Tiny solar powered sensor that supply power forever

Posted By on February 12, 2010

smallchippennyGadgets, particularly those with microchips are getting more and more ‘micro’ all the time. For the most part, this leads to improvements in electronic gizmos that serve us daily for convenience and even health. I read an article in TechNewsDaily about a solar-powered sensor that is small enough to supply endless power, yet powerful enough to possibly keep medical implants running indefinitely. One of the new micro-micro sensors being developed at the University of Michigan is said to be  1000 times smaller than comparable chips and can be used with low powered off the shelf low-powered microcontrollers. These can be used to power a variety of electronic monitoring sensors besides the medical devices.

solarcircuitprojectsm_aniOne of the projects I’ve been tinkering with for over 10 years is LCD panels that are switchable in order to curtain or semi-curtain windows for shade or privacy. The low power consumption can make them self contained powered by only a solarcell and capacitor (and possibly battery depending on intended use) and a switch, adjusted manually or automatically depending on time or conditions. Smaller demand for power and lower current needs may make these improve sensors ideal for this project.

World’s smallest solar powered sensor runs almost forever

A tiny solar-powered sensor, smaller than Abe Lincoln’s head on a penny, can supply almost perpetual energy, its creators say.

The device contains solar cells, a battery and a processor, all in a package that measures  2.5 by 3.5 by 1 millimeters.

It could enable new biomedical implants as well as new devices to monitor buildings, bridges and homes. “It could vastly improve the efficiency and cost of current environmental sensor networks designed to detect movement or track air and water quality,” the developers said in a statement.

With an off-the-shelf ARM Cortex-M3 processor, the system contains the lowest-powered commercial-class microcontroller. It uses about 2,000 times less power in sleep mode than its most energy-efficient counterpart on the market today.

“Our system can run nearly perpetually if periodically exposed to reasonable lighting conditions, even indoors,” said David Blaauw, an electrical and computer engineering professor. “Its only limiting factor is battery wear-out, but the battery would last many years.”

The new sensor spends most of its time in sleep mode, waking briefly every few minutes to take measurements. Its total average power consumption is less than 1 nanowatt. A nanowatt is one-billionth of a watt.

The developers say the key innovation is their method for managing power. The processor only needs about half of a volt to operate, but its low-voltage, thin-film Cymbet battery puts out close to 4 volts. The voltage, which is essentially the pressure of the electric current, must be reduced for the system to function most efficiently.

“If we used traditional methods, the voltage conversion process would have consumed many times more power than the processor itself uses,” said Dennis Sylvester, an associate professor in electrical and computer engineering.

One way the U-M engineers made the voltage conversion more efficient is by slowing the power management unit’s clock when the processor’s load is light.

“We skip beats if we determine the voltage is sufficiently stable,” Sylvester said.

The system, in the process of being commercialized, could enable less-invasive ways to monitor pressure changes in the eyes, brain, and in tumors in patients with glaucoma, head trauma, or cancer, the scientists say. In the body, the sensor could conceivably harvest energy from movement or heat, rather than light.

This research, presented today at the International Solid-State Circuits Conference in San Francisco, was funded by the National Science Foundation, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the Focus Center Research Program and ARM.

Palm Pre, PrePlus, Pixi concern rumor published in BGR?

Posted By on February 11, 2010

From BGR:

According to an OTR Global report, three different sources have confirmed that all future orders of the Palm Pre and Palm Pre Plus are being suspended as of Wednesday. One of the sources said, “The decision is very sudden, and Foxconn was told to reduce all February Pre forecast to zero on Wednesday and nobody knows whether shipment will resume in March.” We have to be honest, we are pretty baffled by this report. Is Palm being bought by another company? Is this the sign of new hardware — even though the Pre Plus just came out? Let us know what you think in the comments. We will report more as it becomes available. Hit the jump for the breaking news report!

