video removed 🙁
Cat, Neo, is surrounded by puppy agent smiths.
Related: Bunny and Kittens – Leopard Bests Crocodile – fun with cats – Friday Dog Fun
video removed 🙁
Cat, Neo, is surrounded by puppy agent smiths.
Related: Bunny and Kittens – Leopard Bests Crocodile – fun with cats – Friday Dog Fun
Teen goalie designs pads to trick shots
“When the shooter comes down and only has a split second to shoot the puck, they’re looking for net,” said Leahy, a senior from Hampton, N.H., who grew up in Byfield. “If you put the net on the pad, they’ll shoot at the pad instead of the goal.”
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Exactly what will happen to the pads after this season is unclear. Leahy said he would like to play hockey in college, probably at the club level, and wants to market the idea. “It would definitely be cool to get it out there and get other guys in the future wearing it,” he said.
Related: The Glove – Engineering Coolness – Engineering Basketball Flop – Science of the High Jump
IBM team boosts MRI resolution
The researchers said it offered the ability to study complex 3D structures at the “nano” scale. The step forward was made possible by a technique called magnetic resonance force microscopy (MRFM), which relies on detecting very small magnetic forces.
In addition to its high resolution, MRFM has the further advantage that it is chemically specific, can “see” below surfaces and, unlike electron microscopy, does not destroy delicate biological materials.
Now, the IBM-led team has dramatically boosted the sensitivity of MRFM and combined it with an advanced 3D image reconstruction technique. This allowed them to demonstrate, for the first time, MRI on biological objects at the nanometre scale.
That is very cool.
Related: IBM Research Creates Microscope With 100 Million Times Finer Resolution Than Current MRI – Magnetic Resonance Force Microscopy (from Stanford) – Nanotechnology Breakthroughs for Computer Chips – Self-assembling Nanotechnology in Chip Manufacturing – Nanoparticles to Aid Brain Imaging
Photo of leaf-footed bug by RobertaThe Growing With Science Blog by Roberta, an entomologist, is full of interesting posts on bugs and more. For example – Bug of the Week: Leaf-footed Bug
Leaf-footed bugs have sucking mouthparts and sometimes feed of fruit such as cactus fruit, oranges or peaches. Although we do have citrus, I think this one is a visitor from our neighbors’ yard. Our neighbors have a pomegranate bush. Pomegranates are one of the leaf-footed bugs’ favorite foods.
Like many of their relatives, these true bugs can give off an odor when handled.
🙂 I was adding in some related links and the first one, I was adding, Backyard Wildlife: Great Spreadwing Damselfly, Roberta had commented on to let me know it was a Great Spreadwing Damselfly. It is a small web.
Related: 2 Mysterious Species in the UK – Cool Looking Florescent Green Beetle: Six-spotted Tiger Beetle – Big Spider
Tardigrades (commonly known as water bears) have eight legs and are their own phylum on the tree of life. Some can survive temperatures close to absolute zero, temperatures as high as 151 °C (303 °F), 1,000 times more radiation than any other animal, nearly a decade without water, and even the vacuum of space.
Related: Tardigrades, UNC Chapel Hill – Tardigrades In Space (TARDIS) – What is an Extremophile? – Evolution, Methane, Jobs, Food and More
Science Commons is a project of Creative Commons. Like other organizations trying to support the advancement of science with open access they deserve to be supported (PLoS and arXiv.org are other great organizations supporting science).
Science Commons has three interlocking initiatives designed to accelerate the research cycle – the continuous production and reuse of knowledge that is at the heart of the scientific method. Together, they form the building blocks of a new collaborative infrastructure to make scientific discovery easier by design.
Making scientific research re-useful, help people and organizations open and mark their research and data for reuse. Learn more.
Enabling one-click access to research materials, streamline the materials-transfer process so researchers can easily replicate, verify and extend research. Learn more.
Integrating fragmented information sources, help researchers find, analyze and use data from disparate sources by marking and integrating the information with a common, computer-readable language. Learn more.
NeuroCommons, is their proof-of-concept project within the field of neuroscience. The NeuroCommons is a beta open source knowledge management system for biomedical research that anyone can use, and anyone can build on.
Related: Open Source: The Scientific Model Applied to Programming – Publishers Continue to Fight Open Access to Science – Encyclopedia of Life – Science 2.0 – Biology
How to Develop Products like Toyota
Integrating events are an opportunity to eliminate weak opportunities. It is only after these events are complete that detailed design commences. “The point is that you don’t get to detailed design until everything works,” says Kennedy. “That is the reason Toyota focuses so intently up front on understanding trade-offs.”
This is very similar to agile software development practices. Though due to different processes, software versus car manufacture the two process are not identical.
This is always true. Copying what others do does not work. You can learn from others by understanding the benefits of their process and then adapting the ideas to your organization.
On my management improvement blog I discuss the Toyota Production System often, you can follow those posts if you are interested.
Related: Toyota Engineering Development Process – Toyota Winglet, Personal Transportation – 12 stocks for 10 years – Toyota Robots
Fitness Isn’t an Overnight Sensation
And genetic differences among individuals mean some people respond much better to exercise than others
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Now, said Mr. Antane, who runs with a group in Princeton on Thursday nights, “everything changed — my outlook on life, who I hung out with, how I felt about myself.”
Our bodies evolved under conditions with much more exercise than we currently get if we sit in an office all day. And we had less food. It is no surprise with more food and less exercise that we gain weight. And given that the benefit of fat was to help us survive when we had little food out bodies don’t change overnight. If they did then our ancestors would have had much more difficulty surviving – the whole point was to provide a resource to tap in bad times. If that resource dissipated quickly it would not have helped much.
Related: Active Amish Avoid Obesity – Big Fat Lie – Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants. – Reducing Risk of Diabetes Through Exercise – posts on exercise

Student Invents Solar-Powered Fridge for Developing Countries
After winning £5,000 from York Merchant Adventurers for her idea, Emily delayed going to college for a year to take her refrigerator to Africa for further development.
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At 16 Emily won a regional Young Engineer for Britain Award for creating a toothpaste squeezer for people with arthritis, and the next year went on to win a Sustainable Design Award for a water-carrier made from wood and rubber tubing. In 2007 Emily was named the British Female Innovator of the Year, and last year was short-listed for Cosmopolitan’s 2008 Ultimate Women of the Year Competition.
Update: some readers seem confused by what related means below. Those links show previous post to related items and include previous similar designs to keep things cool, including “Refrigerator Without Electricity” which is a clay pot design by Mohammed Bah Abba of Nigeria for the Pot in Pot Cooling System that received the 2000 Rolex award.
Related: Refrigerator Without Electricity – Compressor-free Refrigerator – posts on appropriate engineering – UK Young Engineers Competitions – Winter Air Refrigeration – The Glove, Engineering Coolness
Pretty cool. Tiny motor allows robots to swim through human body
Their miniature motor was connected to an electricity supply and a way would need to be found to power it remotely. The construction of the flagella also needed refinement.
Related: Micro-robots to ‘swim’ Through Veins (post in 2006 on this work) – Bacteria Power Tiny Motor – Biological Molecular Motors – Robo Insect Flight