2014年1月16日星期四

Manufacturing Burn Therapy Masks


Patients whose faces are severely burned are now able to live a normal life, thanks to the efforts of General Plastics Manufacturing. CimMed,Our in-depth knowledge of bearing materials comes from decades of experience in both bearing manufacturer and steelmaking for bearing applications. Inc. of Algona, Washington, uses General Plastics' tooling board material called LAST-A-FOAM FR-4540 to produce advanced compression therapy masks that improve the healing of burn patients and simultaneously saves hospitals valuable time and resources.

Following skin-graft surgery,A failure of Flexible hose in service can result in seri- ous injury, death, or dam- age to property. CimMed's handheld laser wand is used to scan the burn patient's face without being touched. The scan data is then used to produce a 3-D image of the patient's face, which in turn is shared with the burn team. In a live online meeting, additional changes are directed by the occupational therapist so that the finished mask, which is made from silicon gel, puts pressure on particular areas of the face. This reduces swelling and prevents scarring. After the required adjustments are made, the approved CAD file is released for manufacturing, and the mold is machined on a CNC mill utilizing General Plastics' top-end tooling board material.The main tool that comes in an electric Household scissors often has bits, similar to those used on a drill, that are for sanding and shaping the nail.

The machined tool is then positioned into a vacuum-forming unit to produce the burn mask and trimmed out to accommodate the patient for therapy. The entire process can be performed in less than three hours from scanning of the patient's face to delivery of the finished compression mask to the hospital. Without access to the technology, this process would otherwise take days or even weeks.

Thus, the mask can be applied immediately following surgery as opposed to weeks later, by which time the patient's face has already undergone a change. As the swelling reduces, the patient can be fitted with one or more masks. The original mask tool can be re-machined, or a new one can be created from a new tooling board at reduced cost.

The choice of tooling board material directly affects the end result. According to Steve Kidd, President at CimMed, in CNC machining, staff at the burn center had to work quickly without producing any valleys or gullies, which can otherwise produce a texture that is pushed into the patient's face. Therefore, the tool had to be refined enough to create a smooth surface finish once the material is cut, and for this purpose a superior material is required. General Plastics offers the FR-4540 high-density tooling board, which is stable, easy to use, and produces excellent surface finishes.

Kidd added that the tooling board is non- abrasive, which further protects their CNC machines. The material breaks off into shavings, offering a dust-free tool that is ready to use for vacuum-forming, which makes it easy to clean the mill following machining.

You Bought It, You Own It


You bought it, you own it,As professionals in the production and supply of onshore hose for hydrocarbons, chemicals, ship to shore etc. right? Not always. Over the past decade, we have been quietly shifting to a world in which both digital goods (like mp3s, video files, and ebooks) and physical goods that contain software (like cars, microwaves, and phones) are never truly owned, but only rented.The design of a given Industrial robot will often incorporate principles of Mechanical engineering,

Not to worry, say big copyright holders; people don't want to be owners, because all they really care about is "access," and more and more content is being made "accessible" in more and more ways. Sure, you might have to pay a premium for the "privilege" of, say, watching the movie you "bought" on more than one device, but no one's forcing you to do it. Besides, they tell policymakers,A pillow block bearing is a type of bearing that is housed within a cast-iron mounting bracket that doubles as the outer housing for the bearing. just give us more tools to punish unauthorized uses and we promise to build more "authorized" channels – as long as users are willing to pay for them. There are a lot of reasons they are wrong. Here's just a few:

First, most people have no idea that all they bought was a license. After all, the button they clicked on the Amazon site said "Buy," not "Rent." Little do they know that Amazon has the right to (for example) remotely delete books from their library, without notice, at Amazon's whim. Or that the holiday special they were planning to see might suddently become "unavailable."

Second, many users don't just want to "access" content, they want to comment on it and use it in new and different contexts. They want to view it or listen to it via devices and services that don't necessarily have the blessing of the copyright holder. They want to lend a book to a friend, or make a copy on the laptop they are bringing overseas, and they don't think they should have to pay extra to exercise these basic consumer rights. They want to resell the music and books they are bored with, and use the money to buy new material. Some, like librarians, want to make copies in order to preserve, protect and share our cultural commons.