Palm Inc. Alert
Palm Orders Production Halt of Pre and Pre+ in February
February 11, 2010

PALM, S, VZ, 2038 HK, 8078 TT

Sources: 3 sources Taiwan handset component supply chain (all repeats)

Key sources in the Taiwan handset supply chain said Palm Inc. has ordered assembler Foxconn International Holdings Co. Ltd. to suspend production of both the Pre and Pre+ in February. “The decision is very sudden, and Foxconn was told to reduce all February Pre forecast to zero on Wednesday and nobody knows whether shipment will resume in March,” said a key source. The source said the CDMA2000 Pre to Sprint and the CDMA2000 Pre+ to Verizon were affected.

Pixi Production Suspended Too?
One source said Palm also told Compal Communications Inc. to suspend shipment of the Pixi and Pixi+ in February, while another source said that production is still going ahead with the Pixi+ to Verizon, but actual delivery in February will amount to less than 5,000 units.

Reporter: Van Tran
Editor: Hartmut Leuschner

Posted via web from richc’s posterous

Letterman-Oprah-Leno and the Super Bowl Ad

Posted By on February 10, 2010

The Media Decoder article in the NYTimes was eye opening with all the challenges and complexity to overcome in order to produce the Letterman-Oprah-Leno commercial. Most of us when seeing the ad chuckled, but probably didn’t give much thought to the difficulty in getting three notable entertainers together — not only to agree, but in secrecy. I found the “behind the scenes, between the lines” account is almost as interesting as was the ad.

How the Letterman-Oprah-Leno Super Bowl Ad Came Together

Jay and Dave together? Could it be true?

It is, and there they were, Jay Leno and David Letterman sitting on a couch – with Oprah Winfrey between them — upstairs at the Ed Sullivan Theater, where Mr. Letterman tapes his show.

The spot was shot last Tuesday afternoon, under the strictest of secrecy which involved both Mr. Leno and Ms. Winfrey flying in surreptitiously to New York, and arriving incognito at the theater, while Mr. Letterman was in the midst of taping his show for that night. It also involved Jay wearing a disguise: hooded sweatshirt, glasses and faux mustache. If you happened to be on Broadway between 53rd and 54th street last Tuesday about 4:15, you might have seen a man fitting that description slip into the theater by a small entrance under the marquee.

According to staff members of the “Late Show with David Letterman” who were on the scene that day — including the executive producer, Rob Burnett – it all happened because Mr. Letterman had an idea he thought would be truly funny: a Super Bowl ad that featured the two longest-running adversaries in late night, sitting with Ms. Winfrey as though at a Super Bowl party.

What gave the idea extra spin, of course, was that the relationship between Mr. Letterman and Mr. Leno has been especially fractious of late in the wake of NBC’s moves that led to the departure of Conan O’Brien from the “Tonight” show and Mr. Leno’s impending return to the show, where he will once again go head to head with Mr. Letterman.

In the weeks since the decision was announced, Mr. Letterman had been notably acerbic in his on-air jokes about Mr. Leno, suggesting he was a schemer in some way in the moves that led to the changes in late night, and Mr. Leno had responded with jokes about Mr. Letterman’s well-covered romantic entanglements.

That added to the surprise viewers encountered when the ad came up and there the two comics were, flanking Ms. Winfrey, in essence for a promotion for Mr. Letterman’s show.

As Mr. Burnett described it, Mr. Letterman had the idea to invite Mr. Leno to participate, playing off a similar ad he put together with Ms. Winfrey the last time CBS had the Super Bowl, in 2007. “Dave wrote the bit himself,” Mr. Burnett said. “He just thought: it’s the Super Bowl, you’re supposed to entertain people.”

Steps were taken to contact Ms. Winfrey, who agreed immediately, Mr. Burnett said, and then Mr. Leno. Mr. Burnett said he spoke with Mr. Leno’s executive producer, Debbie Vickers. “She asked if this was for real and then she laughed for about 10 minutes,” Mr. Burnett said.

Mr. Leno quickly agreed, but the idea had to be passed by the top NBC executives, including the chief executive, Jeff Zucker. Permission was granted.

