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  • New system being developed to assess risk of travel-related thrombosis

    Air travellers will soon have an easy way to asses their risk of thrombosis

    Each year, around 80,000 people in Germany become seriously ill from occlusions of veins caused by blood clots. Such thromboses can cause pulmonary embolism or even heart attacks. Air travel is recognized as a risk factor for deep vein thrombosis with evidence showing the wearing of compression socks or tights while traveling reduces the incidence of thrombosis in people on long flights. However many people don’t wear such items as they don’t realize they may be at risk. A new fast and easy test of the risk of travel-related thrombosis will soon be possible – and all airline passengers will have to relinquish is one drop of blood. ..
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  • Seiko unveils ‘Hybrid’ series of PV-powered wrist watches

    seiko hybrid watches pv

    Eco Factor: Wrist watches powered by exposed photovoltaic cells.

    Seiko Watch Corp has announced the developed of a new “Hybrid” series of environmentally friendly wrist watches that are powered by onboard solar panels. The watches will be unveiled May 14, 2010 in Japan. In the past, the company has concealed the solar cells by colored resin plates, but this time they’ve come up with a design that shouts its eco-friendly credentials.

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  • The energy efficient soap lamp uses LEDs

    led-soap-lamp.jpg
    Here’s a lighting device that can light up your bathroom and create a bit of lather to aide your bath too; though it isn’t actually made to do so). This LED lamp is made out of soap, 97% that is. The soap-lamp or the glowing soap, whatever you’d like to call it, was designed by D-Vision and shown off at the Milan Design Week.

    LEDs being a cool source of energy, these little lights do not emit any heat at all, keeping the soap from melting. We’ve seen different types of materials like cloth and plastic being used for lampshades before, soap isn’t one of those. LEDs being energy efficient and long lasting as compared to incandescent bulbs, are finding loads of applications today, including lighting up soap.

    [Inhabitat]

  • MIT Technology Review names 10 technologies that will change the World

    What technologies that will change the World (Photo: Stephan Uhlmann, CC license)

    Here we are in the Information Age. Never before has the flow of ideas, innovation and new technologies been so strong, so much so that it’s hard to imagine what the world will be like in 10, 20 or 50 years time. So which of today’s fledgling technologies will have a fundamental impact on the way we live our lives in the future? MIT’s Technology Review has turned its attention to this question with the release of its annual list of 10 emerging technologies and it makes thought provoking reading.
    ..
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  • Speakers made from recycled paper ceramic

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    You probably love stacking up speakers to hook up your home entertainment system to. What you probably haven’t realized is these speakers can suck in loads of energy to make sweet music. Well here’s something we came across that helps amplify your sweet music, without the use of electricity. Jaws dropped? Read on!

    These “speakers” are made of recycled paper ceramic. They help amplify sound from you earphones and are not to be hooked up to your audio system. Simply place your each earphone in them, and the ceramics do the job of amplifying. Now don’t expect a sound quality of a Bose audio system or the likes. Ceramics are known to give a pretty decent sound quality though. These are something to show off to your environment-conscious buddies.

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    [Treehugger]

  • Micro-Kitty – The world’s first solar powered sex toy

    solar vibe

    Eco Factor: Sex toy powered by renewable solar energy.

    Should I, shouldn’t I? I think, I should! This is what was going through my mind when I first saw the Micro-Kitty. However, owing to its green credentials it becomes my duty to bring to all eco-conscious readers, who’re trying to green their lifestyle by using green gadgets, the Micro-Kitty, which is being touted to be the world’s first solar-powered sex toy which is also phthalate-free.

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  • Doom ported to hacked ZuneHD

    That did not take long.  Less than a week after the ZuneHD has been hacked to allow arbitrary software, a port of the ever popular Doom first person shooter has been released on Zuneboards.com.

    Much like Windows Phone 7, the ZuneHD is a locked down system with only access to high level APIs that are sandboxed, and on the ZuneHD prevented access to the 3D graphics accelerator.  The Doom port shows the potential of getting direct access to the hardware, and we will hopefully see a similar hack for Windows phone 7 soon after release also.

    Via Engadget.com


  • Photo for Today – Temple of Derr





    Temple of Derr, Lake Nasser
    Rock cut temple of Ramesses II, moved during Nubian Rescue Campaign.
    It was originally on the east bank of the Nile and was later
    used as a Coptic church, which accounts for some of the damage.
    However, in spite of the Coptic usage colourful friezes still survive.
    The temple is often described as crude, but I found it to be charming.
    The deities above are, from left to right, Thoth, Ptah and Sekhmet.
    There is a plan of the site on the Tour Egypt website.
  • Norway’s wooden building to be the tallest in the world

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    We’ve heard of wooden floorings in our homes before. A wooden building does sound weird though. Norway will soon have one of these. The Barents Secretariat Tower is what will be the tallest wooden structure in the world. 144 feet high, the tower was designed by the Reiulf Ramstad Architects. The 16 to 17 storey tall building will be fantasy come true in the world of environment friendly building structures.