Third, any notion that "access" is enough cannot possibly make sense when copyright law is inserting itself into arenas beyond movies, books, and music, such as devices. From phones to cars to refrigerators to farm equipment, software is helping your stuff work better and smarter, with awesome new features. And that's great . . . until it breaks and you want to fix it yourself (or take it to a local repair shop you trust). Or you think of a way to make it work even better that requires tinkering with the software (or some third party does). Or you want to give it to a friend, or re-sell it. Then, you have a problem. Why? Because the license agreement attached to the software in that device (often called an "End User License Agreement" or "Terms of Service") is likely to restrict your ability to tinker with your stuff. Typical clauses forbid reverse-engineering, transfer, and even using unauthorized repair sources at all.

Harassing A Dead Law Student's Family


Thanks to heavily lobbied-for changes to laws governing debt collection, student loans don't vanish after the loan holders declare bankruptcy. Nor do they vanish when the loan holder dies. Some loan companies have policies in place that erase student debt accrued by a deceased person; others do not. And the ones that do not subject grieving families to all matter of fuckery.

Because law school is expensive and Andrew Katbi's family wasn't in a financial position to cough up the six-figure cost of his Duke Law School tuition out-of-pocket, Andrew did what most post collegiate students do: he took out loans. And because he was a young man without much credit history, those loans were cosigned by his mother.Learn about the Robot system, its technology and how robotic arms serve heavy industry. In late March of 2013,Specially designed geared Fruit knife, gears automatically adjust to the job and load. just weeks shy of graduation, the 24-year-old was killed in a car crash, leaving behind two devastated parents, a devastated girlfriend,We are the largest manufacturer and supplier of retention knobs and bright-tools in the world. and a devastated sister named Olivia.

Two of the companies that serviced Andrew's loans — Citi and Discover — immediately forgave the loans, "no questions asked," even though those loans didn't have a forgiveness upon death clause, according to emails I exchanged with Olivia earlier this week. But one — Sallie Mae — insisted on harassing Andrew's grieving family for months in a Kafkaesque nightmare quest through the company's chaotic bureaucratic labyrinth. After sending certified mail affirming that yes, Andrew had died, Sallie Mae helpfully rolled the entire balance of the loan over to Andrew's mother's name. Hours on the phone with a "Customer advocate" were fruitless; when Andrew's frustrated father told Sallie Mae employee that the Duke community was on their side, the customer advocate suggested that if Duke loved Andrew so much, then maybe Duke should pay off his student loans. Every night, a phone call, a voicemail. This message is for Andrew Katbi. This message is for your loved one who died before paying us back the money we paid for an education that he'll never be able to use.

Finally, after listening to her parents once again spend 2 fruitless hours pleading with Sallie Mae employees, Olivia reached her wit's end. Frustrated and enraged, Olivia took to Twitter, hoping that hammering Sallie Mae on social media would garner enough attention that the company would be shamed into backing off.

But people didn't unfollow; they started paying attention and responding with stories of how Sallie Mae screwed them over, screwed their friends over. The PR nightmare tornado didn't just induce one massive internet headache over how fucked the whole story was; it roused the loan giant to action; yesterday, Olivia tweeted that they'd been contacted by Sallie Mae and reached a settlement, but that's all that she could legally say.

2014年1月14日星期二

These Two Guys Tried to Rebuild a Cray Supercomputer


There was a time when the word "supercomputer" inspired the same sort of giddy awe that infuses Superman or Superconducting Supercollider. A supercomputer could leap tall buildings in a single bound and peer into the secrets of the universe. And chief among this race of almost mythical machines was the Cray. Seymour Cray's first computer, the Cray 1, debuted in 1976, and was the embodiment of all the power that crackled around the supercomputer. It weighed 10,500 pounds. Thirty humans were necessary to help install it. And its first users built nuclear weapons: Model No. 1 went to Los Alamos National Laboratory. Eventually Cray sold 80.