Mr. Leno was able to get Tuesday free – NBC had rearranged its schedule to pre-empt his 10 p.m. show that night — and took the NBC corporate jet, Mr. Burnett said. There seemed little chance though that Mr. Leno could sneak into Mr. Letterman’s theater unseen, so the idea was hatched to try to sneak him in during a live taping, in disguise.

Both guests turned up while Mr. Letterman was on stage doing his show. They were kept in a secret green room until the show was over and the theater was cleared. Then Mr. Leno and Ms. Winfrey went up to the theater balcony where a living room set was fashioned with a faux TV and a couch.

Mr. Letterman arrived a short time later. The two late-night rivals greeted each other warmly, Mr. Burnett said. “It was very friendly, very professional, totally cordial,” he said. “You could tell these were two guys who have known each other for a long time.”

The idea Mr. Letterman came up with was for him to be first seen alone, complaining about being at the worst Super Bowl party ever — then to be seen in a two-shot with Ms. Winfrey as he had been in 2007, with her telling him to be nice. And then Mr. Leno would be revealed at the other end of the couch saying that Mr. Letterman was only complaining because he was there.

Mr. Letterman followed doing a mock-Jay voice. The 15-second spot was shot quickly and efficiently, Mr. Burnett said. “I’d say it took no more that 20 or 30 minutes,” he said.

“I think everybody wanted to do it just because they all knew it would get attention and they all just wanted to do something funny.”

After the taping was completed, Mr. Letterman thanked his guests and they said a cordial goodbye, Mr. Burnett said. The two stars slipped back out into the Manhattan night, Mr. Leno back in his faux mustache.

“This wasn’t done to help Dave or to help Jay,” Mr. Burnett said, “though I think it does help both of them. It was just done because Dave thought it would be funny and would entertain people. Nothing went beyond that.”

Posted via web from richc’s posterous

Slow work week due to snow although the economy doesn’t help

Posted By on February 10, 2010

snowfrtofhouse100209 I’m ‘enjoying’ (sort of) staying in town this week since most of Ohio has been receiving a good dose of snow. I’ve been out shoveling the walk (Palm Pre photo left – click for larger) and snowblowing the driveway more than once already – and no doubt will do it again before the last few snow showers end later today … if weather prognosticators can be believed.

WCPO Weather:
Our best chance of falling snow happens through the first part of today with snow tapering to just leftover flurries later today and this evening. Today will stay cloudy with very little sunshine and the snow pack will keep it cold with highs only in the middle 20s. Wind chills will be in the single digits with gusts close to 35 mph and sustained winds between 15 and 25 mph.

Audi A3 TDI clean diesel “green” ad has lovers and haters

Posted By on February 9, 2010

I had to chuckle this morning when registering my vote on the Wall Street Journal poll for best and worst commercial during the Super Bowl – Audi was first in both (click for graphic of poll).

bestworsesbads2010
See ad video below

It’s "Green Police" ad was the sixth most popular in USA TODAY’S Ad Meter, in which 250 viewers gathered in McLean, Va., and San Diego rate every ad in the Super Bowl. No other automakers made the top 10, but a lot tried.

Volkswagen, Honda, Acura, Kia and Dodge were among those automakers with Super Bowl ads this year. Almost all took a humorous turn. But Audi’s take caught attention, an ad in which a "green police" try to force environmental ways on society but the Audi A3 TDI diesel is given a free pass because of its fuel-saving, low-polluting ways.

Google to Add Social Feature to Gmail

Posted By on February 8, 2010

Looks like a little more competition for those carving out their space in social networking?

Google Inc. is taking a swipe at Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc. with a new feature that makes it easier for users of Gmail to view media and status updates shared online by their friends.Google could announce the new Gmail feature as soon as this week, said people familiar with the matter. A Google spokeswoman declined to comment.

The change adds a module to the Gmail screen that will display a stream of updates from individuals a user chooses to connect with, said one of these people. It is a format popularized by Facebook and Twitter.

