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Power

Submission + - free energy demo melts

boldra writes: Steorn's perpetual motion engine (reported here yesterday) has apparently melted beyond repair. According to CEO Sean McCarthy:

Technical problems arose during the installation of the demonstration unit in the display case on Wednesday evening. These problems were primarily due to excessive heat from the lighting in the main display area. Attempts to replace those parts affected by the heat led to further failures and as a result we have to postpone the public demonstration until a future date.
They may have cheated thermodynamics, but they're still victims of Murphy!
Media

Submission + - Petition the Prime Minister on BBC Microsoft Deal (pm.gov.uk)

apodyopsis writes: "There is a e-Petition on the UK government website about the recently announced BBC/Microsoft deal to use Windows based DRM on the BBC website. The petition asks the Prime Minister to raise this issue in parliament. From the e-Petition:

"We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to raise the subject of the Microsoft BBC deal to parliment."

"The BBC has announced that its iPlayer due for release later this year will be based around proprietary Microsoft codecs and DRM and hence be neither open source or available to some operating systems. This has already been raised and criticized by the OSC (Open Source Consortium). More information can be found on the BBC website and on the open source consortium website. This goes against common sense and government or BBC policy to be open."

e-Petition is here:
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/bbcmicrosoft/

Email your friends, pass the link, post it on newsgroups. Anything you can to raise the publicity of this.

e-Petitions do get responses, remember the one about car pay-by-mile systems that forced a personal response from the Prime Minister.

(Disclaimer: I helped setup this petition)"

Editorial

Submission + - Gore calls for new climate treaty by 2009 (nytimes.com)

mdsolar writes: "The NYT has provided Al Gore a platform to call for a new climate treaty

that cuts global warming pollution by 90 percent in developed countries and by more than half worldwide in time for the next generation to inherit a healthy Earth.
to be ratified by the end of 2009.

Gore starts his political argument quoting the Gipper on how an alien invasion would unify the world, talks about the need for American Leadership, says Americans

deserve better than a government that censors the best scientific evidence and harasses honest scientists who try to warn us about looming catastrophe. They deserve better than politicians who sit on their hands and do nothing to confront the greatest challenge that humankind has ever faced — even as the danger bears down on us.
and finishes by saying that we are privileged to experience

a generational mission; a compelling moral purpose; a shared cause; and the thrill of being forced by circumstances to put aside the pettiness and conflict of politics and to embrace a genuine moral and spiritual challenge.
Does it make any sense to push up a new treaty by 3 years when the old treaty is going to be very hard to observe by the end of the compliance period (2012)? Is leading with the Gipper in an especially weird moment, something that works? Is mention of attacks on climate geeks politics or morality?"

The Internet

Submission + - Wikipedia's role in wrestler murder/suicide case

93,000 writes: "Relating to the apparent murder/suicide, CNN reports that the Wikipedia entry for WWE wrestler Chris Benoit was edited to mention the death of his wife — fourteen hours before the authorities found the bodies. Even more interesting, according to CNN: "A Wikipedia official, Cary Bass, said Thursday that the entry was made by someone using an Internet protocol address registered in Stamford, Connecticut, where World Wrestling Entertainment is based.""
Announcements

Submission + - MYT Combustion Engine - 150 mpg !!! (greencarcongress.com)

An anonymous reader writes: A California inventor is developing a new compact and highly efficient engine — the Massive Yet Tiny (MYT) engine — that promises high power output with a very high power to weight ratio (20:1). The inventor, Raphial Morgado, recently won first prize in the 2005 Emhart-NASA Tech Briefs Design Contest for his work on the engine.

The engine moves pistons on different rotors relative to each other to form combustion chambers of variable volume in a toroidal cylinder. The pistons move in stepwise fashion, with the pistons on one rotor travelling a predetermined distance while the pistons on the other rotor remain substantially stationary.

Fuel is drawn into a chamber as one of the pistons defining the chamber moves away from the other, and then compressed as the second piston moves toward the first.
Myt2
The cycles of the MYT engine. Click to enlarge.

