Wireless energy could power consumer, industrial electronics
Related: Engine on a Chip: the Future Battery – Physics promises wire-less power – Recharge Batteries in Seconds
Wireless energy could power consumer, industrial electronics
Related: Engine on a Chip: the Future Battery – Physics promises wire-less power – Recharge Batteries in Seconds
Global Engineering Education Study includes a great deal of useful information. Universities partnering in the study include: Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany; Georgia Institute of Technology, USA; MIT, USA; Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China and University of Tokyo, Japan.
Recommendations include:
Related: The World’s Best Research Universities – Innovative Science and Engineering Higher Education – Science and Engineering in Global Economics
How flowering plants beat out the competition on ancient earth:
Seed-bearing plants also figured out better ways to get around. Some seeds sprout improbably elaborate barbs in order to snag a lift on passing animals. A significant number hitch a ride by growing a morsel called a elaiosome that entices ants to carry them off a few feet. Other seeds are textured or buoyant, so they can float away on wind or water.
The human appetite for seeds has resulted in new forms of dispersal as well. Thousands of years ago, people began collecting and cultivating nutrient-rich seeds, like corn, lentils, and oats, for food.
Related: What Are Flowers For? – Artic Seed Vault – Seeds, a new book
She sees vistas in a tiny speck of life
“They’re the minimum form of life,” she says. “We’ve decoded their genome sequence and found that it’s made of 1,700 genes. That’s the smallest number of genes that can convert sunlight into life.”
Related: The World’s Smallest Genome – $40 Million for Engineering Education in Boston
Learn . Create . Succeed is a blog by SolidWorks dedicated to assisting Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) instructors in incorporating SolidWorks into their course curriculum. The posts include ties to algebra, geometry, physics, and robotics.
Suggested by Marie Planchard via the Curious Cat Post Suggestion form.
Brave nano world by Nate Birt:
Former President Bill Clinton started the initiative in 2000, and it became a part of the federal budget in fiscal 2001. Back then, the federal government spent an estimated $464 million on nanotechnology
Related: MIT Energy Storage Using Carbon Nanotubes – Nanotechnology Overview – R&D Spending in USA Universities
NSF presents a large amount of data on the Characteristics of Recent S&E Graduates: 2003. The data covers undergraduates and graduates in 2001 and 2002. The report shows 937,700 bachelor’s graduates (*682,200 in science fields; 112,300 in engineering; and 143,300 in health care). And 246,700 master’s graduates (117,000 science; 47,000 engineering; 82,700 health).
Median 2003 salary for 2001 and 2002 bachelor’s graduates:
all science: $32,000
all engineering: $50,000
Some of the specific areas median salaries: computer and information sciences $60,000; electrical/computer engineering $70,000 and industrial engineering $70,000.
2003 median salaries for 2001 and 2002 masters graduates:
all science: $45,000
all engineering: $65,000
* the report totals do not exactly add do to rounding estimates by NSF.
Related: Top degree for S&P 500 CEOs? Engineering – Science and Engineering Degrees – Career Success – Lucrative college degrees
Old Viruses Resurrected Through DNA by Carl Zimmer:
This year 195 teams from 17 countries (mainly from Asia) will participate in the World Robot Olympiad next week. The World Robot Olympiad brings together young people to develop their creativity and problem solving skills through challenging and educational robot competitions.
Brunei’s bid to make history at World Robotics Olympiad
Related: Lego Learning – For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology (FIRST) – Boosting Engineering, Science and Technology – La Vida Robot
Microbes May Use Chemicals to Compete for Food
Related: Microbes Types – Bacterial Evolution in Yogurt