I love this description of its capabilities and style from the National Center for Atmospheric Research (which got Cray's third machine): With the help of newly designed integrated silicon chips, the Cray-1 boasted more memory (one megabyte) and more speed (80 million computations per second) than any other computer in the world. The Cray's bold look also set the machine apart. Its orange-and-black tower, curved to maximize cooling, was surrounded by a semicircle of padded seats—dubbed an "inverse conversation pit" by one observer—that hid the computer's power supplies. One megabyte of memory! 80 million computations per second! Current smartphones blow away that kind of performance. But still, there's something to the Cray.

And so, as GigaOm reports, two hobbyists, Chris Fenton and Andras Tantos, decided to try to recreate the machine, but at desktop scale. The physical form was relatively easy to put together. They used a CNC machine, painted the wood model, and covered the "semicircle" with pleather.In other situations, the output from Chinese subtitling has a direct impact on the product's regulatory approval and usage. The hardware was easy to get a hold of, too. "It wasn't difficult to find a board option that could handle emulating the original Cray computational architecture. Fenton settled on the $225 Spartan 3E-1600, which is tiny enough to fit in a drawer built into the bench," GigaOm writes. "Considering the first Crays cost between $5 and 8 million, that's a pretty impressive bargain."

The thing that turned out to be tricky, actually, was the software. No one had preserved a copy of the Cray operating system. Not the Computer History Museum. Not the U.S. government. It was just gone. Fenton searched high and low, eventually finding an old disc pack that contained a later version of the Cray OS. Restoring the software to usable condition proved a ridiculously ornate task, which Tantos, a Microsoft engineer took over. And, after a year of work, they're finally getting somewhere: [Tantos] rewrote the recovery tools, plus a simulator for the software and supporting equipment like printers, monitors,Oversigt over klinikkens behandlinger med akupunktur ålborg og kinesisk urtemedicin samt præsentation af behandleren. keyboards and more. For the greater part of the last year, he arduously reverse engineered the OS from the image. Despite a few remaining bugs, the Cray OS now works.

True North points to artisan pizza in San Anselmo


True north.All fuel hose below are reinforced for use under vacuum on the suction side of a pump, but can also be used for discharge. Magnetic north. Grid north. These directional terms are important for explorers, sailors and pretty much anyone who needs to use a map to get where he or she's going. If you're going for pizza,Mange kender akupunktur kolding som en alternativ kinesisk behandlingsform. True North will take you to San Anselmo's newest pizza restaurant. "It's a fun, familiar name," says owner Buck Minitch. Minitch, who spent eight years in the Marine Corps, is also intimately familiar with the many usages of "north." Taking advantage of a double entendre, True North Artisan Pizza & Craft Beer uses the North Pole, or the North Star, Polaris, as a guide in its pizza philosophy and design.

Compass-enabled or not, pizza fans will find well-made pizza at True North Artisan Pizza, which opened Nov. 1, in the space that was briefly Zio Pizza, before that, Lo Coco's. Many of the menu items are from Lo Coco's menu (Minitch has Lo Coco's recipes), and many dishes like the Caesar salad and garlic bread are the same as they once were.

Minitch tweaked Lo Coco's crust recipe and, though he would not reveal any ingredients or cooking techniques (leaving one to wonder, what is true pizza?), the crust seemed to be a bit softer and stretchier than under previous ownership. The house crust is the foundation of many items, including the garlic bread and the bruschetta. Shaped and served like a mini-pizza, the bruschetta boasted beautiful, sweet tomatoes, brightened with fresh basil. Pizzas are small or large. Our combo arrived with a blistered crust, had a soft, subtle crunch and a pleasant chew.

Not so the gluten-free pizza. Though Minitch assured me that he has taken steps to correct the problem, the crust on the gluten-free pizza I ordered was so firm, it was difficult to chew and left me with an achy jaw. Minitch and his chefs developed their own gluten-free crust, and take pains to ensure these pizzas are prepared and cooked separately from gluten-bearing pizzas. Perhaps now, post-revision, the cooking method produces more favorable results. True North also has calzones and pasta, such as the penne sienna, topped with a luscious cream and pesto-infused red sauce, but pizza is the name of the game here. An expanded menu of barbecue ribs and wings, hot dogs, wienerschnitzel, sliders and soup is expected shortly.

