Saturday, November 24, 2012

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Saturday, August 11, 2012

I'll take some crackers with my gluon soup, please!

We live in amazing times! If you think that's an overly optimistic statement, then check out this fun list of recent discoveries.

Friday, July 6, 2012

Amazing stuff: The quantum frontier

Congrats to the team at the CERN LHC on observing a particle consistent with the Higgs Boson postulate. What a breakthrough, once this discovery is validated and proves to be repeatable. Quantum fireworks on July 4th, WOW!

Friday, June 15, 2012

OLEDs - make way for LCDs!

A really interesting article about how Quantum Dot technology stands to revolutionize LCD capabilities, likely at the expense of OLEDs, which as discussed earlier probably won't scale economically anyway. So this is good news!

Monday, May 21, 2012

Fascinating Digital Media Ecoscapes

I recently saw the display advertising map from Luma Partners and was dumbfounded by what I already knew was a complex environment.

Here's a link to the complete set, which is even more mind boggling.

And you thought a display advertising budget was your biggest headache!

Monday, April 2, 2012

Great April Fool's joke!

TigerDirect has a real sense of humor. Sending out one of their normal advertising emails for the Kube X16 on April 1st; here's the details (ha ha!)

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Making parts from scratch

When I first heard of 3D printers, I thought it was vaporspeak. I'd read about such devices in some good Sci Fi stories, but they seemed at least 50 years off, not something that would occur anytime soon.

Well, step aside and embrace the future! Now, you can fabricate small prototype parts and items (just plastic so far) at home if you want to pony up to do it.

The idea of direct CAD  to Fab is an amazing jump, even if it's just for plastic parts so far. Expect to see some noticeable advances in various industries from the application of this technology.

Some companies producing these machines:

Why quality matters

Sort of a silly and obvious subject, but here's a real-life example.

On Jan 27, I received a new notebook from a large off-shore manufacturer. It's a generally satisfying computer, with the exception that I noticed one or two pixel failures on the display. Knowing that most manufacturers will state that one or two pixel failures are within acceptable tolerances and since it wasn't that big of a deal, I let it go.

A few weeks later, I noticed more dead pixels had shown up! Hmm, oh well. Not the best quality display, I suppose. I was mildly disturbed that the issue was growing, but hoped the worst was over.

Of course, it wasn't! There have been a few more pixel failures since then and this morning, when I started the laptop, there's a one-pixel wide vertical line on the left side of the display that's there to stay :-(

OK, that's it! This display clearly has a problem and it's getting worse over time. Now, our IT department will have to replace the unit, lots of people (myself included) will invest time and effort, and a lot of needless expense will occur just because of this issue. I sure hope its limited to my unit and not a larger issue, but I have to admit I suspect that mine might be the tip of an iceberg...

So, by now, it should be obvious that quality does matter!

Monday, February 20, 2012

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Amusing physics comment

You can't always get what you want! From Lederman & Hill's book, Quantum Physics for Poets (a wonderful book and a recommended read):

The notion that nature (or God) plays dice with subatomic stuff never sat well with Einstein, Schrodinger, de Broglie, Planck, and others. Einstein cherished the belief that quantum theory was merely a stopgap, which would eventually be replaced by a theory that was deterministic and causal. Over the years, he made many clever attempts to show that uncertainty relations could be circumnavigated, but they were foiled, one by one, with relish, by Bohr.