Thursday, November 1, 2012

Ancient history professor revives medieval times ? Griffon News

By Michelle Cordonnier

October 30, 2012

Missouri Western recently enhanced the history department by adding a new professor to the staff to teach Ancient and Medieval History and Early Modern History. Eventually, Dr. Jay Lemanski will help to expand the upper level history courses by introducing and teaching classes on ancient Rome and ancient Greece.

Lemanski is originally from Detroit. He came to Western from his most recent appointment as a Senior Lecturer for the history department at the University of Akron in Akron, Ohio. From 2003-2012, Lemanski was also a teaching assistant and an instructor at Akron.

?I am from a big city, and I grew kind of tired of living in a larger community,? Lemanski said. ?I enjoy the smaller community; the countryside around St. Joseph is nice. I like the idea of having big city amenities and the small-town feeling that St. Joseph offers.?

Lemanski is enjoying the transition from big city living to the smaller community of St. Joseph, and he is happy with the colleagues he has met since being at Western. Lemanski said the smaller campus gives the college and community a more intimate quality than the larger colleges offer.

?I am very pleased with the instructors and students that I have met since coming to Western,? Lemanski said. ?They are the nicest people, and have made me feel very welcome.?

Junior Kristen Brantley is taking Lemanski?s Ancient and Medieval History course, which she is enjoying this semester. She said she has had trouble in history classes before, but so far this semester she has learned a lot from Lemanski?s teaching style.

?He has a passion for the subject,? Brantley said. ?He?s not just passing out information, but actually making the material more relatable. College is tough, and he makes it easier by providing us with study guides, easily readable maps ?and interesting readings.?

Lemanski is educated in a variety of subjects, such as history and modern languages. He earned his bachelor?s degree at Concordia College in Ann Arbor, Mich., in 1983. Lemanski was a dual major in Greek and Hebrew with a minor in Latin.

In 1985, he received his first master?s degree at the University of Michigan in near eastern studies. Lemanski continued to study at the University of Michigan and received his?doctorate?in 1989.

The year 2005 brought Lemanski his second master?s degree in history department. Lemanski passed his Ph.D. comprehensive exams in 2007 with distinctions in Medieval, Early Modern Europe, the Middle East and the United States pre-1877.

In 2007, Lemanski also won a one-year Robert W. Little Graduate Research Fellowship, and in 2008, he was awarded a Graduate Student Government Research Grant from the University of Akron. The year 2009 finally brought Lemanski his Ph.D. in history from the University of Akron.

In addition to his extensive knowledge of history, Lemanski is skilled in many language cultures, such as: German, Greek, Latin, Arabic, Anglo-Saxon, Hebrew, Sumerian, Akkadian, Ugaritic and French.

?Lemanski?s use of other languages helps to illustrate certain points in ancient Greece and ancient Rome,? Brantley said.

Lemanski also has the ability to decipher and translate ancient Greek and Roman clay tablets from the beginnings of written language.

Throughout Lemanski?s years of schooling, he has worked in the education field as an assistant librarian of rare books and as reference librarian. He has also worked for the New York Times as an Indexer for the University Microfilms International and has taught courses in Absolution to Revolution, Ancient Middle Eastern Studies, Renaissance and Religious Studies, Early and Late Medieval European Studies, the Latin Language, Middle Eastern Studies and Humanities in the Western Tradition.

?This is my last history course required for my degree, but if I had to take another one, I would definitely consider taking a different course taught by Dr. Lemanski,? Brantley said.

Lemanski said he?s enjoying teaching at Western more than anything else. He feels that the students are very diverse for a smaller community and is enjoying getting to know them through the classes he teaches.

?The best part of Missouri Western is the students,? Lemanski said. ?I like the students; I enjoy talking to them, and getting to know them. They are very interesting and engaging. I like teaching them. I have great students here at Missouri Western, I couldn?t ask for more.?

Source: http://www.thegriffonnews.com/2012/10/ancient-medieval-history-not-torture-with-dr-jay-lemanski-in-charge/

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McCain Blasts Obama on Benghazi

After nearly 48 hours of squall stall, Sen. John McCain has kicked the the presidential campaign back into gear, ripping the Obama administration's response to the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi during a brief speech this afternoon at a "storm relief and volunteer appreciation" event in central Ohio.

"The president is either engaged in a massive cover-up deceiving the American people or he is so grossly incompetent that he is not qualified to be the commander-in-chief of our armed forces," McCain told a gathering of Romney supporters, as first reported by NBC News.

"I think it's interesting to note that when there was a success, such as when, thank God, we were able to get bin Laden, the administration poured out every single detail, even details that put American lives in danger," McCain said, answering reporters' questions later.

It's a familiar line of attack from the Arizona senator, who during a Sunday appearance on CBS's "Face the Nation" called the incident "the worst cover-up or incompetence I have ever observed in my life."

"This administration is very good at touting and giving all the details, like when they got bin Laden but now we know there were tapes, or recordings inside the consulate during this fight ? and the FBI finally got in and took those and now they're classified as 'top secret,'" McCain added, suggesting the president understood the nature of the attack weeks before informing the public.

Speaking at another "storm relief event" earlier in the day, Mitt Romney was more cautious.

"We have heavy hearts, as you know, with all of the suffering going on in a major part of the country," he said as volunteers boxed up food, bottled water, diapers and batteries for storm victims.

Romney is in Florida tonight. He will join Sen. Marco Rubio on the campaign trail Wednesday morning. President Obama is not expected back on the stump before Thursday.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/game-mccain-blasts-obama-benghazi-storm-relief-rally-004348541--abc-news-politics.html

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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Yelp's new picture-heavy menus give you a better look at that Baby Back Rib Tickler

Yelp's new pictureheavy menus give you a better look at that Baby Back Rib Tickler

Needless to say, we're all well aware of Yelp's popularity amongst people who love a thing or two about visiting restaurants and, in turn, eating some good ol' food. And while the service could be considered relatively great as is, it never hurts to see a few new features added here and there -- especially one as useful as the new "Explore the Menu," which is made possible by everyday users like yourself. The newfangled menu system will allow folks to upload pictures of any grub item they've tried at frequented restaurants, making it easier for future goers to have a slight idea of what to expect should they be interested in trying a particular dish from one of the many places listed within Yelp. The novel menu pages will be rolling out to business pages today in the US, with Yelp noting that this will be the "first time ever" it's simultaneously launching a fresh service across its OG site, mobile website and applications.