Combustion of the fuel drives the first piston away from the second, and the spent gases are then expelled from the chamber by the second piston moving again toward the first. An output shaft is connected to the rotors in such manner that the shaft rotates continuously while the rotors and pistons move in their stepwise fashion.

The engine fires 16 times on one revolution of the crankshaft, 32 times on two. By comparison, a standard V8 fires four times per crankshaft revolution — one-quarter the number of the MYT. Angel Labs, the company developing the engine, calculates the equivalent displacement of the MYT as 848 cubic inches (13.9 liters), with a 3-inch bore and a 3.75-inch stroke. The company further calculates that the 14" x 14", 150-pound prototype could produce power in excess of 3,000 hp.

        [The 3,000 hp rating] is conservatively estimated from 850 CID. A conventional engine can produce 4 hp per CID (when turbo charged). Four times 850 [the equivalent displacement] is more than 3,000. Our data of air motoring (800 lb.ft. of torque from 150 psi of compressed air) extrapolates to more than 4,000 lb.ft. of torque when fuel is ignited, exceeding our conservative estimate.
        — Jin K. Kim, Managing Member, Angel Labs

The design is also modular. Additional MYT units can be connected by removing the rear cover of the engine and connecting another ME chamber assembly. With a dual-assembly configuration, the engine becomes a "64-cylinder" engine with 1,695 cubic inches displacement (27.8 liters), raising the power-to-weight ratio up to a projected 40:1.

The engine uses only about 20% of the number of parts normally found in a reciprocating internal combustion engine, and only 12 of the MYT parts are moving parts, reducing friction and parasitic losses.

Unlike a reciprocating combustion engine, the MYT engine permits a piston dwell at the equivalent of Top Dead Center (TDC) — the starting point for combustion. The current prototype is set for a piston dwell of approximately 12 degrees of the crankshaft rotation. By adding in that delay under combustion before permitting the power stroke, the MYT burns a greater percentage of the fuel and air mixture in the combustion chamber, resulting in a more complete combustion.

        All we know is that 12-degrees dwell at the TDC, which no other engine can do, will burn all the fuels completely. Therefore, we expect very clean emissions.
        — Jin K. Kim

Other features of the engine include:

        *

            The ability to support a compression ratio as high as 70:1.
        *

            No valves. The MYT uses open ports with no restriction. Airflow action is one way.
        *

            The entire engine acts as a heat sink and a radiator. It is both air and oil cooled.
        *

            There is no thrust loading on piston skirts.
        *

            Pistons do not touch the cylinder walls, only the rings do.
        *

            Pistons travel only the same direction. No reciprocation, only stop and go.
        *

            There are no cylinder heads, no cam shaft, no valves (the ME is equivalent to the bottom end of a reciprocating engine).
        *

            Intake compression and power stroke and exhaust stroke events are happening all at the same time, so there are no load strokes.

The MYT engine is not the first implementation of rotating pistons in a toroidal cylinder — the 1968 Tschudi engine is very similar in concept. (A newer derivative is by Hoose, 2005.) The key to the MYT engine is its timing mechanism.

        The stop and go actions can be generated in many different ways, but you can not have active locking mechanism, because it will break under repeated stress. It took Raphial, who usually can invent in a couple of hours per invention, more than two years to come up with this invention (he threw away about 10 different ways of implementation.)
        — Jin Kim, in the Angel Labs forum

Angel Labs is targeting a number of application: autombiles and trucks, pumps and compressors, aviation (helicopter, fixed wing and UAV), and military. Their goal is to license the technology non-exclusively to everyone. According to Jin Kim, Angel Labs is currently in discussions with Lockheed Margin, Boeing, Ford and several smaller potential licensees.

(A hat-tip to Bob C!)

Math

Submission + - Faster integer multiplication

origins writes: On the STOC 2007,thesis about faster integer multiplication was submitted. According to the thesis,multiplication can be calculated faster than ever. Schönhage&Strassen algorithm was known as fastest(O(n log n log log n)) but now Martin Fürer algorithm was((n log n 2^O(log* n)). improvement of multiplication algorithm after decades is quite interesting.
Martin Fürer's homepage
The thesis
Television

Submission + - Television's Mr. Wizard dies at 89 (yahoo.com)

RickTheGeek writes: "FTA: LOS ANGELES — Don Herbert, who as television's "Mr. Wizard" introduced generations of young viewers to the joys of science, died Tuesday. He was 89. Herbert, who had bone cancer, died at his suburban Bell Canyon home, said his son-in-law, Tom Nikosey.