Yahoo Inc. added a similar feature to Yahoo Mail last year, allowing users to see whether friends have uploaded a photo to a site like Flickr, for example.

Google, too, is trying to get users to turn to Gmail as a place they can go to see what’s up with their friends. But whether users will want to blend sending email with browsing friends’ content is unclear.

Google has been trying to fashion Gmail into more than an email service for years. It currently lets users set an “away message”—which can be a link to a Web site—that their friends see when they message them.

The new stream will eventually include content that a user’s connections share through Google’s YouTube video site and Picasa photo service, according to one person familiar with the matter. But whether those features will be announced in the coming days remains unclear.

Google’s move comes after Facebook last week rolled out a new design with a newmessage inbox that more closely resembles an email inbox like Gmail’s. The social-networking company said it had roughly 400 million users. Gmail had 176 million unique visitors in December, according to comScore Inc.

Write to Jessica E. Vascellaro at jessica.vascellaro@wsj.com

Posted via web from richc’s posterous

Who Dat? Dey be Super Bowl 44 champions

Posted By on February 8, 2010

The days of the “paper bags over the head” have given way to “destiny” and a dream come true for the 2010 Super Bowl saints3colts17winning New Orleans Saints and their many fans on Sunday. I thought the cool headed Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts would end up on top when pitting arm against arm,  but the mistake free Drew Brees threw for a recorded tying 32 completions, rallying his team to a 31 to 17 victory over the Colts. He was deservingly chosen the game’s MVP for a performance admired by any fan of the NFL. Brees stated after the game, “We just believed in ourselves and we knew that we had an entire city and maybe an entire country behind us. What can I say? I tried to imagine what this moment would be like for a long time and it’s better than expected.”

A disappointed Peyton Manning (four time NFL MVP) commented as he walked to the sideline after the game, “It’s time for the Saints to celebrate. It’s their field and it’s their championship.” Manning’s performance was almost MVP caliber and if the score would have been reversed, I have no doubt Manning would have been the game’s MVP. Although the Colts quarterback was nearly perfect, drewbrees_son_sb44_100206he did throw the games only interception — a costly turnover that was returned by New Orleans cornerback Tracy Porter for a touchdown. The games only turnover prevented the Indianapolis Colts a chance at tying the game in the 4th quarter. Unfortunately for Colts’ fans, it was not to be. The Saints continued to click on all cylinders and dominated the second half in “time of possession.” They scored one more time giving little time for Manning to score once, let alone twice.

Drew Brees and son after the game (Palm Pre of home theater)

Great game and one that looked to have been enjoyed by most of America. Speaking of enjoying the Super Bowl, The Who’s performance was ‘good’ and enjoyed by most of us boomers, but on Monday it seemed to have been lost to celebration in New Orleans and chatter about the commercials. Personally I liked the Denny’s commercials … but some of the others were enjoyable too.

Car maintenance weekend project before the Superbowl

Posted By on February 7, 2010


Replaced the rear brakes on my daughter’s 2001 Volkswagen Jetta TDI for the second time in its life this weekend. They were in pretty bad shape, but I enjoyed being able to exchange the “liftetime warranty pads” at Autozone for free. The loner tool program and easy to use warranty make it a “recommended” place to purchase auto parts in my book, even though I’ve found O’Reilly Auto Parts seems to have better prices. I did end up replacing her rotors too … but for $15.99 a rotor I’ll feel better when she has to make a hard stop.

For those that don’t remember great late night TV

Posted By on February 6, 2010

Johnny Carson and Dom DeLouiseSince I missed posting to the blog on Saturday, I decide to back date a post that I found enjoyable.  Obviously I’m getting older since I can remember Johnny Carson hosting the Tonight Show, but I thought I’d share a clip portraying better late night television comedy that I’m seeing nowadays … in my opinion. Johnny Carson and Dom DeLuise “back in the day,” as my daughter would say has some pretty funny stuff.

