Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

Photovoltaic Moore’s Law Will Make Solar Competitive by 2015

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

Photovoltaic Moore’s Law Will Make Solar Competitive by 2015

Now there are some new twists and turns—essentially, three very positive developments that would not have been generally anticipated a decade ago. First, silicon-based solar technology has decoupled from the semiconductor industry and is achieving steady cost reductions, so that those following PV discern a kind of Moore’s law at work. In 2005, production of silicon for solar cells already surpassed production of silicon for semiconductors.

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Second, the industry has become so confident in that evolutionary path, policymakers and planners have started to set dates when they expect PV-generated electricity to be competitive with the major sources of electricity sold on the grid now. And third, while the incremental path promises a commercial breakthrough within ten years, it’s suddenly looking like second generation technology may be arriving after all—in which case wide commercialization of PV could occur much sooner.

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[Above, maps showing average daily solar energy]

In recent years, global PV production has been increasing at a rate of 50 percent per year, so that accumulated global capacity doubles about every 18 months. The PV Moore’s law states that with every doubling of capacity, PV costs come down by 20 percent. In 2004, installing PV cost about $7 per watt, compared to $1/W for wind, which at that time was beginning to stand on its own feet commercially, Last, year, as recently noted in this blog, average global solar costs had come down to between $4 and $5 per watt, right in line with the PV Moore’s law. Extrapolate those gains out six or seven years, and PV costs will be below $2/W, making photovolatics competitive with 2004 wind.

UK Security Camera, 30th Aniv. of Spam, Robotic Suits

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

4.2 million surviellence cameras hasn’t reduced crime in the UK.

ccta

“Massive investment in CCTV cameras to prevent crime in the UK has failed to have a significant impact, despite billions of pounds spent on the new technology, a senior police officer piloting a new database has warned. Only 3% of street robberies in London were solved using CCTV images, despite the fact that Britain has more security cameras than any other country in Europe.”


30th Anniversary of Spam was May 3rd.

spamboy

According to a story in the Wall Street Journal, Gary Thuerk, who at the time worked for Digital Equipment Corp., sent what is believed to be the first spam message, an invitation to an open house for a new DEC computer (a VAX 11/780?) that he sent to 400 of the 2,600 or so people who had email accounts on the ARPANET at the time.

Thuerk claims that his email generated about $12 million in new sales. However, many people who received his email also got highly irritated, complained to US Defense Department (which operated the net) which in turn told him never to do it again. Thuerk says he never did, either.

Thuerk also said in the story that “people have one of three reactions when they meet him: Some are excited to meet someone with an unusual claim to fame; some want to beat him up on the spot; and others just avoid him like the plague.”


Robotic Suit for the Army Being Tested

robosuit

There was an AP story last week on the Army’s “exoskeleton” robotic suit being developed by Sarcos Inc (now owned by Raytheon) that potentially will “multiply a person’s strength and endurance as many as 20 times.”

“Jack Obusek, a former colonel now with the Army’s Soldier Research Development and Engineering Center in the Boston suburb of Natick, foresees robot-suited soldiers unloading heavy ammunition boxes from helicopters, lugging hundreds of pounds of gear over rough terrain or even relying on the suit to make repairs to tanks that break down in inconvenient locations,” according to the story.

The suit is still not practical: it is very expensive, and the suit’s battery life currently lasts only 30 minutes.

Japan is running out of engineers

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

Japan is running out of engineers.

NYT:  High-Tech Japanese, Running Out of Engineers

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Universities call it “rikei banare,” or “flight from science.” The decline is growing so drastic that industry has begun advertising campaigns intended to make engineering look sexy and cool, and companies are slowly starting to import foreign workers, or sending jobs to where the engineers are, in Vietnam and India.

It was engineering prowess that lifted this nation from postwar defeat to economic superpower. But according to educators, executives and young Japanese themselves, the young here are behaving more like Americans: choosing better-paying fields like finance and medicine, or more purely creative careers, like the arts, rather than following their salaryman fathers into the unglamorous world of manufacturing.

In the meantime, the country has slowly begun to accept more foreign engineers, but nowhere near the number that industry needs.

While ingrained xenophobia is partly to blame, companies say Japan’s language and closed corporate culture also create barriers so high that many foreign engineers simply refuse to come, even when they are recruited.

