Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Zune HD
I have a Zune HD, and I'm loving it. It is an awesome MP3 player without the Apple Branding. I would highly recommend it to someone how is serious about listening and organizing their music.
Monday, June 21, 2010
The Oil Spill

The Oil Spill is the story of the summer which seems like it is never going to end. It is an important story, and vastly complicated. There are many stories regarding the Oil Spill from different points of view ranging from people working on the Oil Rig to President. The news is lacking the view point of the engineers who designed the rig. The Oil Spill is actually an engineering failure. As a former chemical engineer, most of design is done by mechanical and chemical engineers. The current problem is most chemical engineers are not in universities how to deal with Oil Rigs, they solve other problems that relate to smaller scales and other devices. Even though there is much blame on BP and the President of United States, some blame has to put on the Engineers since there was a design failure. Engineers are not perfect, there have been mistakes before ranging from the Apollo Space Ship Shuttle accident to collapsing bridges. The live video stream showing the leaking oil is a sign that this is truly an engineering failure.
Another point that the media is avoiding is the discussion of alternate energy. Just a year or two ago, the price of oil was sky rocket high. People were talking about using biodeisel, and fuel cells. There were small companies that would take used cooking oil and would recycle it into biodiesel. The topic of alternate energy has been avoided greatly during the media coverage. Is it the oil companies are influencing the media not to cover the new technologies? The oil spill is due to our dependence on crude oil, if Americans were using natural gas, or biodiesel to power our cars, there would be less need to have oil rigs in the ocean. There has been the discussion of cost of alternative energy is expensive than crude oil, but now consider the cost and expense of the oil spill. It is thousand times greater than the cost of using alternative energies, and most of damage at this point may not be repairable. My suggestion is to stop playing the blame game on the CEO of BP, and the President of the United States, but to move forward to clean up the oil spill, stop it from leaking, and become less dependent on oil, by using alternative energies.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Dear Apple: What are you thinking?

Dear Apple / Steve Jobs;
What are you thinking messing with the media / Gizmodo?
The readers of Gizmodo, buy your silly products, and vouch for your products even though they may be flawed, low quality, and unreasonably priced. Apple you had a strong fanboy base, but how much longer will this last? Google is picking up some fanboys. Apple, it was also your fault to allow public field testing of an unannounced product and not consider the consequences. Don't you know hundreds of your customers lose their iphones each day? These customers don't raid into people's homes and take their computers, cameras, and servers. Gizmodo was a good enough to return back your phone. If this is the way you treat one of your most loyal blogs, how do you treat your customers? I was always skeptical about Apple's business practices about using child labor in factories, and unethical methods of treating suppliers. The actions that took place yesterday were illegal to seize property of someone who works for the press.
Apple did fail before in the 90s, there is no doubt that they might fail again one day.
| The Daily Show With Jon Stewart | Mon - Thurs 11p / 10c | |||
| Appholes | ||||
| www.thedailyshow.com | ||||
| ||||
Monday, April 26, 2010
Wrote for the Tartan this week

I wrote for the Tartan this week. I wrote how AFM works. Please digg my article.
Brief preview of the article:
Atomic force microscopy (AFM), a popular tool for imaging, measuring, and manipulating matter at the nanoscale, was invented in 1986 and was commercialized in 1989. This type of microscopy gathers information by feeling the surface with mechanical probes. AFM is a type of scanning probe microscopy (SPM) in which the image of a surface is obtained by moving a probe over a sample and recording the interactions between the probe and the surface of the sample.
AFM is used for a variety of biological applications, including imaging molecules, cells, tissues, and biomaterials. At Carnegie Mellon, AFM is being used to study peptides and lipoproteins. AFM, popularly used in nanotechnology research, has been used to image the surface of the ivy plant to understand how it climbs structures, as stated in an article on www.photonics.com.
According to www.veeco.com, AFM is on the cutting edge of science since it provides true three-dimensional surface images. AFM is used to image and manipulate atoms and structures on many different surfaces. Samples viewed by AFM do not need any special treatments. The technology provides higher resolution images than other methods such as the scanning electron microscope. It is also favorable since it has the ability to operate in liquids and work with sample sizes ranging from a few nanometers up to several micrometers.
Read more
Sunday, April 4, 2010
Is the media forcing you get an iPad?

The Apple iPad is now official out and officially in your local Best Buy or Apple Store. The device has gotten criticism that it is a larger / super-sized version of the iphone/ipod touch. There has been some bias in the recent reviews of the iPad. As we know the publishing industry is going through a bad time right now, with less people subscribing to magazines and newspapers. People are getting their news online for free. Media companies like the Wall Street Journal, Time Magazine, and PC Magazine are giving biased reviews about the iPad, and saying it is an awesome magical device. While online media outlets like Engadget, Gizmodo and CNN are saying it is nice device, but lacks many things like Adobe Flash. The media companies are betting on the iPad, since they are moving to digital model distribution for an example Time Magazine charges 4.99 an issue on the iPad, vs reading it online for free. The WSJ offers a subscription to access their material on the iPad. WSJ does not give free content. One of the media outlets, USA Today who had a poor free iPad app, gave the iPad a poor review. The iPad is being hyped by media companies like WSJ especially since they have key interests in the product. I do believe that some of these reviews are not ethical, by giving people a wrong impression to buy a product.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Innovation in e-book screens

Current e-book readers only display colors in black and white and aren’t useful for viewing color magazines. Pixel Qi is a hybrid display screen that can display colors when a backlight is on. When the backlight is off, the e-book displays black and white colors, uses 70 percent less power, and is readable in direct sunlight. It can also be used in devices like netbooks or tablets. Pixel Qi CEO Mary Lou Jepsen plans on seeing this technology sometime in the first quarter of this year.
Source: Engadget
Google pulling out of China

Google has threatened to end www.google.cn in China over concerns about censorship and hacking. Hacking targeted a flaw in Microsoft Internet Explorer, violating Internet user privacy, while censorship is a long-running dispute regarding human rights. Yahoo supports the decision, but Microsoft has no plans to exit China. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer disagrees with the situation: “There are attacks every day. I don’t think there was anything unusual, so I don’t understand.”
Source: Reuters
Intel’s glasses-free 3-D TV

Intel has announced a technology, “glasses-free 3-D,” that allows one to watch 3-D content without wearing 3-D goggles. There is a special overlay applied to HDTV to make it glasses-free. The video has to be shot in a special format, and the current resolutions are slightly below 720p. There is a current limitation of eight specific viewing angles from which one can experience the 3-D content.
Source: Engadget
Lenovo reveals hybrid tablet

Lenovo has announced the release of a notebook computer that has a detachable screen that becomes a tablet PC. The notebook computer is two computers in one. When the screen is attached to the keyboard, it runs Windows 7 and has access to the hard drive and RAM. When the screen is detached, it runs on a touch-enabled Linux operating system designed by Lenovo with limited memory. Lenovo expects to start shipping the hybrid tablet this June.
Source: Revision3/Techzilla
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