How does it compare to the late night show of today?

Book: Comeback American by David M. Walker

Posted By on February 5, 2010

comebackamericadavidwalker1Books about fixing America’s dysfunctional economy are trendy again and partisan finger pointing is probably the most notable component in most books. The book by David M. Walker called Comeback America is no exception when it comes to the frustration and anger he shares when in particular chastising President George W. Bush. Irritation aside, Walker is one who has the credentials to deliver punches since he also work under President Reagan, Bush 41 and Clinton eventually becoming comptroller general of the U.S. from 1998 to 2008.  During that same period he was also CEO of the non-partisan Government Accountability Office (GAO) and shares how he led it’s reorganization from what was the General Accounting Office.

Walker became the nation’s seventh comptroller general under President Clinton and was able to experience a robust economic, helped by the technology boom, and a political environment that saw both a “Contract with America” fresh faced congress and a President willing to make choices that gave the U.S. a budget surplus as it faced the year 2000. 

In Comeback America, David Walker explains how he warned congress and the Bush 43 administration of the disconnect after 2001 of tax cuts and pending wars. In reflecting on Walkers recent history lesson, I still find it disturbing as a fiscally conservative Republican to see how different George W. Bush was with finances than his father, George H. W. Bush. Walker commented that he has “lifelong respect for our first President Bush who had the courage to break a campaign promise — “Read my lips: No new taxes” when he saw our deficits rising to dangerous levels.” For me, Democrats are the spendthrifts, not the Republicans … obviously someone lost their way.

 

As David Walker analyzes the Obama presidency, he says that Clinton was fiscally responsible, but doesn’t see President Obama following that discipline, based on his first year in office. Walker see him currently overly focus on health care "reform," and comments that he is continuing Bush 43’s spending habits, aided and abetted by Congress.

Walker believes that if significant reforms to current government programs and policies aren’t made, federal taxes will double from their current levels. The effect will be a decline in our nation’s economic strength and position in the world will diminish, not to mention the suffering and hardship of our citizens, especially the poor. His credit card example was easy to understand where seeing continual overspending eventually costs the user more in interest than in principle – and when we are talking Trillions of dollars, the hole we are digging is very deep.

Walker believes that reforms must be made in every sector of the government, including raising the retirement age for Social Security, the so-called "Third Rail" of reform.  He proposes raising the eligibility age and the amount of wages and self-employment earnings subject to the Social Security tax $150,000.  He would also require supplemental savings accounts, believing that President Roosevelt in his 1935 Social Security Act legislation never intended the program to be the primary source of retirement income … which it currently is for many retirees.

Walker also wants a total reform of the Pentagon and to health care he suggest fixed limits as to what the federal government can spend each year. No unfunded mandates.

Tax reform is big on Walker’s recommendation. He suggests adopting a Value Added Tax believing a VAT would encourage saving and discourage conspicuous consumption – a concern for our materialistic society.

One of the biggest changes and most challenging is my wife’s pet peeve: Term limits for Congress.  Walker notes that it is widely used in state and local governments and believes electing members of the House of Representatives to four-year terms, instead of the current two-year and limiting the tenure of representatives and senators to 12-18 years – which seems overly liberal (in a non-political way)  to many of us?  One other area would be in electing Presidents; Walker believes only a single 6 or 8 year term rather than a second potentially lame duck term. Obviously these changes would require a Constitutional Convention … and in my limited understanding of the goings on in Washington, a monumental undertaking.

Although the majority of David Walker’s Comeback America is depressing and reflects on how we have mismanaged our way, he also shows how we can return to our founding principles of fiscal responsibility and stewardship for future generations, hence the title Comeback America.

On another personal note — Since my daughter is in town with her Nook (and the hardback was $26.00 compared to the. $9.99 B&N e-book), I took the opportunity to read some of Comeback America on the Nook – my first full read of an e-book on e-reader (not counting computers, Palm Pilots and smartphones).

combackamerica_nook_100205

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog