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Submission + - Google: Gmail users 'have no legitimate expectation of privacy' (rt.com)

KDEnut writes: As tensions worsen among privacy-focused email users amid the escalating scandal surrounding government surveillance, a brief filed by attorneys for Google has surfaced showing that Gmail users should never expect their communications to be kept secret.

Submission + - Controlled Tornadoes Create Renewable Energy (discovermagazine.com) 1

An anonymous reader writes: Source

Tornadoes may be destructive, but even funnel clouds have a silver lining. Inspired by the process that creates natural twisters, electrical engineer Louis Michaud of Canada’s AVEtec Energy Corp. designed a nonpolluting source of swirling power he calls the Atmospheric Vortex Engine. The device can spin waste heat from power plants into usable energy.

Instead of directing excess heat into conventional cooling towers that simply disperse it into the air, power plants could usher the heat into the hollow, open-topped tower of a vortex engine. A heat exchanger outside the tower transfers the extra heat (piped in as warm water) to ambient air.

When this warmed air is directed into the tower at an angle, it encounters cooler air and produces a circular current. This current funnels air upward into a controlled twister whose low-pressure center draws more air into the tower, turning turbines at its base. These turbines drive a generator much like a wind turbine does, except, as Michaud says, “You’ve got more oomph to push it with.”

Michaud has already demonstrated working models of the engine up to 15 feet across, but the real deal would measure 300 feet wide and half as tall, capable of producing tamed twisters that stretch nine miles high. When hooked up to the average 500-megawatt natural-gas or coal power plant, the vortex engine could produce an extra 200 megawatts of energy just by putting the excess heat to use.

At a cost of less than 3 cents per kilowatt-hour, tornado energy is cheaper than burning coal (which rings up at 4 or 5 cents per kwh) and produces no additional greenhouse gases.

The vortex engine could also run on heat sources other than power plants. “You’ve got to have warm air, and you’ve got to have spin,” Michaud says. Solar heat or warm ocean waters fit the bill. “If there’s enough energy in warm seawater to produce a hurricane,” Michaud says, “there’s enough energy to run a vortex engine.”

Submission + - The First "Practical" Jetpack May Be on Sale in Two Years (vice.com) 1

Daniel_Stuckey writes: This week, New Zealand-based company Martin Aircraft became certified to take what it calls "the world's first practical jetpack" out for a series of manned test flights. If all goes well, the company plans to start selling a consumer version of the jetpack in 2015, starting at $150,000 to $200,000 and eventually dropping to $100,000. "For us it's a very important step because it moves it out of what I call a dream into something which I believe we're now in a position to commercialize and take forward very quickly," CEO Peter Coker told Agence France Presse .

Submission + - 10 Wearable Habitats to Shelter You From the Apocalypse (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: The end may not be nigh, but with vicious storms, severe flooding, and rising temperatures becoming the new normal, the apocalypse might be closer than we think. In the case of a cataclysmic event that could displace thousands, if not millions, of people, the availability of emergency shelter becomes a pressing concern. Here are 10 "wearable shelters" that serve as protective all-weather garments in the day and insulating dwellings at night.

Submission + - MIT Startup's Coffee-Infuse Socks Neutralize Stinky Feet (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: Summer swelter have your feet in funk? Ministry of Supply is launching a line of men’s dress socks that are engineered to eliminate sweat and odor while providing all-day comfort at key pressure points. Derived from coffee-infused recycled-polyester fibers, the “Atlas” acts like a “Brita filter for your feet, according to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology-based startup, which launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund its development.

Submission + - This Bizarre Coat is Made Entirely of Male Chest Hair (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: We doubt if a phone call to PETA would result in a protest response to a new “fur” coat made entirely from millions of male chest hairs (yes, it’s true and no, men were not injured in the making of this product). UK dairy company Arla commissioned the coat for a series of parody advertisements in support of a new chocolate milk drink aimed at men for the brand Wing-Co. The “Man-fur Coat” is said to be “a wake-up call for the nation’s gents. A way to encourage them to readopt the values of assured ‘men’s men’ from yesteryear who would laugh nonchalantly in the face of adversity and be proud of their abundant manliness”.