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Yelp's new picture-heavy menus give you a better look at that Baby Back Rib Tickler originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Oct 2012 23:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/30/yelp-new-explore-the-menu-feature/

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Monday, October 29, 2012

10 Pet Safety Tips For Hurricane Sandy | Babble Pets

PetSafetyTipsHurricaneSandyiStock 000020557456XSmall1 226x300 10 Pet Safety Tips For Hurricane Sandy

Pets need protection from Hurricane Sandy just as we do: follow these pet safety tips.

We can?t stress the advice from the ASPCA more: ?If you are not safe, neither is your pet.?

While those of us on the East coast are preparing for a monster of a storm with the arrival of Hurricane Sandy, we must remember that our pets need to be included in our safety and evacuation plans.

Here are 10 must-read tips:

Take your pets in and keep them inside. While there is no reason that a pet should live outside, at the first sign of an imminent storm, pets need to be secured inside the house ASAP. A doghouse will NOT provide any protection. If you can?t be outside neither can your pet!

Do NOT leave your pets behind ever. If the situation calls for you to evacuate your home there, your pet is not safe there either. Do not rely on thinking animal instinct will protect them.

Call ahead to shelters. If you must escape and go to a shelter, remember that not every Red Cross shelter accepts animals. The time to search for shelters that accept pets is now- before you must leave. Local vets and shelters might know about nearby shelters that accept pets. You can also call nearby hotels and motels who may allowed pets. Please note that if you live in NYC, pets are welcome at all NYC Hurricane Sandy evacuation centers. Please do NOT leave your pets behind!

Lean on friends and family. Friends and relatives who are outside your immediate area might be willing to take in your pet(s). Ask early on when first making your emergency plans.

Create an emergency supply and travel kit.As you pack you ?Go Bag?, make one for your pet with all the necessary items they might need over a period of days.?Click here to see exactly what items should be in it.

Select a designated temporary caregiver. No one wants to think about this but there is always a chance that you might not be able to go back to your home for a while. By predetermining a person who will take your pet in for a lengthy period of time, it not only provides protection for your beloved pet, but also gives you peace of mind that you pet will be taken care of properly.

Secure proper identification for your pet. The ASPCA specifically advises the following: ?Make sure all pets wear collars and tags with up-to-date identification. Your pet?s ID tag should contain his name, telephone number, and any urgent medical needs. Be sure to write your pet?s name, your name and contact information on your pet?s carrier.?

Visually sum up your house and predetermine the safest points in your home. Locate the rooms that are highest if flooding is an issue. Make sure the room is window free and possible flying debris. Your best bet is to choose ?easy-to-clean areas such as utility rooms, bathrooms, and basements as safe zones.?

Provide for sufficient and long-term water for your pet. Just like people, pets will need extra water in case of a prolonged power outage, so fill up bathtubs and sinks with water.

After the storm, do not let pets outside right away. Yes, they will have to relieve themselves after being holed up for hours on end, but check your yard and street for downed power wires, which may electrocute them. Do not let your pets out on their own: dogs should be on a leash and cats need to stay inside. The chances of outside hazards are too great in the days following a hurricane.

Image: iStock

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Follow Danielle on?Twitter?and?Facebook?and?Pinterest?(where she maintains an ?Adorable Pups? board), or find her at her blog,?Just Write Mom?and Babble?s?Strollerderby.

MORE FROM DANIELLE:?

10 Strangest Items Swallowed By Dogs

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 10 Pet Safety Tips For Hurricane Sandy

Source: http://blogs.babble.com/pets/2012/10/28/10-pet-safety-tips-for-hurricane-sandy/

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

Manufacturing complex 3-D metallic structures at nanoscale made possible

ScienceDaily (Oct. 18, 2012) ? The fabrication of many objects, machines, and devices around us rely on the controlled deformation of metals by industrial processes such as bending, shearing, and stamping. Is this technology transferrable to nanoscale? Can we build similarly complex devices and machines with very small dimensions?

Scientists from Aalto University in Finland and the University of Washington in the US have just demonstrated this to be possible. By combining ion processing and nanolithography they have managed to create complex three-dimensional structures at nanoscale.

The discovery follows from a quest for understanding the irregular folding of metallic thin films after being processed by reactive ion etching.

"We were puzzled by the strong-width-dependent curvatures in the metallic strips. Usually initially-strained bilayer metals do not curl up this way," explains Khattiya Chalapat from Aalto University.

The puzzle began to unravel when Chalapat noticed, together with Dr. Hua Jiang, that the Ti peak was absent from the EDX spectra of folded Ti/Al bilayers.

Further experiments at the O.V. Lounasmaa Laboratory confirmed that the strips bend upward with strong width-dependent curvatures if the bottom layer of the strips is made more reactive to ions than the top surface.

In nature, similar geometrical effects take place in self-organization directly observable to the human eye. When dandelion flowers bloom, one may try cutting the flower stem into small strips; put them in water, and the strips will fold with observable width-dependent curvatures due to differences in the water absorption between the inside and outside parts of the stem.

"Our idea was to find a way to adapt these natural processes to nanofabrication. This led us to an incidental finding that a focused ion beam can locally induce bending with nanoscale resolution."

The technology has various applications in the fabrication of nanoscale devices. The structures are surprisingly resilient:? the team found them to be quite sturdy and robust under a variety of adverse conditions, such as electrostatic discharge and heating.

"Because the structures are so small, the coupling and the magnitude of typical nanoscale forces acting on them would be commensurately small, reminds Docent Sorin Paraoanu," the leader of the Kvantti research group, Aalto University.

"As for applications, we have demonstrated so far that these structures can capture and retain particles with dimensions of the order of a micrometer. However, we believe that we are just scratching the tip of the iceberg: a comprehensive theory of ion-assisted self-assembly processes is yet to be reached," notes Paraoanu.

The research has been recently published in the Early View edition of Advanced Materials.

Khattiya Chalapat and Sorin Paraoanu would like to give credit to the Aalto University research facilities for microfabrication and imaging at Micronova Centre for Micro and Nanotechnology and the Nanomicroscopy Center in Finland.

Link to video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tw1AAxcULwQ

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Aalto University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Khattiya Chalapat, Nikolai Chekurov, Hua Jiang, Jian Li, Babak Parviz, G. S. Paraoanu. Self-Organized Origami Structures via Ion-Induced Plastic Strain. Advanced Materials, 2012; DOI: 10.1002/adma.201202549

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/Ma1Ms6-BlXM/121018103020.htm

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Stewart: Romney binder a 'Notebook of Nipples'

By Craig Berman, NBC News contributor

Jon Stewart wasted no time leaping on Tuesday night's Presidential Debates on "Daily Show" Wednesday -- and he picked two of the most obvious soundbites from the debates to skewer: First, Mitt Romney's?infamous comment about getting ?binders full of women? qualified for jobs when he was governor of Massachusetts.?Stewart played the clip, arranged the papers on his desk, paused, and smiled.

?Couple of things: One the women?s group was called MassGAP and they approached Governor Romney, not the other way around. And two, my guess is they did not refer to what they presented as a binder full of women, but perhaps as an organized collection of qualified resumes,? Stewart said. ?But hey, Binder of Women, Book of Broads, Notebook of Nipples, whatever.?

He had more fun with the Libya discussion, which centered on determining the exact day President Obama first referred to it as an act of terror. Watching Romney walk into a trap of his own devising was almost too good for Stewart to talk about, particularly given that Obama urged him to "please, proceed."

?There?s your first clue -- when you feel you?re about you?re about to spring what you think is the checkmate moment of the debate and your debate opponent says to you, ?Please proceed. Hold on, are you trying to open that door? Allow me to open it wider,?? Stewart said. ?When your opponent does that, you may want to wonder a la Wile E Coyote and Road Runner, (whether) that door your opponent is pointing to is merely paint on a rock.?

From Stewart?s perspective, that?s exactly what it was. It should make Thursday?s interview with President Obama less awkward than it would have been a week ago, when Stewart was still focused on his less-robust performance in the first debate. Odds are good, however, that this will still come up in that conversation.

Stephen Colbert also had some thoughts, although he first told his viewers: ?If you?re an undecided voter who did not watch, just trust me, it?s 2-0.?

Like Stewart, he considered the Libya comment a turning point -- but wasn?t as happy with the outcome. ?No, no ... it?s supposed to change everything the other way!? he said.? ?That should have been Mitt?s moment of chest-thumping dominance over the carcass of his opponent, and it would have been too had it not been for that meddling moderator.?

In that latter comment, he echoed the Fox News spin, which also decried Candy Crowley?s purported fact-checking, which they argued should have taken place only after the event.

?Yes, the time for fact-checking is after the event, when voters have stopped watching,? Colbert said.

He was also sympathetic towards the Fox criticism of the ?random? questions. ?Why are we talking about Lady Issues in the Town Hall? Save it for the Sadie Hawkins debate when the girls are supposed to do the asking.?

And don?t get him started on assault weapons, or Romney?s spin that two-parent households could help solve the problem.

?The answer to gun violence isn?t getting rid of assault weapon, its two-parent households,? Colbert said. ?Because when a psychopath marches into the mall in Kevlar body armor, slowly lifting the laser site of his Ak-47 towards the Sunglass Hut, the only thing that will stop him from carnage is when he asks himself what would mom and dad think??

And having learned that people on the street will opine on anything if a microphone is in front of them, "Jimmy Kimmel Live" again sent roving reporters out to talk to people not just about a debate that hadn't happened yet (as they did last night, before the second presidential debates even started) -- but on one that would never exist: A First Ladies debate between Ann Romney and Michelle Obama. Naturally, everyone they spoke to was well-informed and happy to talk about who did the best in that particular debate.?

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Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/18/14532899-jon-stewart-dubs-romneys-binder-a-notebook-of-nipples?lite

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Public battle over prince's private letters to officials

By Annabel Roberts, NBC News

Getty Images file / 2012 Indigo

A professor says of Prince Charles: "If he led an idle life we would criticize him; when he takes an interest we slap his wrist and say he can't go there."

LONDON - It may come as no surprise that researchers conducting a survey over a four-week period found that the Duchess of Cambridge was featured on the front pages of British newspapers more frequently than anyone else, and her husband, Prince William, came fifth.

It's fair to say Britons' see a lot of the royals in their papers - but what do they know about what the monarch and her heirs think of the country's affairs? The answer is very little. The queen is obliged to remain politically neutral and has no political authority - and keeps her views to herself.

Which is why a rare opportunity to learn about Prince Charles's thoughts on topical issues has generated so much interest; there were calls for the release under the Freedom of Information Act of 27 letters written by the Prince of Wales to seven government departments between September 2004 and April 2005. But this has been scuppered by the government - the attorney general, Dominic Grieve, using a veto to overrule a court decision and keep the letters secret.

Tantalizingly, Grieve said the letters revealed the prince's "most deeply held personal views and beliefs" and were "particularly frank." But he suggested they could lead to Prince Charles being seen to disagree with government policy and so be favoring one political party over another - which clearly he wanted to avoid.


Grieve added: "Any such perception would be seriously damaging to his role as future monarch, because if he forfeits his position of political neutrality as heir to the throne, he cannot easily recover it when he is king."

Certainly in the past Charles has not been coy about expressing fairly conservative views on issues close to his heart, such as architecture, or farming and the environment. But it seems pretty clear the content of these letters went further. ?

Prince William, Kate 'hugely saddened' by publication of topless photos

Rob Evans, a journalist writing for The Guardian newspaper who made the initial request for the letters to be released, told NBC News the letters should be seen, because people have a right to know how much influence the Prince of Wales has.

"Prince Charles is known to lobby government on a wide range of issues, but he's unelected and there has been a lot of concern about how he influences government behind the scenes... the public ought to know how much effect he is having on government policy," Evans said.

NBC's Michelle Kosinski takes a look at newly released video of a young and seemingly happy Prince Charles and Diana with their toddler sons, William and Harry from 1986.

The original court ruling (now overturned by Grieve) in similar vein concluded: "Those who seek to influence government policy must understand that the public has a legitimate interest in knowing what they have been doing and what government has been doing in response."

Evans says he will now take the matter to the high court to try to overturn the government's veto.

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Public opinion is divided. Commentator David Aaronovitch wrote in The Times, "The clever silliness of Mr Grieve's letter says... that you the subject/citizen really don't want to know if your next king or queen's a bit of an idiot because you're getting them anyway."

