s Photo Face Recognition Is Wow Marketing   more similar news »
Google’s new face recognition system on its Picasa photo sharing site is the sort of show-off technology that helps reinforce its brand.
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Explore 'Puzzle Quest' Designer's New 'Kingdoms'   more similar news »
A first look at Puzzle Kingdoms shows expanded gameplay that's both familiar and promising.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Applied use of LinFu/Cecil and Aspect-Oriented Programming Concepts - a Library   more similar news »
A library of useful functionality using aspect-oriented programming concepts and implemented using the LinFu & Cecil.Mono projects/frameworks
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Chrysler Plug-In Hybrid Revealed (to Dealers)!   more similar news »
Chrysler says it's got "producible prototypes" of a plug-in hybrid with a 300-mile range. We'll have to take its word for it, because it's showing them only to a few dealers.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Deployment Of Web Application Executing SSIS Package In Web Server.   more similar news »
This article describes the prerequisite needed for .Net And SSIS integrated deployment.
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Telecom Reporting Rule May Be Eased    more similar news »
Phone giants AT&T, Verizon Communications and Qwest today are expected to win approval to report less information to the Federal Communications Commission on such matters as consumer complaints and infrastructure investments.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Ciena Shares Sink As Profit Plunges, Outlook Weakens    more similar news »
Shares of Ciena took a hammering yesterday, losing nearly a quarter of their value after the Linthicum Heights company announced a decline in third-quarter profit and warned of a sales slowdown.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Retooled MiddleBrook Gears Up for Big Pitch    more similar news »
As a senior executive at Adams Respiratory Therapeutics, John S. Thievon tackled the challenge of launching a pricey decongestant in a marketplace filled with cheap generics. Ultimately that drug, Mucinex, trampled its competition.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Sept. 5, 1885: Pay at the Pump   more similar news »

1885: Sylvanus F. Bowser delivers the first gasoline pump. It improves safety, but can't guarantee low prices.

The automobile was yet to be invented, and gasoline was a byproduct of refining kerosene for stoves and lamps. Some of that equipment could use gasoline, but it wasn't much in demand.

You bought fuel in a general, hardware or grocery store. You had to bring your own gallon (or whatever) can, and the storekeeper would ladle the flammable fluid from a barrel. Wasteful. Messy. Dangerous.

To reduce spillage, Bowser built a pump in his Fort Wayne, Indiana, barn. He sold and delivered the first one to Fort Wayne merchant Jake Gumper 123 years ago today.

The self-contained unit included a wooden storage barrel, marble valves, a wooden plunger, a hand lever and an upright faucet lever. It was a success. Bowser formed the S.F. Bowser Company and patented his pump in 1887.

The Bowser pump soon became known as a "filling station," and Bowser started selling an improved model to the first automobile-repair garages in 1893.

Most places that sold fuel to motorists used the "drum and measure" method. Gasoline was gravity-fed from a large steel drum into a five-gallon measuring can. The motorist then carried the can over to his automobile and poured the fuel into the car's tank through a funnel that was lined with a chamois filter to remove grit and impurities. A big bother all around, and not awfully safe, either.

Bowser came up with a big improvement in 1905: He enclosed a square, metal tank in a wooden cabinet equipped with a forced-suction pump. A hand-stroke lever pumped the gas. This pump featured air vents for safety, stops that you could set to deliver a predetermined quantity and -- wonder of wonders -- a hose to dispense the gasoline directly into the vehicle's fuel tank. He called it the Bowser Self-Measuring Gasoline Storage Pump. (Rival John J. Tokheim of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, had fitted a pump with a direct-delivery hose in 1903.)

The word bowser soon became a generic term for a vertical gasoline pump. That usage has dropped away in the United States, but lingers in Australia, New Zealand and, to a lesser extent, Canada. A bowser is also a tank truck that delivers fuel to airplanes on the tarmac, and in Britain the term applies as well to self-propelled tanks carrying any fluid that is delivered directly to the end user -- for instance, water after a disaster.

Bowser's later career was quirky and litigious. He invented and personally marketed a backscratcher and a sit-down enema. He also sold postcards of himself next to the "Stone of Scone," part of the coronation throne on which British monarchs sit while being crowned in Westminster Abbey.

Source: Petroleum Collectibles Monthly, others



Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Gallery: Distilling 2.0 -- Bye-Bye Boiling, Hello Health Care   more similar news »
: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

PASADENA, California – For all you moonshine makers who thought your hobby was just a guilty pleasure, a new spin on distilling may actually help save lives. Using ancient technology reduced to a microscopic scale, scientists at Caltech have created new tools to detect disease and purify water using tiny stills.

The creation of the still around A.D. 500 was one of humanity's earliest, and still quite popular, technological advancements. Traditionally, a still boils liquids in order to vaporize and separate them. Now, using nanoparticles and lasers, liquids no longer need to be boiled to be separated.

Removing the heat requirement from distillation means the process could be used to separate living cells without killing them, which could lead to advanced disease detection. Other applications include extracting water cheaply and efficiently from sea water in low-energy saltwater distillation plants.

How do they do it? Take a tour through professor David Boyd's lab and go behind the scenes of this revolutionary process.

Left: A green laser evaporates the water from a liquid. This is the final stage of nano distillation.

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Here is a diagram of the basic nano still technique. At top is the initial setup with gold nanoparticles sitting on top of a glass slide. The fluid waiting to be distilled is enclosed from above by a silicone rubber chip.

In the bottom diagram, a green laser operating near the resonant frequency of the gold particles is applied. The laser heats the gold nanoparticles, which then transfer the heat to the surrounding fluid. This small amount of heat is just enough to cause controlled evaporation over the gas bubble barrier, leaving pure water on the right-hand side of the diagram.