Nonetheless, labor experts warn Japan may be doing too little, too late. They say the country has already gained a negative reputation as discriminating against foreign employees, with weak job guarantees and glass ceilings. Experts say Indian and other engineers will often opt for more open markets like the United States.

Xcel Energy starts building the power grid of the future

Friday, May 16th, 2008

SmartGridCity technology will allow Boulder residents to go online to see how much power they are using and what it is costing them. They will be able to control their energy usage with the help of “intelligent” appliances communicating with the power grid. Xcel page on the technology.

boulder

Project Details:

Phase I: March 2008 – August 2008

* Includes full-system automation, monitoring and smart meters for the first group of SmartGridCity customers. Involves upgrades to two substations, five feeders and nearly 15,000 meters (representing both residential, commercial and light industrial customers) in Boulder.
* A Web portal will provide consumers with insight into their energy use and information for better home energy management.
* A dedicated customer service phone number (1-877-887-3339) and e-mail address (SmartGridCity@xcelenergy.com) for SmartGridCity customers.
* Some customers can choose to have in-home automation tools, allowing increased control over home energy use and costs.
* By mid-August, initial capabilities should be demonstrated.

Phase II: September 2008 – December 2009

* Complete the installation of a distribution and communication network for remaining areas within Boulder (an additional two substations, 20 feeders and smart meters for an additional 35,000 premises).
* Expanded in-home automation installations.
* Enable Web portal access to all SmartGridCity customers.
* Begin initial integration of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, solar and wind co-generation sources onto the grid in Boulder.

Previous post on the SmartGridCity.

Negawatt Central

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Ever heard of a Negawatt? To understand a negawatt, you need to know first what a megawatt is. A megawatt is a large amount of electrical power. So the cleverly named negawatt just means not using a megawatt of electricity. It’s a great concept for reducing the need for more power plants and with the latest high-tech power usage monitoring tools that are available it is finally becoming a practical solution. Technically, Amory Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute coined the term “negawatts” in 1989, for conserved energy.

CNET takes an inside look at one such anti-power control center in New England called EnerNoc.

noc

When a utility or power generator gives EnerNoc a signal, technicians in the operations center alert their customers and then dial down their energy usage using the Internet.

The changes can be relatively simple, such as turning down the lights in a hotel lobby for 15 minutes. But added together, they can lighten the load significantly on the grid during peak times and potentially obviate the need to build more power plants.

Utilities also want to avoid turning on expensive and dirty “peaking plants” that get turned on at peak times, such as the middle of a hot summer day, when air conditioners are on high.

Read on and see more photos.

Here is a longer article about the history and current state of the Negawatt.

Amazingly, someone actually wrote a poem about the Negawatt (in the comments of the previous article). Read it at your own risk…

A Negawatt

A negawatt is a megawatt saved,
A negawatt is the path to be paved,
Energy efficiency is what we strive to be,
For negawatt savings are real.

A negawatt is power not used,
And none of us should be excused,
From keeping on the switches, wasting power in glitches,
Running of electrons is abused.

Leaving lights on when they are not needed,
Disconnects on microwaves not heeded,
We keep in the power plug and it turns into a slug,
By draining power which from the grid is feeded.

Negawatts are megawatts to save,
The negawatt should be the path to crave,
Energy efficiency is what we strive to be,
Yes, negawatt savings are real.

HP researchers solve 37-year mystery of the memory resistor, the missing 4th circuit element.

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

The Mysterious Case of the Memristor: The Fourth Passive Circuit Element
Researchers at Hewlett Packard labs claim to have found a mythical fourth circuit element to join the trinity of resistors, capacitors, and inductors. Some engineers think that the so-called memristor will be the key to building neural networks that work less like a microprocessor and more like a brain.

memristor

1 May 2008—Anyone familiar with electronics knows the trinity of fundamental components: the resistor, the capacitor, and the inductor. In 1971, a University of California, Berkeley, engineer predicted that there should be a fourth element: a memory resistor, or memristor. But no one knew how to build one. Now, 37 years later, electronics have finally gotten small enough to reveal the secrets of that fourth element. The memristor, Hewlett-Packard researchers revealed today in the journal Nature, had been hiding in plain sight all along—within the electrical characteristics of certain nanoscale devices. They think the new element could pave the way for applications both near- and far-term, from nonvolatile RAM to realistic neural networks.