But Professor Robert Hazell of University College London suggests this protection is useful - even necessary - for the Prince of Wales, as there is no obvious or established path for him to follow to keep abreast with national affairs, and prepare for his future role as king.

More reporting on the British royal family from NBCNews.com

He told NBC News: "We do ask a lot of Prince Charles ... he's meant to be interesting and worthy. If he led an idle life we would criticize him; when he takes an interest we slap his wrist and say he can't go there."

"We're entitled to know his public pronouncements, not his private thoughts - same as anyone else" tweeted Parliamentarian, MP Tom Harris, in favor of the letters being kept secret.

Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

The issue also raises questions about Charles's role in general - how DOES he occupy himself as he waits to ascend to the throne (it's been a 61-year wait so far)and how does he prepare for the ?job? he will eventually hold?

It's a role Professor Hazell describes as "a blank space."

Royal censorship? BBC says 'sorry' for daring to report UK queen's comments

Last month Britons got an unexpected and revealing glimpse of the queen's personal thoughts when a BBC journalist divulged the details of a private conversation in which she admitted she had lobbied government ministers over the radical Islamic cleric Abu Hamza. The BBC swiftly apologized for this breach of confidence, and Buckingham Palace said it would never comment on private conversations involving any member of the royal family. This was an extremely unusual episode.

As for Prince Charles?s letters, the decision to keep their contents secret only has the effect of increasing speculation about what they contain and hunger to find out. It will now be up to the High Court to judge if the public will get a chance to see their contents.?

Carl Court / AFP - Getty Images

After six decades on the throne, view images from the extraordinary life of Queen Elizabeth II.

More world stories from NBC News:

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/18/14536807-very-public-battle-over-private-letters-from-prince-charles-to-government-agencies?lite

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9 creative ways to boost your income

Carolyn Kaster / AP file

A seller works on her hat display at a yard sale, Such sales are one of many ways you can put extra money in your wallet.

By LearnVest.com

So, you're looking to make a little extra cash?

As a parent, any additional income you bring in for your family will definitely be put to good use for, say, a college fund or rainy day savings. You may also need extra bucks for shoes for your toddler, who outgrows hers like she's getting paid to do so.

Because we're probably a little bit too old for lemonade stands, we had to look elsewhere.?And guess what? Nowadays, with ubiquitous smartphones and laptops, the easiest ways to earn extra cash are accessible to everyone at the click of a button.

Learnvest.com: The 10 worst interview questions (and the 5 best)

To help, we hunted down apps, opportunities and projects and chose nine "extracurriculars" that are particularly flexible in nature, so you can earn some cash while the kids are at school ... or maybe even bring them with you.

Download apps

Apps aren't only fun ? they're income!

Easyshift is an app that lets you moonlight as a "mystery shopper." When you go on your regular errands, you complete tasks for retailers' research departments like taking pictures or answering a few questions, and you get paid ($2?$4 per task) for the privilege.

Learnvest.com: 10 money secrets of happy moms

Other apps for extra cash include WeReward and Field Agent.

Multitask your errands

Have you heard of TaskRabbit? It's a website (and app) that lets you outsource chores to willing parties. If you're one of those willing parties, you can earn some extra cash doing anything from picking up groceries to assembling IKEA cabinets.

Use your car

If you have a reliable car (and some great driving tunes), consider bringing in some extra money from a car-sharing service. Services like ZimRide let you sell seats on trips you're already taking for as much as $25, and services like Relay Rides let you rent out your car at your chosen price for the hour, day or week (and provides free insurance).

And what about parking? If you have it, you can rent that out, too, with Parking Panda.

Baby-sit

Almost everyone has dabbled in baby-sitting at some point, but the job only becomes more lucrative as you grow older and are able to offer more skills, like driving, cooking or CPR certification.

Websites like SitterCity or Care.com are great resources for matching sitters with families.

Learnvest.com: Why you aren't actually poor

Charging $12?$15 per hour is pretty standard, but to figure out how much is appropriate for your age and experience, use SitterCity's Babysitter's Rate Calculator.

Spread your availability by speaking with your child's teachers, any friends who work in your community and with real estate brokers, who may work with families with small children who are new to town. If possible, you may even consider an arrangement where you can watch children at your house; it's a built-in play date for your own kid!

(Prefer watching four-legged cuties rather than two? Petsitting.com has you covered.)

Sell your clothes

Another way to finance your habit might be cleaning out your closet ? and your child's. It's doubly beneficial: You can clear clutter and make some cash at the same time.

Learnvest.com: The science of spending: What really makes us happy?

Start by choosing high quality pieces from the current season without any visible wear and tear. Make sure they're clean and folded, then bring them into your local consignment store.

If it's easier, take well-lit pictures of the pieces and list them on a site like eBay or Dresm, a site specifically meant to facilitate sales of used clothing.

Tutor

Do you have a masters degree in engineering? Are you a whiz in the kitchen? Do you know the ins and outs of Photoshop?

Any skill someone else wants to learn is an opportunity for you to teach it. Depending on experience and whether or not they join a larger organization, tutors can bring in up to $50 an hour (in cash) teaching out of their own homes, or visiting their students (who could be both children and adults).

Learnvest.com: 8 things that aren't worth the money

In addition to advertising in your community through standard newspaper ads, Facebook posts and fliers in the library, consider applying to be a tutor on sites like Tutor.com, the Princeton Review and Kaplan.

Take online surveys

If you spend hours surfing the Internet, what's a few extra minutes spent taking a paid online survey?

Websites like Free Paid Surveys or Opinion Place allow you to make money from the comfort of your home. If you're looking for something more interactive, list yourself as available for focus groups by joining FindFocusGroups.com.

Become a style entrepreneur

Style blogs don't have to be a guilty pleasure. Instead, they can be the inspiration for a side job as a "style entrepreneur."

StyleOwner is a free site that lets you create your own store by choosing items from a ?Master Closet? of more than 2,000 brands. When your friends ? sent that way through your tireless efforts on Facebook, Twitter and emails, no doubt ? buy from your store, you earn 10 percent on everything you sell.

Host a yard sale

With the right curatorial skills, yard sales can be a lucrative way to make extra cash. To get the most traffic at your yard sale, advertise on Craigslist and in your town newspaper, and consider coordinating with your neighbors to hold a group sale.

If you're lacking a yard (or half-decent weather), there's also the option of hosting a virtual yard sale: The app Yardsale lets you connect with neighbors and friends without setting up a single folding table.

Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2012/10/17/14456395-9-creative-ways-to-boost-your-income?lite

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Thursday, October 11, 2012

Techniques for Using Art in Science

There are many different ways to help children translate what they have learned about a science concept into abstract and artistic representation. This is an important skill because it not only allows children to apply what they have learned (and to demonstrate their understanding) but it also invites children to move to higher levels of thinking. During what Jean Piaget defined as the Pre-Operational Stage (usually from 2-6years) children are on a ?search for representation? and their major task is to master symbolic and representational function.

Some suggestions for artistic and scientific abstract representation:

? Field Drawings: When children observe both in the science center or classroom or outside, invite them to ?record? their observations with drawings. It really doesn?t matter if their drawings look anything like what they see. Have drawing paper near your microscope or magnifiers. Always take sketchpads outside for playtime. You never know when an amazing discovery will occur.

? Prediction/Results Charts: Before testing out a concept such as ice and melting ask children to make predictions about what they think will happen. What is the best place for ice to melt fast? What will happen when you paint on frozen paper?? Record these on chart paper with words and drawings. Add the results at the end of the activity and discuss the findings.

? Graphs: Simple graphs made with objects or pictorial representations are essential for demonstrating information in an abstract format.? After a rust experiment children can paste in 2 parallel columns the objects that rusted and those that did not.

? Field Photos: Children can be amazingly adept at using cameras if they are shown correct handling and use.? Use disposable or even digital cameras for children to record their observation and experimentation.

? Audio Field Notes: Of course, recordings don?t have to all be made on paper.? Show children how to use a simple handheld tape recorder to record their observations on a walk or in the classroom.

? Science Journals: Provide small notebooks for children to keep their field drawings, photos, and writing.

Make 9x12 size copies of the class charts and graphs in order for children to share their work with families.? The science journal is an excellent way for families to talk ?science? with their child. You might want to include a note to parents with a summary of the science project and some questions they can ask to help them discuss the work in the journal.

? Measurement Charts: Science often involves measurement. When children are measuring the growth of a moong seed sprout or the rising of bread dough. Use graph paper, strings, ice cream sticks, or adding machine tape to record their measurements and paste these in a row across a recording chart. Children will be able to ?read? their findings by reading the pictures!

Source: http://children.ezinemark.com/techniques-for-using-art-in-science-7d37e520d17d.html

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UPDATE: Saving The Moline Train Depot - KWQC-TV6 News and ...

  • Early Morning Shooting In Davenport-Update

    Early Morning Shooting In Davenport-Update

    Oct 8, 2012 07:56 AM CDT2012-10-08 18:46:08 GMT

    Police are investigating a shooting in Davenport early Monday morning. Around 4:00 a.m., officers surrounded on a home in the 6000 block of Hillandale Road. Crime scene tape is wrapped around one of theMore >>Police are investigating a shooting in Davenport early Monday morning. Around 4:00 a.m., officers surrounded on a home in the 6000 block of Hillandale Road. Crime scene tape is wrapped around one of theMore >>
  • Davenport: Schools & Genesis West React As Mysterious Gas Smell Returns

    Davenport: Schools React As Mysterious Gas Smell Returns

    Oct 8, 2012 09:47 PM CDT2012-10-09 15:08:37 GMT

    The smell of natural gas caused eight Davenport schools to evacuate Monday morning, October 8, 2012. According to Dawn Saul, Communications/Media Relations for Davenport Community Schools, students fromMore >>The smell of natural gas caused eight Davenport schools to evacuate Monday morning, October 8, 2012. According to Dawn Saul, Communications/Media Relations for Davenport Community Schools, students fromMore >>
  • Sunset Marina In Dire Need Of Dredging; Rates Raised Again

    Sunset Marina In Dire Need Of Dredging; Rates Raised Again

    Sunset Marina In Dire Need Of Dredging; Rates Raised Again

    Monday, October 8 2012 11:55 PM EDT2012-10-09 03:55:31 GMT

    In dire need of dredging. Rock Island city leaders say a lack of maintenance at Sunset Marina is a threat to the future of the popular harbor. But in order to fix years of build up, boaters who use itMore >>Rock Island city leaders say a lack of maintenance at Sunset Marina is a threat to the future of the popular harbor. But in order to fix years of build up, boaters who use it will be paying more again.More >>

Moline aldermen have decided to hold off on plans to sell the Moline Train Depot. At the urging of the mayor, council voted to give the Moline Preservation Society 70-days to save the depot. The preservation society has to raise $155,000 to move the depot from its current location on River Drive to the new WIU Quad Cities Riverfront Campus. So far, the society has raised almost $30,000 and the fundraising effort is on fast track.

"We're talking to corporations, foundations, anybody we can think of." says Moline Preservation Society President Diann Moore, "We are even talking with railroad organizations, museums, and owners of railroad lines. We need to get this out to as many people as possible."

If the society does not raise enough money the city will sell the 112-year old depot to the Illinois Department of Transportation. The depot will then be demolished to make way for a new I-74 bridge. The society has until December 18th to raise the money.

Source: http://www.kwqc.com/story/19779348/update-saving-the-moline-train-depot

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Security official at US Embassy in Yemen killed - officials

By NBC News staff and wire reports

Updated at 9:35 a.m. ET: A masked gunman assassinated a Yemeni security official who worked for the U.S. Embassy in a drive-by shooting near his home in the capital Sanaa on Thursday, officials told The Associated Press.

Yemeni officials told the AP the killing bore the hallmarks of an attack by the al-Qaida offshoot in Yemen, but it was too early to determine whether the group was behind it.

The slain official was identified as Qassem Aqlani, a man in his fifties.

He was walking near his home in western Sanaa, when a gunman on a motorcycle opened fire at him and fled the scene.?The embassy is located in eastern Sanaa.

A senior official at the State Department told NBC News that they were aware an embassy worker had been shot but did not provide further details.?

"We are deeply saddened by this tragic incident involving a Yemeni employee of our Embassy in Sanaa, and we are working with Yemeni authorities," the official said.?

Worked for embassy for 20 years
Aqlani had been working for the U.S. Embassy for nearly 20 years, said the officials who spoke to the AP condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Most recently, he was in charge of investigating a Sept. 12 assault on the U.S. Embassy by angry Yemeni protesters over the anti-Islam film.?

Protesters stormed the embassy and set fire to a U.S. flag before government forces dispersed them with tear gas. That attack came one day after the killings of the Americans in Benghazi.

Anti-US protests over Islam film spread in Middle East

The assassination resembles other attacks recently that have targeted Yemeni intelligence, military and security officials.

Those attacks are believed to be in retaliation for a military offensive by Yemen's U.S.-backed government against Yemen-based Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), which Washington considers the most dangerous offshoot of the global terror network.

AQAP has called for attacks on U.S. embassies in a bid to exploit the anti-American sentiment that has swept the Middle East and other parts of the Muslim world in the past month over an anti-Islam film produced in the United States.

Al-Qaida's revenge? Leading Yemen general killed by suicide bomber

Initially, the film was linked to an attack on the U.S. Consulate in the Libyan city of Benghazi on Sept. 11 which left four Americans dead including U.S. Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens. U.S. officials said later the attack was not linked to the video.

AQAP praised the killing of U.S. diplomats in Libya, describing it as "the best example" for those attacking embassies to follow.

AQAP had taken advantage of a security and political vacuum created by last year Arab Spring-inspired uprising and seized territories and cities in the south. The government-led offensive has pushed the militants out to mountainous areas from where they have been staging suicide attacks and assassinations inside cities.

Two weeks ago, a top intelligence official, Col. Abdullah al-Ashwal, was also killed in a drive-by shooting in Sanaa.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

More world stories from NBC News:

Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

?

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/11/14360901-ap-yemeni-security-official-at-us-embassy-in-sanaa-shot-dead-local-officials-say?lite

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PDCA - Public Displays of Cephalopod Affection


ShareShare ?ShareEmail ?PrintPrint



Sometimes the easiest way to spark discussion about science is to bring it into everyday situations ? like by wearing it as jewellery.

Steampunk cephalopod by Noadi.

This week polymer clay sculptor Noadi a.k.a. Sheryl Westleigh aims to increase the conversation about cephalopods ? and it?s Cephalopod Awareness Days!

Cephalopod Awareness Days are organized around the number of limbs of these charming molluscs:

  • October 8 ? Octopus Day, for all the eight-armed species
  • October 9 ? Nautilus Night, a time for all the lesser-known extant cephalopods
  • October 10 ? Squid Day/Cuttlefish Day, or?Squittleday, covering the?tentacular species
  • October 11 ? Kraken Day, for all the fantastical cephalopods of myth, movies, literature and legend.?Cthulhu fthagn!
  • October 12 ? Fossil Day (to coincide with?National Fossil Day), for all the?incredible suckers that have gone extinct but left an impression with us.

-Source, Cephalopod Day Tumblr.

?

Noadi is doing contests and giveaways on her blog for a couple of more days featuring her fun (and just a bit sinister) tentacles creations. I can?t see how any of these would fail to spark a conversation at the grocery, in the lab, at holiday dinners, or when waiting in line to cast a ballot.

?

Deep Space Nautilus by Noadi

?

While many of her creations have bright colours, I love how the greys and metallics look on the soft twisting forms.

A custom piece , part of a steampunk series.

The versatile Noadi has a deft hand at painting too.

- -

Fire bad! Frankencuttlefish helps you grab more Hallowe'en candy.

?

Noadi Art

Noadi?s Blog

Facebook

@NoadiArt on Twitter

Etsy Shop (15% off all cuttlefish, octopus, nautilus and cephalopods for a couple of more days!)

?

Glendon MellowAbout the Author: Glendon Mellow is a fine artist and illustrator inspired by evolutionary biology working in oil and digital media. You can see his portfolio at glendonmellow.com and work-in-progress at The Flying Trilobite blog. Follow him solo at @flyingtrilobite and with co-blogger Kalliopi Monoyios at @symbiartic. Follow on Twitter @symbiartic.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=f0a6d8afc1aad14af6608e88c228f3d7

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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Five Step Check List for Your Estate Plan | Financial Wellness @ Work

What did Heath Ledger and former Supreme Court Justice Warren Burger have in common?? Their career choices couldn?t have been more different but in their estate planning, they made similar mistakes ? ones that could have been easily avoided.? Heath Ledger made the mistake of not updating his will when his daughter was born and even though Warren Burger was a Supreme Court Justice, well versed in the law, he made the mistake of doing it himself and ended up leaving out some key provisions.? In both cases, the family paid the price.? If a Supreme Court Justice can make a mistake, anyone can.

Here is an estate planning to-do list that can give you a framework to look for what might be missing in your plan:

1)????? Start with what you have.? Make some lists:

* Your valuable physical property ? automobiles, furniture, jewelry, antiques, firearms, collectables, etc.

* Your investments ? your home, investment property, retirement accounts, bank and brokerage accounts.

* Benefits ? life insurance, employee benefits, Social Security information

* Debts ? what you owe and who you owe it to

2)????? What do you want to do with your property?

* Assign beneficiaries on your retirement accounts (double check they are correct!) and also possibly your brokerage and bank accounts as a ?transfer on death? or ?payable on death.?

*? Determine who you would like to leave your property, such as your heirloom jewelry, to and assign names to pieces ? take photos of the items and include them with your documents.

3)????? Consider what could go wrong.? This is often a missing step because truthfully, it isn?t pleasant to think about all the things that can go wrong. Before setting up your estate documents, take some time to? think about the financial situations and the personalities of your beneficiaries.? For example, do you have special considerations such as leaving a large amount of money to a beneficiary that would have a difficult time handling it?

One of our financial planners, Diane Winland, shared an example of some clients she?d worked with in handling their estate plan (in a former life before becoming a financial educator).? They loved their adult son dearly but were concerned about leaving him a large inheritance.? They set up their trust so their son would receive some funds monthly but also would receive an amount double what he earned on a 1099 or a W-2 at the end of the year ? incentivizing him to work to ensure the trust would provide some support throughout his life. ??He wasn?t happy about it and fought the trustee tooth and nail but the trust language prevailed.

4)????? Put your estate plan in place.? Setting up your plans puts some teeth into it. Whether you go with a will or a trust, setting up the document makes it official so a probate court for a will or if needed (hopefully not) a court of law can uphold it.? Because estate planning is so complex, it makes sense for most people to work with an estate planning attorney . ?Some resources on setting up a will if you want to do it yourself are Legacy Writer(TM)? and Nolo.? Check your employee benefits as many companies have a legal benefit or financial guidance either directly as an employee benefit, in a financial wellness program, or through your EAP.

