Software Breakthroughs: Solving the Toughest Problems in Computer Science, 2004:
Related: Bill Gates Interview from 1993 – Donald Knuth – Computer Scientist – Open Source: The Scientific Model Applied to Programming – Internship with Bill Gates
Software Breakthroughs: Solving the Toughest Problems in Computer Science, 2004:
Related: Bill Gates Interview from 1993 – Donald Knuth – Computer Scientist – Open Source: The Scientific Model Applied to Programming – Internship with Bill Gates
SanDisk Drops Price On Solid-State Drives For Laptops
The latest devices operate at a 40,000 vRPM, or virtual RPM, a metric used to compare the speeds of SSDs and HDDs. The SanDisk drives read and write data at 200 MBps and 140 MBps, respectively.
“With large capacities and aggressive pricing, SSDs are poised to enter mainstream corporate notebooks in 2009,” Rich Heye, senior VP and general manager of SanDisk’s SSD business unit, said in a statement.
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SSDs use flash memory chips to store data, so have no moving parts. As a result, the technology is quieter, uses less power and is more reliable than HDDs. In addition, SSDs are faster and are more rugged.
Related: von Neumann Architecture and Bottleneck – Nanotechnology Breakthroughs for Computer Chips – IBM Believes New DRAM will Double Performance – $100 Laptops for the World
When researchers disabled the moth’s noisemaking organs, though, bats caught the moths in midair with ease, Conner reported at the annual meeting of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.
Conner says the work is “the first example of any prey item that jams biological sonar.” Conference attendee David Yager of the University of Maryland in College Park says Conner’s experimental paradigm is “very strong, and I do think he has documented jamming by a species of moth.”
Insect-hunting bats and their moth prey have become a classic in the study of evolutionary arms races, Conner says. “This is warfare … The first counter-adaptation is that the insects developed ears.”
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Jamming isn’t the only possible explanation for moth noises, he said. An explosive clicking sound coming back out of the night might startle a bat just a split-second long enough for the moth to get away.
Related: Vampire Moth Discovered – Monarch Butterfly Migration – Human Sonar, Echolocation – Still Just a Lizard – Lancelet Genome Provides Answers on Evolution

I have posted photos from the first day of my Utah trip: Antelope Island, Great Salt Lake and Salt Lake City. The Great Salt Lake is
Related: Clifton Gorge State Nature Preserve, Ohio Photos – Grand Teton National Park – Scientists Search for Clues To Bee Mystery – Researchers Learn What Sparks Plant Growth
The Innovations in Engineering Education, Curriculum, and Infrastructure (IEECI) program supports research which addresses four aspects of engineering education: (1) how students best learn the ideas, principles, and practices to become creative and innovative engineers, and how this learning is measured (2) how application of cyberlearning resources of networked computing and communication, interactive visualization capabilities, and well designed user interfaces can be used to develop easily transportable tools and systems with low barriers to adoption which significantly improve learning, (3) integration of sustainability into engineering education, and (4) future directions of U.S. engineering doctoral programs.
Two types of awards will be supported: Expansion Projects (approximately 10 grants are anticipated) will only be available for area (1), Innovations in Teaching and Learning. Exploratory Projects (25-30 grants are anticipated) will be available in areas (2-4).
Anticipated Funding Amount: The total anticipated funding in fiscal year 2009 is $8,500,000. Expansion Projects will be funded at a level of up to $400,000. Exploratory Projects will be funded at a level up to $150,000, but exploratory projects involving multiple universities may apply for grants up to $200,000.
Full proposals are due by 11 March 2009.
Related: $92 Million for Engineering Research Centers – Worldwide Science and Engineering Doctoral Degree Data – NSF Graduate Research Fellows 2008 – House Testimony on Engineering Education – Webcast: Engineering Education in the 21st Century