Submission + - Solar Power Goes Couture With Pauline van Dongen's Avant-Garde Wearables (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: No power socket? No problem. That mass of incandescent gas in the sky has you covered. But unless you want to feel like a walking gadget, harnessing the power of the sun requires more than slapping photovoltaic panels onto your person. Wearable Solar, a nascent clothing line founded by Gelderland Valoriseer's Christiaan Holland, fashion designer Pauline van Dongen, and solar-panel specialist Gertjan Jongerden, seeks to merge functionality and aesthetics in a manner that's as appealing to behold as it is to use. The team's prototypes—a coat and a dress—feature a series of solar-powered flaps that unfurl in the sunlight. Alternatively, the sections fold away "invisibly" when not in use.

Submission + - Abercrombie & Fitch Gets Trolled by YouTube Campaign to Clothe the Homeless (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: After remarks emerged that Abercrombie & Fitch would rather destroy its clothes than see them on poor people, Greg Karber decided to take action. The L.A. writer-filmmaker has started a campaign to distribute the store’s garments to the homeless. In a YouTube video released on Monday, Karber is seen scouring the “douchebag section” of his local Goodwill for Abercrombie-branded merchandise. He then heads to Skid Row in East Los Angeles, home to one of the largest populations of homeless people in the United States, to hand them out.

Submission + - Hot Pop Factory Debuts World's First 3D-Printed Wooden Jewelry (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: Extruded plastic baubles not your thing? Rapid-prototype firm Hot Pop Factory just unveiled the world’s first three-dimensionally printed wooden necklaces. Named after the northern forest, the limited-edition “Boreal” collection, uses recycled cherrywood filaments instead of the typical powdered nylon. Mixed with a binding polymer, the material emanates the “slightest scent of charred wood” during the 42-minute printing process, according to founders Matt Compeau and Bi-Ying Miao, who use a Makerbot Replicator for their fabrications. The resulting curvature and heat-induced striations, much like fingerprints or the rings of a tree, are unique to each individual piece.

Submission + - Bangladesh Garment-Factory Collapse Kills Nearly 100 People, Injures a Thousand (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: An eight-story facility that housed several garment factories and shops collapsed in Bangladesh on Wednesday, killing at least 96 people, injuring more than 800, and trapping a yet-unknown number under the mass of concrete rubble, according to officials. Firefighters and emergency personnel dug through the ruins of the Rana Plaza building in Savar, a suburb of the South Asian nation's capital of Dhaka, just five months after a fire at the Tazreen Fashions factory killed at least 112 garment workers in the worst industrial disaster the country had ever seen. The latest accident comes at time when questions are being raised about the safety issues that plague Bangladesh's booming garment industry, which is second only to China's in terms of exports.

Submission + - PHOTOS: Gap Turns Indonesia's Rivers Into Unnaturally Multicolored Chemical Soup (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: When Gap told the world to "be true to your hue," it probably didn't have Indonesia's waterways in mind. Yet the retail giant, which also owns the Banana Republic, Old Navy, Piperlime, and Athleta labels, is among a raft of brands that have turned the Citarum River in West Java into an unnaturally florid chemical cocktail, according to Greenpeace. Published on Wednesday, Toxic Threads: Polluting Paradise details how the company's business relations with P.T. Gistex, who runs the polluting facility, has transformed a once-pristine watershed into a sewer of toxic, hormone-disrupting, and highly persistant substances.

Submission + - Civet poop coffee may be threatening wildlife (mongabay.com)

Damien1972 writes: Popularization of the world's strangest coffee may be imperiling a a suite of small mammals in Indonesia, according to a new study in Small Carnivore Conservation. The coffee, known as kopi luwak (kopi for coffee and luwak for the civet), is made from whole coffee beans that have passed through the gut of the animal. The coffee is apparently noted for its distinct taste, though some have argued it is little more than novelty. Now, this burgeoning kopi luwak industry is creating "civet farms," whereby civets are captured from the wild and kept in cages to eat and crap out coffee beans.
Apple

Submission + - Are We Headed for a Smartwatch War? (ecouterre.com)

fangmcgee writes: You thought the smartphone wars were bad? Just wait till the battle heats up over the smartwatch. As Samsung goes public with its plans for a wristwatch-style computer, and rumors of an Apple “iWatch” hits fever pitch, the giants of the tech world have just begun to fight. Not that companies aren’t already competing for real estate on your arm, of course. Sony released an Android-powered model last April. The Pebble watch, which raised a record-smashing $10 million on Kickstarter, began shipping in January. And let’s not even mention the plethora of fitness bracelets—Fitbit, Jawbone Up, Nike Fuelband—that are vying for a slice of an increasingly saturated market.

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