5)????? Don?t forget other important documents. Some other documents to put in place to help you now ? not after you pass away ? are financial powers of attorney so if you are sick and can?t sign, someone can take care of your financial matters for you and medical powers of attorney so someone can talk to your doctor and make medical decisions if you aren?t able to.? The living will is a separate document that deals with end of life issues ? you?ll need that, also.? These documents need to be updated if you move to a different state. Click here for more information.

Estate planning requires some thought and a little attention to detail but once it?s set up, all it requires of you is to review it once a year or in the event you have a significant change such as the birth of a child. Otherwise, your family could be the one paying the price.

?

Source: http://www.financialfinesse.com/blog/2012/10/five-step-check-list-for-your-estate-plan/

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Monday, October 8, 2012

Alaska Airlines: Operations returning to normal

SEATTLE (AP) ? Alaska Airlines says flights are running close to normal after a fiber-optic outage temporarily shut down its ticketing system, causing the airline and its regional carrier to cancel 78 flights, affecting nearly 7,000 customers.

More than 130 other flights departed, but some were delayed for as long as four hours.

Spokeswoman Marianne Lindsey said Monday evening that ticket counter lines were clearing out and the airline doesn't anticipate any problems Tuesday.

The problem started Monday morning and was caused by two severed fiber-optic lines.

Lindsey says the cities most affected were Seattle; Portland, Ore.; Los Angeles; Anchorage, Alaska; and the San Francisco area. The airline flies to 95 cities.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/alaska-airlines-operations-returning-normal-013448517--finance.html

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7 Social Media Mistakes Remodelers are Making - Direct Mail and ...

7 Social Media Mistakes Remodelers are Making

social media mistakes remodelers makeEven if you use social media for your remodeling business on a regular basis, it is a relatively new marketing technique, so you most likely haven't been doing it for very long.? It is easy to make mistakes, especially when you are starting out.? However, it is important to learn from your mistakes and make improvements anywhere that you can.? Here are seven mistakes that you can easily fix, all of which are free and require very little time.

1) Not using the accounts that you set up: Nothing says that a company does not have their act together more than a poorly tended web site or social media account.? Customers will not be impressed with a Twitter account that only has 4 tweets from 3 months ago.? Use all of your social media accounts regularly.

2) Not linking back to your web site in social profiles: One of the easiest ways to get customers to visit your web site from a social media profile is a link in the profile.? Can it get much easier than that?

3) Not claiming your accounts: There are only so many possible user names available on any given social network.? Make sure that you get your account claimed with your remodeling company name as soon as you can before someone else takes it.

4) Not separately business and personal accounts: As a remodeling business company owner, do not use your personal Facebook or Twitter account to market your company.? You will lose friends and not gain customers.? Post business related information on your designated business social media accounts.

5) Not asking people to engage: Research shows that one of the most effective ways to get people to participate in social media is to ask them directly.? If you've just created a Facebook page for your remodeling company, write a blog post about it in which you ask customers to "like" the page.

6) Not including pictures and links, including your profile: Customers want to see a profile picture and at least one company link within a social media profile.? Include photos and links social media updates on a regular basis as well.

7) Not posting updates with content:While we all think messages with funny cat photos or baby videos are amusing, these will not engage customers on a long term basis.? Provide regular updates about new company products, services, and more.

Source: http://info.tmrdirect.com/bid/106705/7-Social-Media-Mistakes-Remodelers-are-Making

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Thanks for the transparent memories: Progress in quest for reliable, flexible computer memory for transparent electronics

ScienceDaily (Oct. 2, 2012) ? Very few discoveries happen in an instant. Few discoverers go, "Aha!" More often, the truth reveals itself to scientists the same way a statue comes to light as a sculptor chips away.

This happens even when the work of art is on the nanoscale, where individual things make a strand of hair look like a redwood by comparison.

More than four years ago, a collection of students, postdoctoral researchers and professors at Rice University found themselves chiseling down into a mystery involving two of the most basic, common elements on Earth: carbon and silicon oxide.

The group led by chemist James Tour came to a discovery of note: that it was possible to make bits of computer memory from those elements, but make them much smaller and perhaps better than anything on the market even today.

From that first revelation in 2008 to now, Tour and his team have steadily advanced the science of two-terminal memory devices, which he fully expects will become ubiquitous in the not-too-distant future.

The latest dispatch is a paper in the journal Nature Communications that describes transparent, non-volatile, heat- and radiation-resistant memory chips created in Tour's lab from those same basic elements, silicon and carbon. But a lot has happened since 2008, and these devices bear only a passing resemblance to the original memory unit.

In the new work, Tour and his co-authors detail their success at making memory chips from silicon oxide sandwiched between electrodes of graphene, the single-atom-thick form of carbon.

Even better, they were able to put those test chips onto flexible pieces of plastic, leading to paper-thin, see-through memories they hope can be manufactured with extraordinarily large capacities at a reasonable price. Think about what that can do for heads-up windshields or displays with embedded electronics, or even flexible, transparent cellphones.

"The interest is starting to climb," said Tour, Rice's Rice's T.T. and W.F. Chao Chair in Chemistry as well as a professor of mechanical engineering and materials science and of computer science. "We're working with several companies that are interested either in getting their chips to do this kind of switching or in the possibility of making radiation-hard devices out of this."

In fact, samples of the chips have climbed all the way to the International Space Station (ISS), where memories created and programmed at Rice are being evaluated for their ability to withstand radiation in a harsh environment.

"Now, we've seen a couple of DARPA announcements asking for proposals for devices based on silicon oxide, the very thing we've shown. So there are other people seeing the feasibility of this approach," Tour said.

It wasn't always so, even if silicon oxide "is the most studied material in humankind," he said.

"Labs in the '60s and '70s that saw the switching effect didn't have the tools to understand what they were looking at," he said. "They didn't know how to exploit it; they called it a soft breakdown in silicon. To them, it was something bad."

In the original work at Rice, researchers put strips of graphite, the bulk form of carbon best known as pencil lead, across a silicon oxide substrate and noticed that applying strong voltage would break the carbon; lower voltages would repeatedly heal and re-break the circuit. They recognized a break could be a "0? and a healed circuit a "1." That's a switch, the most basic memory state.