Pupils conquer fear of computers
“I’m feeling much better. The E-library has helped with my studies. “We can see the periodic table of science, and also maps and other geography things in a pictorial way that is easy to understand. It’s not only that – we can also play games and have fun.”
Kamal says his parents were very excited when he told them about the computer and came to watch the very next day. It was not only Kamal. His computer teacher, Shankar Prajapati, says all the pupils were afraid. “They all worried they would catch some virus and fall ill or even die. But now they are familiar with computers,” he says.
“Even we teachers are gaining knowledge from the E-library. It’s really helpful for us, too. “The students can see science experiments carried out on screen and search for whatever they want in the encyclopaedia.
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This is a free and open-source (accessible to everyone) package which connects one powerful central server in the school, using the Linux operating system, to a number of diskless low-end computers. When linked to the server, each computer receives a full Linux desktop.
Read more about the Help Nepal Network’s eLibrary program. Photos from this web site shows students in Nepal using computers.
I believe strongly in the ability of kids to learn if they are just provided some tools that help them do so. See a great post on Hole in the Wall computers.
Related: A Child’s View of the OLPC Laptop – Fixing the World on $2 a Day – Open Source: The Scientific Model Applied to Programming – What Business Can Learn from Open Source
Did Earth’s Twin Cores Spark Plate Tectonics?
The idea stems from an ancient, cataclysmic collision that scientists believe occurred when a Mars-sized object hit Earth about 4.45 billion years ago. The young Earth was still so hot that it was mostly molten, and debris flung from the impact is thought to have formed the moon.
Haluk Cetin and Fugen Ozkirim of Murray State University think the core of the Mars-sized object may have been left behind inside Earth, and that it sank down near the original inner core. There the two may still remain, either separate or as conjoined twins, locked in a tight orbit.
Their case is largely circumstantial and speculative, Cetin admitted. “We have no solid evidence yet, and we’re not saying 100 percent that it still exists,” he said. “The interior of Earth is a very hard place to study.”
The ancient collision is a widely accepted phenomenon. But most scientists believe the incredible pressure at the center of the planet would’ve long since pushed the two cores into each other.
I must say two cores seems very far-fetched to me. But it is another great example of the scientific discovery process and an interesting idea.
Related: Himalayas Geology – Drilling to the Center of the Earth – Curious Cat Science and Engineering Search

We always hear of science fiction. But what about engineering fiction? Well I finished reading a book this weekend that was at least as much engineering fiction as science fiction: The Ice Limit by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. It was a fun read. I enjoy the books those two collaborate on.
I also finished reading another book recently. I recommend Panic in Level 4 by Richard Preston. He wrote The Hot Zone, which is also great. He writes what “literary nonfiction” or “creative nonfiction.” The book includes 2 stories on math, about the Chudnovsky brothers, and 4 on biological science stories. I believe they were all previously stories in the New Yorker.
Douglas Preston and Richard Preston are brothers. It is just a happy co-incidence I happened to read them both recently. I just noticed the last names were the same so I looked online to see if they were related. Here is a nice bit from Douglas Preston’s web site:
Also I read Tyrannosaur Canyon by Douglas Preston a few months ago. I preferred it to Ice Limit actually (but it didn’t have the engineering fiction angle) just a fun thriller with some science fiction thrown in.
Related: Ebola Outbreak in Uganda – science books – Waterloo’s wizards of game theory – The Best Science Books – My favorite science fiction author Orson Scott Card
I have added a Google gadget to the right side column of the Curious Cat Science and Engineering Blog that translates our blog into 35 languages. I have been proving a direct link to 6 languages, so this is a great increase in languages covered.
All that is required to add this capability to your site is add a short bit of javascript from the Google Translate gadget site. And as they add more languages that additional coverage will automatically be reflected on your site.
The usability of the Google translate is excellent, I think. If you are reading the translated page, say in Chinese, and you follow a link to another page on our site it translates that page for you automatically.
I hope you enjoy this new capability.
Related: Funding Google Gadget Development – Google Offers $10 Million in Awards for Google Phone Development – Marissa Mayer on Innovation at Google – Is Google Overpriced? – Javascript books
“Fat is catching” theory exposed
Excellent reminder of the risks of analyzing data for correlations. We continue to, far to often, fail to interpret data properly. Both authors of the study, received PhD’s from the University of Wisconsin-Madison which strengthens my belief that it is teaching students well (just kidding).
Also another example of the scientific inquiry process where scientists challenge the conclusions drawn by other scientists. It is a wonderful system, even if confusing and not the clean idea so many have of how science works.
Related: Correlation is Not Causation – Seeing Patterns Where None Exists – Statistics for Experimenters – 500 Year Floods – Playing Dice and Children’s Numeracy – The Illusion of Understanding – All Models Are Wrong But Some Are Useful – Data Doesn’t Lie But People Can Draw Faulty Conclusions from Data