    Built using recycled materials, the buildings integrated systems enable it to adapt with seasonal weather changes. The building also biodegradable household and industrial waste for biogas production, making it sustainable form the exterior structure as well as its interior. A building like this could be risky though, taken that the wood is quite flammable. A whole load of precautions will need to be taken there.

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    [ArchDaily]

  • New screens leak from the myTouch 3G Slide

    TmoNews has uploaded a gallery of new screens which were taken from the upcoming myTouch Slide 3G. We already posted some early impressions of T-Mobile’s next phone in the myTouch series, but this is the first time we have gotten a closer look at the new Sense UI codenamed Espresso.

    One new feature revealed is myModes which allows the user to create custom desktop themes and easily switch between them. This feature was originally called Scenes on other Sense UI phones, but T-Mobile has done a lot of UI tweaking for this device.

    Another program spotted is the new Genius Button app which launches a voice command prompt. Users can call a friend, dictate a text message, search the web, or find directions with the click of a single button.

    Hit up the source link for the rest of the pics.

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  • A wearable that collects environmental data, the Atmo

    Atmo from Ishac Bertran on Vimeo.

    Now here’s something that you can wear and collect environmental data at the same time. Designed and developed by Ishac Bertran and Mayo Nissen at the Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design, the Atmo is still in its experimental stages. The Atmo, a wearable, gathers and records environmental data and displays to users the pollutants and toxins they are being exposed to in the atmosphere around them. That’s not all.

    The Atmo can also hook up to what will be a centralized authority to help in mapping environmental conditions in real-time. With a device like this, we are sure to know where that terrible toxic smell is coming from and help warn others to keep away from it, when connected to the central authority.

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    [Fashioningtech]

  • Samsung and Sprint to celebrate Earth Day with recyclable Samsung Restore

    samsung restore

    Eco Factor: Eco-friendly cellphone made from 84 percent recyclable materials.

    Samsung and Sprint have unveiled their second eco-friendly handset together, the Samsung Restore. The Samsung Restore features award-winning Sprint One Click customizable user interface and offers environmentally conscious customers the perfect blend of technology with an environmentally friendly design.

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  • DS homebrew – fb4nds v1.3

    Homebrew coder Lino has recently released a new version of fb4nds, a simple Facebook client application for the Nintendo DS. Notable features of the latest update of the homebrew includes the addition of search friend function and

  • Volkswagen’s Milano electric taxi

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    City streets will be a cleaner place, if we have taxis like the Milano around. Volkswagen’s new battery powered taxi was unveiled at the Hanover Trade Show in Germany this week. The car does away with the passenger door on the driver’s side, allowing passengers to get off on the curb. Also, the front passenger seat is ripped off to make room for luggage.

    Using lithium-ion batteries, the Milano boasts a 186 mile drivable range on the EU cycle with a 45 kilowatt-hour pack mounted in the floor. This car is a concept design as of now. Hopefully, Volkswagen, the German automaker does come up with a vehicle like this for production in future.

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    [Autoblog]

  • More cancer-fighting nanotech

    Research has found carbon nanotubes can help the body’s immune system fight cancer. Hit this link for all my cancer-related nanotechnology blogging.

    From the first link:

    Carbon nanotubes boost cancer-fighting cells

    New Haven, Conn.—Yale University engineers have found that the defects in carbon nanotubes cause T cell antigens to cluster in the blood and stimulate the body’s natural immune response. Their findings, which appear as the cover article of the April 20 issue of the journal Langmuir, could improve current adoptive immunotherapy, a treatment used to boost the body’s ability to fight cancer.

    Adoptive immunotherapy involves extracting a patient’s blood so that the number of naturally occurring T cells (a type of white blood cell) can reproduce more effectively in the laboratory. Although the body produces its own tumor-fighting T cells, they are often suppressed by the tumor and are too few to be effective. Scientists boost the production of T cells outside the body using different substances that encourage T cell antigens to cluster in high concentrations. The better these substances are at clustering T cell antigens, the greater the immune cell proliferation. Once enough T cells are produced, the blood is transferred back into the patient’s body.

    The Yale team had previously reported the unexpected effect that carbon nanotubes had on T cell production. They found that the antigens, when presented on the surface of the nanotubes, stimulated T cell response far more effectively than coating other substrates such as polystyrene in the antigens, even though the total amount of antigens used remained the same.