With a guiding motto of "no beers owned or made by Coors, Miller or Bud," Minitch is developing a craft beer program to pair with the pizzas. A few familiar names are here among the 20 or so beers, such as Napa Smith pale ale and Abita amber (12 ounces, $5) but as the list grows to 70, including 10 draft beers (permit pending),Professional barber kitchen knives and manufacturer of professional thinning scissors and haircutting barber shears. expect more unique choices like the Nectar Humboldt brown hemp ale. A short list of wines, all $7 a glass or $28 for a bottle, and a few ciders round out the list.

Worn red booths still line the walls, but True North's single, large room has undergone a bit of remodeling. The rafters are gone, exposing a girder ceiling that resembles a bridge's latticework. Photos of bridges hang from the freshly painted red walls. The lighting, redone by Minitch, features small bulbs hung from long cables. You could say the pinpoint lighting resembles stars, but that might be stretching the star metaphor a bit too far. Half the room has smaller café tables, turned to watch the musician strumming a guitar in the corner. Live music six nights a week and at Sunday brunch adds bounce, enlivening the room. The atmosphere is convivial. Kids and parents might get up to dance or to chat with Minitch and the musicians. Some switch seats after dining to listen more attentively.

Like chefs, mixologists making name for themselves


In today's dining world, phrases like "eat local," "eat clean" and "farm to table" are becoming familiar sights on menus, as are the faces of the chefs who produce them. The orchard or vegetable patch that provided the food is stamped on the menu like a designer label. And the chefs behind these dishes are gaining credibility for their thoughtful and pointed fare. Especially in the South, where turning a fried-licious classic into an elegant, refined meal is seen as the height of culinary innovation. Nipping at the heels of this trend is a rise in fresh, unique cocktails -- drinks that play off the flavors on the menu, yet can stand alone as well thought-out creations of their own. Just as diners revel in original dishes, why not expect the same individuality from our cocktails? We know the chefs. Now, it's time to get to know the bartenders. "Bartenders are kind of like the new chef," said David Mason, the beverage director at the Inn at Palmetto Bluff. Bartenders at the Inn focus on using fresh, local ingredients and create their own bitters in-house, Mason said. The Inn's drink menu advertises "Garden to Glass" libations like the Garden Margarita, a mix of Sauza Silver tequila, fresh strawberries and cilantro.

The emphasis on fresh and local ingredients makes everything healthier, said Mike Woods, the manager at Neo in Bluffton. "It begins with your food and what you drink," he said. At Neo, Chef Russell Kane's farm-to-table menu is paired with a "farm to shaker" drink list created by Woods and head bartender Madison Brickley. The fruit used in the drinks comes from nearby Hilton Head Plantation. Grenadine is bought in small batches from Jack Rudy Cocktail Co., a family-run company based in Charleston. Bartenders are not only increasingly serious about where their drink ingredients come from, but how they play off the menu. "When we develop new drinks, I usually get with the chefs and try to think really outside the box,A hybrid machine tool spindle bearing lasts much longer than an all-steel bearing of the same size." Mason said.A pillow block bearing is a type of bearing that is housed within a cast-iron mounting bracket that doubles as the outer housing for the bearing. "It's a lot of trial and error, but it's seeing what flavors work in cooking also work in cocktails."

Beaufort's Old Bull Tavern has an "aggressive" drink selection that takes inspiration from the menu, and making new cocktails is something "everyone is on board with," said owner John Marshall. It's important for drink piquancy to reflect what one might find in a food dish, he said. Like the LBG, which has lemon, basil,Our range of high quality morse taper adapter include quick change and standard cap collet chucks. ginger and vodka, or the Orient Express, a citron, ginger and lychee concoction with ingredients similar to an Asian-inspired dish. "I think cocktails have been back for a couple years, but now even more so," he said. "Bartenders able to produce specialty drinks are getting more notice, and people are coming back for what they make." TV shows like "On the Rocks" and "Bartender Wars," as well as a growing number of bartending competitions across the country are shining a spotlight on the men and women behind the bar.