As a young child in the 80's, I watched Mr. Wizard as often as I can... I wanted to not only try the experiments, I wanted to be one of the kids on the show. Too bad there aren't any shows like that on TV now! Apparently, there are a few DVDs of Mr. Wizard's world available at the web site Mr. Wizard Studios."

Media

Submission + - So long Mr. Wizard

nbvb writes: "It's a sad day for science. The one and only Mr. Wizard, Don Herbert, passed away today at the age of 89. It's impossible to count the number of children — worldwide — who were mesmerized by his amazing feats of science! To all of us who grew up with Mr. Wizard — let's hoist one high and remember a great man. Thanks Don — it's because of you that countless children were excited about science. May your legacy live on!"
Television

Submission + - "Mr. Wizard" dead at 89

linuxwrangler writes: Don Herbert, television's "Mr. Wizard", died this morning of bone cancer. Over the decades, the Peabody Award winning Mr. Wizard introduced several generations to science using basic household items in his demonstrations and encouraging viewers to duplicate the experiments at home. Herbert died at his home. He was 89 years old.
Software

Submission + - A Reverse Eula

An anonymous reader writes: One of the most disturbing trends that keep on being discussed on Slashdot are EULA (End User Licensing Agreements), in which End Users after they have bought and paid for their products and fully discharged their end of their agreements say by purchasing a copy of Windows, is forced to give up all their rights as well as their first born — AFTER THE FACT that the Contract has been fully discharged. (A clear cut violation of the Doctrine of First Sale) What a novel concept that you can force people to surrender their rights by throwing on terms after you got their hands on the money. So why not take this logical evolution of contract law to the next level, and do a "Reverse EULA". You go out and buy your Windows/OS X/Treo/whatever, and then send them a letter setting up terms on how they can spend the money you exchanged for their product AFTER THE FACT. If they don't agree to spend the money the way you demand, they have to return it immediately for a refund of their product. If they keep the money, they agree, because as we all know EULA's are enforceable by consent of use. If they object, well too bad, our EULA is every bit as fair as yours.

(Yah I know turn about is fair play, but I am sure this is too fair for the legal community out there)
Space

Submission + - Riding an Ion Drive to the Asteroid Belt (nasa.gov)

Iron Condor writes: JPL is now close to embarking on another of its trademark, one-of-a-kind missions, this time to the heart of the asteroid belt: The Dawn mission is being prepared for launch this summer from Kennedy Space Center. Dawn will explore Ceres and Vesta, the two largest known asteroids in our solar system, which lie in the vast expanse between Mars and Jupiter. In the process, the mission will make history on several fronts. Besides being the first spacecraft to orbit a main-belt asteroid and the first to ever orbit two targets after leaving Earth, Dawn will be the first science mission powered by electric ion propulsion, the world's most advanced and efficient space propulsion technology.
Google

Submission + - Google fails to produce accurate results (somethingawful.com)

BondGamer writes: "For some reason Google hates SomethingAwful.com. In a recent article, SA administrator Richard "Lowtax" compares search results with Microsoft Live and Yahoo. SomethingAwful consistently takes the top spot on other search engines but does not appear at all in Google's results. Google will not explain what the issue is and only points to general web site optimizations."
Power

Submission + - Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant Unit 1 Restarted

Firethorn writes: From Decatur Daily
Shut down 22 years ago in 1985, the Tennessee Valley Authority has reactivated Unit 1 at Browns Ferry Nuclear plant in response to rising demand for electricity in North Alabama. It's the first reactor activated since 1996.

It's expected to produce 1,155 megawatts, power 650,000 homes, and employ an extra 100 workers at the plant.

Renovations cost $1.8 Billion, but they expect the payback to be done within 4-5 years, down from the 7-8 years estimated in 2002, mostly because of increased fuel costs for the alternatives.

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