Archive | March, 2006

An Idea Market

31 Mar

Here are some executives experimenting with an “idea market”, where everyone can post ideas, then those ideas become “stocks” that the rest of the employees can “buy”. The market allows an efficient way to “vote” on the best ideas.

“LIKE many top executives, James R. Lavoie and Joseph M. Marino keep a close eye on the stock market. But the two men, co-founders of Rite-Solutions, a software company that builds advanced ‚Äî and highly classified ‚Äî command-and-control systems for the Navy, don’t worry much about Nasdaq or the New York Stock Exchange.
Instead, they focus on an internal market where any employee can propose that the company acquire a new technology, enter a new business or make an efficiency improvement. These proposals become stocks, complete with ticker symbols, discussion lists and e-mail alerts. Employees buy or sell the stocks, and prices change to reflect the sentiments of the company’s engineers, computer scientists and project managers ‚Äî as well as its marketers, accountants and even the receptionist.”

Link

Point Of View

28 Mar

Julian Beever’s pavement drawings
“Anamorphic illusions drawn in a special distortion in order to create an impression of 3 dimensions when seen from one particular viewpoint. The Portable Computer and the General Election drawings were commissioned by companies as part of a promotion and an event.”

Link

Check out these 3D illusion chalk drawings:

Here is a different view of the globe drawing:

Here is the “wrong” view of the pool and swimmer:

CPUShare – The Low Cost Supercomputer

25 Mar

CPUShare is a softare/ website that allows you to share your computer’s idle processing power to use it for supercomputing. The CPUs from many computers can be pooled over the Internet to create one big supercomputer.

The time you allow your computer to be used will earn you time on the supercomputer for your own calculations, or if you prefer, cold hard cash.


"CPUShare is a research project founded with the goal of connecting together the computers of the Internet in order to create a general purpose Low Cost and World Wide Supercomputer available to everybody to use in a matter of minutes, controlled by a market for the CPU resources that chooses the price of the CPU resources using the supply and demand law in real time.
CPUShare allows the home users to profit from the significant power of their hardware that otherwise would be wasted every day. "

Link

Six-Stroke Engine

25 Mar

The new six-stroke engine may revolutionize the modern auto engine
A more effecient 6-stroke engine has been built. It takes the energy that a normal engine would lose- and harnesses it for more power. Less power is lost to heat, and more is kept to run the engine.

The engine is about 40% more efficient, and runs cooler than a normal engine.

A “STROKE” OF GENIUS?
There is another fundamental change for the 6-stroke engine, other than 2 additional strokes (compared to standard modern engines). During these new strokes, instead of pumping more fuel into the chamber, his design injects water. Since the chamber is very hot, the water immediately turns to steam- expanding rapidly – forcing the piston down for a second power stroke. An exhaust cycle pushes the steam out of the chamber, and then the six-stroke cycle starts over again.

COOLER – AND VERY COOL
Besides providing the additional power, this additional “water cycle” cools the engine from within. This makes the radiator and cooling fans obsolete. So, despite not having a modern coolant system, his engine is cool enough to the touch while it is running in tests.

“We’ve been trying to think how to capture radiator losses for over 30 years”, explains the veteran camshaft grinder and race engine builder. “One morning about 18 months ago I woke up, like from a dream, and I knew immediately that I had the answer.”

Hurrying to his comprehensively-equipped home workshop in the rural hills outside San Diego, he began drawing and machining parts, and installing them in a highly modified, single-cylinder industrial powerplant, a 12-hp diesel he converted to use gasoline. He bolted that to a test frame, poured equal amounts of fuel and water into twin tanks, and pulled the starter-rope.

“My first reaction was, Gulp! It runs!”, the 75-year-old inventor remembers…”

Link

Bacteria could power nanobots

20 Mar

The power for nano robots could come from tiny bacterium…

“Researchers at Rice University and the University of Southern California have embarked on a project to harness the power of Shewanella oneidensis, a microorganism that essentially spits lightning. Rather than consume oxygen to turn food into energy, Shewanella consumes metals.

The waste product of its metabolic process comes in the form of excess electrons stripped from the metals but not recombined in subsequent chemical reactions. The bacteria lives in soil, water and other environments and can extract its necessary nutrients from a variety of materials.”

Link

Slacking improves business

19 Mar

In the new century, where innovation is more important than ever in the workplace, overtime may not always be the best use of time. Workers need to spend time outside of work doing other things to help creativity an problem solving. Also, attention is chopped into ever smaller chunks of time where strategic thinking is impossible. Employees must be able to spend some time in larger, contemplative chunks.

“”Companies need to respect the time it takes to do strategic thinking,” he says. “Task-oriented thinking is important too, of course. But bigger thinking is slow.”

The late Peter Drucker agreed. He wrote in The Effective Executive (an eerily prescient 40 years ago), “All one can think and do in a short time is to think what one already knows and to do as one has always done.” Gulp.

Moreover, in Drucker’s view, simply working longer and longer hours won’t help. “To be effective, every knowledge worker, and especially every executive…needs to dispose of time in fairly large chunks,” he wrote. “To have small dribs and drabs of time at his disposal will not be sufficient even if the total is an impressive number of hours.””

Link

New state of matter created

19 Mar

Atoms in new state of matter behave like Three Musketeers: All for one, one for all

An international team of physicists has converted three normal atoms into a special new state of matter whose existence was proposed by Russian scientist Vitaly Efimov in 1970.