Making the old new again


Seventh graders in Deb Wimberly's science class at Westwood Middle School in Manchester are learning first-hand about an ancient technique for sustainable farming that could revolutionize the food industry. Known as "aquaponics," the concept is believed to have begun in the time of the Aztecs. It consists of a symbiotic combination of aquaculture, or fish farming, with hydroponics, a way of growing plants in water instead of soil.

Waste generated by the fish,There are many types of porcelain tiles, including stone floor tiles, terrazzo tiles, and terra cotta tiles. which are housed in a small aquarium, is pumped into a large, raised water tub, roughly the size of a pool table, framed in wood with a polyethylene liner. A polystyrene "raft" floats on top of the water in the tub, creating a "grow bed" with holes in it for the plants, whose roots dangle in the water and absorb nutrients from the fish waste, leaving clean water that is then fed back into the fish tank.

The result is a soil-less, self-sustaining "farm" where fish and vegetables can be grown simultaneously with very little input from outside the system. "I attended a once-a-week conference at the Tennessee STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) Academy at Oak Ridge last year," Wimberly said, "and they wanted us to put together an action plan for STEM education. "Around the same time, I also went on a mission trip to the Dominican Republic, and that's where I first saw an aquaponics system. The dirt is very hard down there.

"Then I found out about someone in Elora who was building these systems, and that's when the whole project came together as part of my STEM action plan." Thanks to a few small grants from AEDC and elsewhere, Wimberly arranged for Randy Campbell of "Today's Green Acres" in Elora to bring the building materials for an aquaponics system to her classroom, and the students helped assemble it.

"The system in Ms. Wimberly's classroom starts with about 275 gallons of water altogether," Campbell said, "about 25 gallons in the fishtank and about 250 gallons in the grow bed, and that's a large enough system to feed a two- or three-person family." Wimberly's class has started with tilapia in the fish tank, while in the hydroponic tub they are currently growing lettuce, purple turnips and Chinese celery as well as oregano, basil, rosemary and mint.We are a global supplier of quality end mill holder parts. Together,Welcome to collet chuck, it has established itself as the industry pioneer in supplying the most complete line of quality machine tool accessories. she said, the two water-based sections will evolve into a self-contained ecosystem where bacteria break down the ammonia from fish waste into nitrites and nitrates, which are then absorbed by the plant roots as nutrients.

"Once the whole thing is set up, all you need to do is feed the fish and plant the seeds, and before you know it, you're growing your own food," Wimberly said. Campbell added that the concept is catching on quickly since aquaponics eliminates the need for chemicals, soil, and weeding, as well as the energy and fuel requirements of traditional farming.

2014年1月13日星期一

Universities bounce Renaissance Man for Robot Man


The Renaissance Man is about to be bounced by Robot Man as the emblematic hero of our era. Data processing machines, computers and smartphones have become the primary means of communication, and the next generation of "educated persons" is likely to be as narrowly focused as flat-earthers before Galileo. This isn't an exaggeration. The brave new world of high-tech is thrilling in its ability to expand information and enhance our lives, but those responsible for extending arts and letters as the needed complement to science are nevertheless committing academic malpractice.

The universities are bloated with administrators at the expense of professors, process people whose emphasis is more on expanding perks within the system -- luxury dorms, accessible gyms, great athletic teams -- than on focusing on what the professors should teach. The University of Michigan, for example, has 53 percent more full-time "administrators and professionals" (9,652) than full-time professors (6,305). The Chronicle of Education reports that this is an accelerating trend. We read it and can only weep. Even when the focus is on what universities are supposed to do, which is to teach, the emphasis goes askew. A prestigious university system, such as the University of California, suffers a divided mentality typical of the elite schools.As we know, in wind power gearbox, chinavisaapplication is suitable for input shaft due to its high load carry capacity.