Chua [IEEE Fellow and nonlinear-circuit-theory pioneer] calls the HP work a paradigm shift; he likens the addition of the memristor to the circuit design arsenal to adding a new element to the periodic table: for one thing, “now all the EE textbooks need to be changed,” he says.

Williams is in talks with several neuroscience/engineering labs that are pursuing the goal of building devices that emulate neural systems. Chua says that synapses, the connections between neurons, have some memristive behavior. Therefore, a memristor would be the ideal electronic device to emulate a synapse.

The HP group is also looking at developing a memristor-based nonvolatile memory. “A memory based on memristors could be 1000 times faster than magnetic disks and use much less power,” Williams says, sounding like a kid in a candy store.

The Power of Pond Scum: Biodiesel and Hydrogen From Algae

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

This IEEE Spectrum article investigates a plentiful, up-and-coming biodiesel source – algae. Using algae to produce biofuels instead of crops will help eliminate the competition between food and fuel. Also, rising food prices are breaking many people’s resistance to genetically engineered crops.

pondscum

Algae – easy to grow and an efficient producer of biodiesel.

21 April 2008—Food riots erupting around the world have been partly blamed on the growing use of food products to produce fuels like biodiesel and corn ethanol. But biofuels need not come from food crops. According to some researchers, the best source of biofuel may be algae, best known as pesky green pond scum.

As anyone who has had to clean a swimming pool or fish tank knows, algae grow quickly. All they need is light, carbon dioxide, and a little water to grow like, well, weeds. It turns out that algae produce oil that can be processed to make biodiesel. In some species, this oil represents more than half of the plantlike organism’s mass. Researchers are also trying to genetically alter algae to make them give off copious amounts of hydrogen to meet the needs of future fuel-cell-powered cars.

Algae’s biodiesel capacity compares well with today’s sources, says Glen Kertz, president and CEO at Valcent Products, a Vancouver, B.C., start-up that aims to become a leading algae oil supplier. A single hectare planted with corn will yield about 40 liters of oil per year; a hectare planted with oil palm would yield 1000 L. But according to Kertz, an algae bioreactor occupying the same space could yield more than 48 000 L. “And we think we can do far better than that,” says Kertz. “In a few years, when we come to understand more about this crop we’re growing, we could see bioreactors producing more than [150 000 L per hectare per year].”

In addition to biofuel, algae can also produce hydrogen, which can then power fuel cells, another clean source of electricity.

Meanwhile, other researchers are trying to ratchet up algae’s natural production of hydrogen to make pond scum bioreactors a fuel source for fuel cells. David Tiede, a senior scientist at Argonne, says he and his colleagues are looking to manipulate an enzyme called hydrogenase, which generates small amounts of hydrogen gas during a process that is concurrent with photosynthesis. Tiede hopes to take the part of the hydrogenase enzyme that produces hydrogen and insert it into a protein integral to photosynthesis. Doing so, he says, could yield amounts of hydrogen equivalent to as much as 10 percent of the algae’s mass, or roughly the same as the amount of oxygen they create.

Algae’s fecundity is so great that researchers at the DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory say that algae bioreactors covering less than 40 000 square kilometers—roughly one-tenth of the sun-baked state of New Mexico—could churn out enough biodiesel, bioethanol, and molecular hydrogen to completely replace petroleum as transportation fuel in the United States, the world’s largest automotive market. That’s a lot of pond scum, considering that in 2006, U.S drivers burned through more than 800 billion L of fuel, according to the Energy Information Administration, which is part of the DOE.

Algae awareness! Algae is the Earth’s primary oxygen source.

But biofuel experts foresee a day when algae bioreactors like Valcent’s will be set up not only in places like New Mexico’s deserts but also in urban areas, atop the smokestacks of industrial plants or coal-burning electric generation plants, and in rural areas where the algae would act as remediators, using human or animal waste streams as a food source. “The reality is that from an ecological standpoint, algae already play a huge role because they’re the primary oxygen source for the planet,” says Kertz. “Most people don’t know that. But I think it’s time for some algae awareness.”

read the entire article

Also from IEEE, researchers are trying to use termites to produce ethanol.