Manufacturers who have been able to fit millions of such switches on small devices in the likes of flash memory now find themselves bumping against the physical limits of their current architectures, which require three wires -- or terminals -- to control and read each bit.

But the Rice unit, requiring only two terminals, made it far less complicated. It meant arrays of two-terminal memory could be stacked in three-dimensional configurations that would vastly increase the amount of information a chip could hold.

And best of all, the mechanism that made it possible turned out not to be in the graphite, but the silicon oxide. In the breakthrough 2010 paper that followed the 2008 discovery, the researchers led by then-graduate student Jun Yao found that a strong jolt of voltage through a piece of silicon oxide stripped oxygen atoms from a channel only 5 nanometers wide, turning it into pure silicon. Lower voltages would break the channel or reconnect it, repeatedly, thousands of times.

"Jun was the first to recognize what he was seeing," Tour said. "Nobody believed him, though (Rice physicist) Doug Natelson said, 'You know, it's not out of the realm of possibility.' The people on the graphitic memory project were not at all excited about him saying this and they argued with Jun tooth and nail for a couple of years."

Yao struggled to convince his lab partners the switching effect wasn't due to the breaking graphite but to the underlying crystalline silicon. "Jun quietly continued his work and stacked up evidence, eventually building a working device with no graphite," Tour said. Still, he recalled, Yao's colleagues suspected that carbon in the system skewed the results. So he demonstrated another device with no possible exposure to carbon at all.

Yao's revelation became the basis for the next-generation memories now being designed in Tour's lab, where silicon oxides sandwiched between graphene layers are being attached to plastic sheets. There's not a speck of metal in the entire unit (with the exception of leads attached to the graphene electrodes). And the eye can see right through it.

"Now we're making these memories with about an 80 percent yield of working devices, which is pretty good for a non-industrial lab," Tour said. "When you get these ideas into industries' hands, they really sharpen it up."

The idea of transparency came later. "Silicon oxide is basically the same material as glass, so it should be transparent," Tour said. Graphene sheets, single-atom-thick carbon honeycombs, are almost completely transparent, too, and tests detailed in the new paper showed their ability to function as crossbar electrodes, a checkerboard array half above and half below the silicon oxide that creates a circuit where the lines intersect.

The marriage of silicon and graphene would extend the long-recognized utility of the first and prove once and for all the value of the second, long touted as a wonder material looking for a reason to be.

"It was a very rewarding experience," said Yao, now a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard, of his work at Rice. "I feel grateful that I stumbled on this, had the support of my advisers and persisted."

By good fortune, Yao was the rare graduate student with three advisers. As confusing as that may have seemed at the start of his Rice career, it was luck those advisers were digital systems expert Lin Zhong and condensed matter physicist Natelson, both rising stars in their fields, and Tour, a renowned chemist.

Each made important contributions to the project as it progressed. "Doug had very acute intuition about the underlying mechanism, and we constantly turned to Lin for his advice on the electronic architecture," Yao said.

Getting his story on Page 1 of the New York Times was enough of a thrill, but another was ahead as NASA decided to include samples of his chip in an experimental package bound for the space station. The day of Yao's planned departure for his postdoctoral job in Cambridge, Aug. 24, 2011, was to be the best of all as the HIMassSEE project lifted off from Central Asia aboard a cargo flight to the ISS. Minutes later, the unmanned craft crashed in Siberia.

Nearly a year later, a new set of chips made it to the ISS, where they will stay for two years to test their ability to hold a pattern when exposed to radiation in space.

In the meantime, Yao passed responsibility for the project to Jian Lin, a co-author of the new paper who joined the Tour and Natelson labs in 2011 as a postdoctoral researcher. Lin built the latest iterations of silicon oxide memories using crossbar graphene electrodes.

"Our lab members are excellent at synthesizing materials and I'm good at fabrication of devices for various applications, so we work together well," said Lin, whose primary interest is in the application of nanomaterials. "This group is a win-win for me."

Labs at other institutions have picked up the thread, carrying out their own experiments on silicon oxide memory. "The switching mechanism has pretty much been investigated," Lin said. "But from engineering or application perspectives, there are a lot of things that can be done."

So here silicon memory stands, a toddler full of promise. Researchers at Rice and elsewhere are working to increase silicon memory's capacity and improve its reliability while electronics manufacturers think hard about how to make it in bulk and put it into products.

Tour realizes impatience for scientific progress is a function of hurried times and not a failure of the process, but he counsels against frustration. "It's a very interesting system that has been slow to develop," he said, "as we've been working to understand the fundamental switching mechanism," a task largely accomplished by Yao and his Rice advisers in a paper published earlier this year. "This is now transitioning slowly into an applied system that could well be taken up as a future memory system.

"It is a good example of basic research," he said. "Now, others have to be able to look forward from the science and say, 'You know, there's a path to a product here.'"

Co-authors of the Nature Communications paper are Rice graduate students Yanhua Dai, Gedeng Ruan, Zheng Yan and Lei Li. Zhong is an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering. Natelson is a professor of physics and astronomy and of electrical and computer engineering.

The research was supported by the David and Lucille Packard Foundation, the Texas Instruments Leadership University Fund, the National Science Foundation and the Army Research Office.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Rice University. The original article was written by Mike Williams.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Jun Yao, Jian Lin, Yanhua Dai, Gedeng Ruan, Zheng Yan, Lei Li, Lin Zhong, Douglas Natelson, James M. Tour. Highly transparent nonvolatile resistive memory devices from silicon oxide and graphene. Nature Communications, 2012; 3: 1101 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms2110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/Saz4QMEbv_Y/121002145756.htm

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Khloe Kardashian and Mario Lopez Confirmed as X Factor Hosts

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/10/khloe-kardashian-and-mario-lopez-confirmed-as-x-factor-hosts/

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The Google Now Home Screen [Featured Android Home Screen]

The Google Now Home ScreenReader dp0 liked the look of Google Now, Android's new real-time info app, so he put together a home screen based on its colorful style. Here's how to recreate it.

It's actually a pretty simple look, all you need is a few apps:

You can see more on dp0's MyColorScreen profile.

Do you have an awesome, tweaked-into-oblivion home or lock screen of your own that you'd like to share? Go ahead and post it on the #homescreenshowcase forum with a description of how you made it and it may be the next featured home screen.

The Google Now Home Screen | #homescreenshowcase

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/m6p-Zf3VSko/the-google-now-home-screen

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