In this new state of matter, any two of the three atoms–in this case cesium atoms– repel one another in close proximity. “But when you put three of them together, it turns out that they attract and form a new state,” said Cheng Chin, an Assistant Professor in Physics at the University of Chicago.

Chin, along with 10 scientists led by Rudolf Grimm at the University of Innsbruck in Austria, report this development in the March 16 issue of the journal Nature. The paper describes the experiment in Grimm’s laboratory where for the first time physicists were able to observe the Efimov state in a vacuum chamber at the ultracold temperature of a billionth of a degree above absolute zero (minus 459.6 degrees Fahrenheit).

This new state behaves like the Borromean ring, a symbol of three interlocking circles that has historical significance in Italy. The Borromean concept also exists in physics, chemistry and mathematics.

“This ring means that three objects are entangled. If you pick up any one of them, the other two will follow. However, if you cut one of them off, the other two will fall apart,” Chin said. “There is something magic about this number of three.”

The Innsbruck experiment involved three cesium atoms, a soft metal used in atomic clocks, formed into a molecule that manifested the Efimov state. But in theory the Efimov state should apply universally to other sets of three particles at ultracold temperatures. “If you can create this kind of state out of any other type of particle, it’ll have exactly the same behavior,” Chin said.

The finding may lead to the establishment of a new research specialty devoted to understanding the quantum mechanical behavior of just a few interacting particles, Grimm said. Quantum mechanics governs the interactions of atoms and subatomic particles, but is best understood when applied to systems consisting of two particles or of many particles.

A good understanding of systems that contain just a handful of particles still eludes scientists. That may change as scientists begin to produce laboratory experiments that simulate systems made of just three or four particles, like those found in the nucleus of an atom.

Now that the Efimov state has been achieved, scientists can aspire to engineer the very properties of matter, Chin said. The Innsbruck-Chicago team exerted total control over the atoms in the experiment, converting them into the Efimov state and back into normal atoms at will.

“This so-called quantum control over the fundamental properties of matter now seems feasible. We’re not limited to the properties of, say, aluminum, or the properties of the copper of these particles. We are really creating a new state in which we can control their properties.”

Today, nanotechnology researchers can combine atoms in novel ways to form materials with interesting new properties, “but you are not changing the fundamental interactions of these atoms,” Chin said. That can only be done at temperatures near absolute zero. “At the moment, I don’t see how this can be done at much higher temperatures,” he said.

Chin began working with Grimm’s group as a visiting scientist at the University of Innsbruck from 2003 until 2005. He continued the collaboration after joining the University of Chicago faculty last year.

“Cheng was very excited about the prospects of observing Efimov physics in cesium already as a Ph.D. student at Stanford,” Grimm said. The 1999 Stanford experiment, led by physicists Vladan Vuletic and Steven Chu, was conducted at one millionth of a degree above absolute zero. “Now we know that their sample was too hot” to observe the Efimov state, Grimm said.

Added Chin: “After working on cesium for many years, this is a dream come true for me.”

From the University of Chicago

Nanotechnology may be able to repair brains

19 Mar

Nanotech to fix brains…

“Rodents blinded by brain damage had their vision partially restored within weeks after being treated with nanotechnology developed by bioengineers and neuroscientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The findings provide evidence that similar strategies might someday work in humans.
“If we can reconnect parts of the brain that were disconnected by stroke, then we may be able to restore speech to an individual who is able to understand what is said but has lost the ability to speak,” study co-author Rutledge G. Ellis-Behnke, research scientist in MIT’s department of brain and cognitive sciences, said in a prepared statement.”

Link

Hacking the universe

18 Mar

Quantum computing is really just a way to "hack" the universe. According to this MIT professor in an interview with Wired, the universe is a computer that we are learning to hack.

"Seth Lloyd is the kind of guy you’d like to have a beer with. Between gulps, the MIT prof will impart the details of how the universe really works. And if you order another, he’ll give you a summary of one of the most mind-boggling ideas emerging in science today. His new book, Programming the Universe, is a plainspoken tale of how the universe is – tell me if you’ve heard this before – one very large quantum computer. – Kevin Kelly"

Link

Google buys Writely

11 Mar


Google has hooked up with Writely, the online word processor. You read about Writely last year here on TomorrowsTrends:

From TomorrowsTrends.com:
Writely and the Web’s future
“…Writely, great concept… and it really portends the future of software. I can really see a lot more applications moving this direction over the next few years.
…”

Link

The idea here may be that Google is putting together a complete, online “Google Office”. Google is already working on a calendar, and already has a great eMail application.

We will probably see an ad-supported suite of online applications that will allow you to do a lot more powerful things online.

Now, Google needs a spreadsheet application to round out the full portfolio. How about NumSum? ( http://www.numsum.com/ ). It is like Writely, except that it’s an online spreadsheet.


Let’s compare, Microsoft Office, to a theoretical G-Office…

Mail
MS = Outlook
Google = GMail and future calendar
Word Processor
MS = Word
Google = Writely
Spreadsheet
MS= Excel
Google = ?? (Numsum? asks Tomorrow’s Trends?)
Database
MS = Access
Google = Google Base (ok, stretching here a little, but they are both databases in a sense)
Presentation
MS = PowerPoint
Google = ? (Not sure what the comparable online app would be here… Google Pages? Not exactly)

MS = $$$$$
Google = Free/ Ad based
MS = Some collaborative capabilities
Google = Smoother, online collaborative capabilities