    Now they have discovered the reason behind the increased stimulation. They found that the antigens cluster in high concentrations around the tiny defects found in the carbon nanotubes.

    “Carbon nanotube bundles resemble a lymph node microenvironment, which has a labyrinth sort of geometry,” said Tarek Fahmy, associate professor of chemical engineering and biomedical engineering at Yale and senior author of the paper. “The nanotube bundles seem to mimic the physiology and adsorb more antigens, promoting a greater immunological response.”

    Current adoptive immunotherapy takes weeks to produce enough T cells, but lab tests showed that the nanotubes produced the same T cell concentration in just one-third the time, Fahmy said.

    Carbon nanotubes can cause problems, such as an embolism, when used in the body. But this isn’t the case when they are used in blood that has been extracted from the patient, Fahmy said. Next, the team will work on a way to effectively remove the carbon nanotubes from the blood before it is returned to the patient.

    “We think this is a really interesting use of carbon nanotubes. It’s a way to exploit the unique properties of this material for biological application in a safe way.”

    ###

    Other authors of the paper include lead author Tarek Fadel, Michael Look, Peter Staffier, Gary Haller and Lisa Pfefferle, all of the Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science.

  • MuckBuster anaerobic digester generates energy from poop

    muckbuster

    Eco Factor: Anaerobic digester produces renewable energy from organic materials.

    SEaB Energy has announced a new anaerobic digested that is built inside a repurposed shipping container and can produce renewable energy from any organic material. Dubbed the MuckBuster, the device is a self-contained digested that uses animal waste, grass clippings or stuff bound for the septic tank to generate renewable energy.

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  • Latest NASA satellite image of Iceland’s Eyjafjallajökull volcano

    Here you go:

    Caption: The MODIS instrument on NASA’s Terra satellite captured a visible image of the ash plume (brown) drifting south and east from Eyjafjallajökull volcano in Iceland at 11:55 UTC (7:55 a.m. EDT).

    Credit: NASA’s MODIS Rapid Response Team

    For more information, here’s the full release accompanying this image.

  • Hide The Decline II

    Article Tags: YouTube

    I’m no lawyer, but believe that for a libel or slander lawsuit to be successful, the plaintiff must prove that the defendants knew what they said was false, and that truth is an absolute defense. Thus, if Michael Mann is foolish enough to proceed in his threatened lawsuit against Minnesotans 4 Global Warming for their Hide the Decline parody video, he will:

    1. Need to prove that Phil Jones email to Mann about Mike [Mann’s] Nature Trick to “hide the decline” doesn’t really refer to Mann “hiding the decline” in the tree ring data, which show decreasing temperatures after 1960.

    2. Need to prove that Mann’s email to Phil Jones on June 4, 2003, stating “it would be nice to try to “contain” the putative “MWP” [Medieval Warming Period], even if we don’t yet have a hemispheric mean reconstruction available that far back” does not show scientific malfeasance.

    3. Need to prove that Mann’s hockey stick isn’t one of the most thoroughly debunked scientific papers of the 20th century

    Source: hockeyschtick.blogspot.com

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  • Met Office blasted for ‘unnecessarily’ triggering six-day British airspace closure by Paul Bentley and Claire Bates, Daily Mail

    Article Tags: Met Office

    The Met Office unnecessarily triggered the six-day closure of British airspace which has cost passengers, airlines and the economy more than £1.5billion, according to senior officials.
    A scientific model based on ‘probability’ rather than fact was used by the government agency to forecast the spread of the volcanic ash cloud, according to critics.

    Matthias Ruete, the European Commission’s director general of transport, said air traffic authorities should not have imposed a widespread ban.

    He suggested the ban should have been restricted to a 20 to 30 mile limit around the volcano in Iceland.

    He said: ‘The science behind the model we are running at the moment is based on certain assumptions where we do not have scientific evidence. It is a black box in certain areas.’

    Results of 40 or so European test flights over the weekend, including a British Airways flight on Sunday, suggested the risks were not as high as computer models predicted

    None found evidence of any ash in engines, windows or lubrication systems.

    Source: dailymail.co.uk

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  • BIG proposal for Quebec’s Beaux-Arts Expansion features a walkable green roof

    beaux arts expansion musee_1

    Eco Factor: Sustainable development to minimize energy consumption.

    BIG Architects have proposed a sustainable design for Quebec’s Beaux-Arts Expansion that including a sloping green roof that people can actually walk on. Though the entry didn’t win the competition, their proposal definitely is sustainable and can reduce energy consumption.

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