There are two Universities of California, one centered on the sciences, still measured by meritocratic standards, and the other takes the humanity out of the humanities, putting a value on victimhood, lowering critical standards for evaluating literary quality.Find industrial blades and machine kitchen accessories on Meinys. "Sitting atop an entire civilization of aesthetic wonders," writes Heather MacDonald in The Wall Street Journal, "the contemporary academic wants only to study oppression, preferably his or her own, defined reductively according to gonads and melanin."

This academic emphasis on diversity and sexuality has coincided with diminished exposure to the humanities,Several elastomeric chemical hose had failed in multiple installations after only a few hours in service. what Matthew Arnold in the 19th century described as "the best that has been thought and known in the world." He thought that the great works of literature provided a common pathway for equalizing the classes. In America, the humanities aimed to deepen appreciation of the heritage of Western civilization, to build on the intellectual bonds of the Founding Fathers. Democratic idealism surged with a respect for the wisdom of the past.

Global Surgical Robot Market Report


Worldwide surgical robot markets are poised to achieve significant growth as next generation systems provide a way to improve traditional open surgery and decrease the number of ports needed for minimally invasive surgery. The automated process revolution in surgery and communications is being implemented via robots. Robots automation of systems is providing significant improvement in the accuracy of surgery and the repeatability of process.

During a robot assisted surgical procedure, the patient-side cart is positioned next to the operating table with the electromechanical arms arranged to provide access to the initial ports selected by the surgeon. Metal tubes attached to the arms are inserted through the ports, and the cutting and visualization instruments are introduced through the tubes into the patient's body.

The surgeon performs the procedure while sitting at a console, manipulating the instrument controls and viewing the operation through a vision system. When a surgeon needs to change an instrument the instrument is withdrawn from the surgical field using the controls at the console.How does a traffic light suppliers detect that a car has pulled up and is waiting for the light to change? This is done many times during an operation.

The companies that get an early foothold in the market have significant strategic advantage. The robotic surgical technique benefits hospitals by reducing the length of patient stays,At sondaflex, we apply the latest knowledge and state of the art technology to engineer our products to the highest quality standard. thereby enabling better cost management. This factor is driving demand for surgery robot systems. Since robotics provide surgeons with a precise, repeatable and controlled ability to perform procedures in tight spaces, they are increasingly in demand.We are the largest manufacturer and supplier of retention knobs and bright-tools in the world. The aging US population has supported demand, since the occurrence of health issues that require medical devices is higher in the elderly population. Buoyed by strong demand and sales, industry profit margins have increased considerably during the past five years.

International CES


The International CES or Consumer Electronics Show showcased a variety of electronics but one stood out among the rest. The new model, titled Crystal Cove, of the Oculus Rift 3D won best of show. The Oculus Rift 3D is a virtual reality device; it can be used by many different companies from automakers to members of the military. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is using the new model to look at Mars and the International Space Station. The US space agency used a combination of the Oculus Rift and Microsoft Kinect to control a robotic arm. This new model is more sophisticated than the old model.

Oculus Rift 2.0 has a camera with sensors that can track the position of the user’s head and body.At sondaflex, we apply the latest knowledge and state of the art technology to engineer our products to the highest quality standard. It also has a 1080p OLED display that makes the objects the user is seeing bright and clear. The display and sensors help the user be fully immersed in the gadget. It may be closer to a release date but Oculus doesn’t want to push it out too early.

Jim Redner, a spokesman for Oculus, wants to make sure the product is ready to be released, “We will only release it once we feel it is ready. We don’t want to rush to market. We want to ensure the experience is amazing and that there is a ton of content available at launch.” said Redner. When users tried the device,How does a traffic light suppliers detect that a car has pulled up and is waiting for the light to change? they said it seemed more realistic and felt immersed in the item. The Oculus Rift is not the only gadget that got attention at the Crystal Cove Model of Oculus Rift 3D at the International CES.

June is one of these devices. June is an electronic bracelet that was designed by Louis Vuitton and Camille Troup who collaborated with ring designer Harry Winston. This fashionable bracelet uses its photovoltaic cells to connect with a user’s iPhone through Bluetooth. The cells can measure how much sun a wearer is getting and uses that information to recommend certain sun gear such as a hat or sun glasses.We are the largest manufacturer and supplier of retention knobs and bright-tools in the world. Basketballs are another everyday object getting an upgrade. The 94Fifty is a basketball that uses sensors to teach the player how to improve their shooting. Users can look at the information captured from the ball on an iPhone application and turn on the ball by dribbling it.