MN News: Cuba, Real ID and Delta-NWA

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Minn. House urges Congress to normalize relations with Cuba (AP)

flag

MN House members have approved a resolution urging Congress to normalize relations with Cuba. The debate featured pictures and recollections of Cuban trade missions and a greeting from former Minnesota Twins star Tony Oliva, who is from the Caribbean island.

Rep. Al Juhnke, DFL-Willmar, says the lifting of trade and travel restrictions could bring Cuban pineapples and coconuts to Minnesota and open a new market for soybeans, corn and even Spam. Cuba has been under a U.S. embargo since the 1960s.



Why is the state questioning REAL ID?

realid

Starting in 2009, the federal government will require all states to have a ‘REAL ID’ card. The REAL ID would form a standardized identification card for all 50 states, in an effort to protect against terrorism and fraud.

But Minnesota can choose not to accept the program. However, if the state doesn’t implement the REAL ID program, Minnesotans would not be able to use a state drivers license to board a commercial airliner.

“REAL ID is real in the sense that it’s happening — it’s required by federal law,” explained Gov. Tim Pawlenty.

One of the main problems that the Governor and the legislature are grappling with is the expense of the REAL ID program. It could cost Minnesota $11 billion over five years and U.S. Congress has only approved $40 million to help states pay for it. “We don’t need the federal government telling us that we need to put in place a card that meets their requirements at our people’s expenses,” said state Sen. Mee Moua.

Moua supports a U.S. Senate bill that states Minnesota would refuse to take part unless the federal government pays 95 percent of the cost. The state has until 2009 to decide whether to implement REAL ID.


Delta, Northwest Airlines CEOs try to calm fears that Minnesota will be big loser in merger

deltanwa

They promise no airport jobs losses and that new, bigger Delta will live up to state commitmentsSteenland, the Northwest chief, said there would be “zero job loss” for Northwest at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport as a result of the deal. And for the handful of Delta flights at the Twin Cities airport, the ramp work already is outsourced, said Delta’s Anderson.

Northwest now employs about 11,500 in Minnesota, down more than 8,000 from 2000.

The Delta-Northwest merger still has many obstacles ahead, including an antitrust review by the U.S. Department of Justice, congressional hearings and integration of its pilots unions’ seniority lists.

The biggest issue facing the merging companies? Which brand of soft-drinks to serve – Northwest serves Pepsi, Delta serves Coke. My guess: there’s no way Delta will serve anything but Coke.

Stories via MPR’s Polinaut blog’s Daily Digest.

Related news: Wired has the scoop on Delta’s new passenger flight safety video and its starlet “Deltalina.”

Deltalina

Plus, Wired comments on a ridiculous, terrible, new, anti-hijacking product: electronic passenger bracelet that will allow the crew to zap would-be hijackers.

emdknife

Micro technology news from IEEE

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

Can engineers and scientists reverse engineer the human brain? With fly brains? In a fly rave?

flyrave

How to build a robotic fly (video)

fingers

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles – MAV surveillance to take flight with “Black Hornet”

mav

Bendable, stretchable circuit sheets

stretch

RFID-based people tracking systems

dhs realid

CES 2008: Eye-Fi wireless SD camera card (video) – wireless download from the SD card to computer/network/web, www.eye.fi

eyefi
Insert into camera, and viola!
Send pictures from your camera sans wires!

eye-fi2

For car enthusiasts – examples of the latest developments in engine efficiency and interior technology
Green Machines By John Voelcker
This year’s top tech cars

mbf700hcci

+ We (the US) are finally getting the awesome Nissan GT-R!

gtr

Power Plant: 358-kW (480 hp) 3.8-L twin-turbocharged V6
Transmission: Rear transaxle with sequential 6-speed; paddle shift

Comcast launches 50 Mbps internet in Minneapolis

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

coax For some reason, the New York Times decided to lead into their story with this trash-talk: “Minnesota sports teams are not known for coming in first. But the Twin Cities are now out in front in at least one respect: Comcast plans to announce Thursday that it is beginning the introduction of a new broadband Internet technology in the Minneapolis-St. Paul region, starting this week.”

Coincidentally, David Letterman was poking fun and the city’s own New York Nicks with his Top Ten Questions On The Job Application For New York Knicks President.

The jump to 50 Mbps (”Extreme High-Speed Internet”) is the biggest residential internet service bandwidth increase since Google launched their revolutionary TiSP service last year.

Thanks to Gil for letting me know about Google’s TiSP service.