Click through to the next photo to take a closer look at each of these steps.

Illustration: Chemical Separations by Bubble Assisted Interphase Mass-Transfer, David A. Boyd, James Adelman, David Goodwin, and Demetri Psaltis

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

This spin coater is used to spread out the thin layer of gold nanoparticles on the glass slide. A drop of the gold solution is placed on the slide and the coater spins extremely fast. This spinning spreads the solution evenly and coats the slide with a nearly uniform 15-nanometer layer of gold.

To get a controlled spacing of particles there needs to be a structure in place to hold them. To achieve this, scientists add a polymer to the gold solution. This polymer forms a uniform lattice to structure all the gold. But observant readers will notice there was no polymer in the previous diagram. Where does it go? Click to the next photo to find out.

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

This is an oxygen etcher. Once the glass slide is covered with the polymer-and-gold solution, this etcher burns off the polymer, leaving just the gold behind.

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

This is a sample slide covered with a matrix of gold nanoparticles. The purple streaks on the slide are the nanoparticles, visibly spreading out from the initial drop applied to the slide during the spin coating. For those readers expecting the entire slide to be purple, scientists actually need only a small portion of the slide to be covered uniformly by the gold, so these streaks will suffice.

The particles have a unique property of rapidly dissipating heat, which is a key factor in how the still works.

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

In another part of the lab, the piece of silicone rubber is made. If you think back to the second image in this gallery, you'll recall that the silicone rubber encloses the fluid between itself and the glass slide. This piece of silicone is called the microfluidic chip because of the fluid channels carved into it.

The machine pictured at left is called a mask aligner. It creates a mold for the microfluidic chip. It does this by exposing an image (in this case, the shape and design of the chip) to a photosensitive material. The unexposed portion of the material is discarded, and the shape of the mold is all that's left. It's similar to a photo enlarger, but instead of a two-dimensional image, a fully formed nano structure is made. The final mold is then used to create fluid channels in a piece of silicone rubber. This silicone rubber ends up being the microfluidic chip.

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

Here, the silicone rubber chip is drilled to create ports for the nano still. These ports will be used to inject solutions for distillation and to extract the distilled liquid.

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

Tiny plugs of silicone are the doughnut holes of the micro-fabrication world. Sadly, these plugs will remain uneaten.

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

After fabrication of the microfluidic chip, we're ready to put it all together. The chip is glued to the gold-coated slide that we made earlier (pictured at center-left inside petri dish). Now we have a nano still, which has an electronic sensor attached for measuring the conductivity of the fluid.

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

Sometimes science is messy. This workbench is covered with a collection of syringes and gold nanoparticle-coated glass slides. The syringes are used to inject fluids through the ports into the channels in the still, which we'll see in the next photo.

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

In this photo, blue "Smurf blood" food-grade dye is injected into the nano still through a syringe. The dye makes it easy to see when the liquid has been distilled. The distilled water will be clear and the remaining water will become darker due to the higher concentration of dye.

: Photo: Dave Bullock/Wired.com

A low-powered green diode laser shines down into the still. The laser is roughly the same strength as an off-the-shelf laser pointer. Very little energy is needed in the microdistilling process thanks to the heat-dissipating properties of the gold nanoparticles.

Professor Boyd, the lead researcher on the project, reveals that this process was largely discovered by accident. "We had this problem with [an] air bubble, so we started hitting it with a laser. Instead of getting rid of it, we saw that we were actually causing the distillation process to occur, which was completely unexpected," Boyd explains.



Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Blimpin' Ain't Easy: Crossing the English Channel in a Pedal-Powered Airship*   more similar news »
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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C# for MS-DOS: Expression trees compiled into 16-bit MS-DOS binary   more similar news »
C# arithmetic expressions compiled into 8086 machine code (yes, you can run it on Vista :-))
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Michael Moore to Release Next Movie, Slacker Uprising, for Free Online   more similar news »
The Fahrenheit 9/11 director plays the Radiohead card with his new documentary about the 2004 election, Slacker Uprising.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Ruling in TiVo, EchoStar case could be delayed   more similar news »
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A federal judge in Texas on Thursday delayed ruling until as late as November on whether EchoStar Corp owes TiVo Inc more damages for infringing on its "Time Warp" digital video recorder, or DVR, technology.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Microsoft kicks off $300 million Windows marketing push   more similar news »
SEATTLE (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp kicked off a $300 million marketing campaign on Thursday, aimed at improving the image of its Windows Vista operating system and strike back at Apple Inc's "Mac vs. PC" ads.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Bits: Reading Take-Two's Tea Leaves   more similar news »
The game maker Take-Two Interactive reported third-quarter earnings that blew away Wall Street analysts’ projections.
Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Prime time goes virtual   more similar news »
RALEIGH, N.C. (Reuters) - Why watch TV when you can be the star? Digital video recorders have done away with the notion of prime time for millions of gamers. Now game publishers are offering interactive TV stories that have ushered in virtual prime time entertainment.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Giant Ice Sheet Breaks Free in Canada   more similar news »
A 19-square-mile chunk of ice shelf has broken away from Ellesmere Island in Canada's northern Arctic. The 4,500-year-old Markham Ice Shelf is now adrift in the Arctic Ocean.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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EA's Spore aims to create new worlds, businesses   more similar news »
RALEIGH, North Carolina (Reuters) - Electronic Arts Inc's creature-building game "Spore" offers players a chance to develop new worlds -- and maybe even new lines of business for the video game maker.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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Rain Clips Greenbird's Wings   more similar news »
You can't set a land-speed record on mud, so British engineer Richard Jenkins packs up his wind-powered land yacht and heads home.

Fri Sep 05, 2008
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