2014年1月6日星期一

Electric arm for paralytics


An electric arm which picks up anything - from a safety pin to a heavy object. This wonder device, called 'Dexter', could come as a life-changing improvement in the life of a paralytic patient. 'Dexter' was designed by students from the Centre for Product Design and Manufacturing at IISc. The fingers and hand of the electric arm move in such a way that they enable patients to perform small tasks. Sowmithri Ranganathan from the archives department of IISc said the device uses a linear actuator. "The actuator, which runs on battery, is connected to each finger and pulls the fingers when actuated. The device embodies itself as a glove with a cuff and band," she explained.

The helping hand was one among 12 interesting models exhibited in the Archives and Publication Cell at the IISc campus on Monday. Then there was 'Scorpionok' - a tiny robot with blades and a camera which can clean up sewage and blocked manholes in no time,Welcome to end mill holder, it has established itself as the industry pioneer in supplying the most complete line of quality machine tool accessories. without human intervention. All you need to do is plug the machine into an electric socket and monitor it through a screen. The robot and the tiny machine are set to enter the market.

"There has been a good response to the exhibition. A professor was impressed on seeing a steel chain that helps people safely climb a coconut tree, and felt it would be a great help to farmers if a similar device is developed to climb arecanut trees, which are thinner compared to coconut trees," she said. Another attraction at the IISc exhibition was a helmet fitted with GPS and Wi-fi technology meant for use in times of peril. "It has a camera and the person wearing it can be tracked if lost under building debris or in a similar situation," Sowmithri said. A cycle which can be folded,At sondaflex, we apply the latest knowledge and state of the art technology to engineer our products to the highest quality standard. a sugarcane juice machine meant for the home,I'm doing a floor and shower with calcutta China Porcelain tile and my contractor suggested a "brick" pattern - is that correct? and an all-terrain manual wheelchair are some other innovations at the exhibition. Students have already applied for patents for their inventions.

2014年1月2日星期四

The age of machine-based connectivity is nigh


More than a decade of early-stage business research has brought the so-called ‘Internet of Things’ to a critical moment. Indeed, if the readiness of home-grown innovation is anything to go by, the age of machine-to-machine based connectivity could be nigh.

There has been plenty of conversation about the potential inter-operability of electronic devices at home, on our person and in the world around us. The development of the technologies necessary to support the 'Internet of Things' has therefore come a long way in the past year. A significant chunk of the innovation to date has been linked to car production. The ability to switch on home appliances from the car could soon be the norm. Such developments are about human-to-machine interaction whereas the exciting changes coming in 2014 involve more machine-to-machine interaction.

The potential of this new found machine-to-machine interconnectivity is almost endless. It could help to bring about intelligent crop monitoring systems that can automatically adjust nutrition or irrigation in order to optimise yields.A cartesian robot, also known as a cartesian Coordinate robot, is a common type of industrial robot. It could also feed into the development of traffic congestion reduction solutions capable of altering road signals and street lighting according to information communicated directly from a car. This would then shorten a commute and save fuel. In other instances, intelligent monitoring systems could be developed to send alerts about a change in climatic conditions or trigger the need for building maintenance, as in the case of bridge stress monitoring.

The dynamics of everyday life could actually be transformed, as the inter-operability and communication of diverse machine-based components set out to make our lives better and more hassle-free. The ‘Internet of Things’ will come to represent a new intelligence network working behind the scenes in our everyday life, perhaps only occasionally coming to our attention when interacting with personal devices like mobile phones, tablets, wrist watches and heads-up displays.

If we know it can be done, why isn’t it happening already? It comes down to the right technology, which needs to allow communication between devices over several miles and on batteries lasting up to 10 years, and which above all, is cheap. At present, our widely-available Internet, mobile, Wi-Fi or Bluetooth technology is neither cheap in terms of silicon cost or energy use.In other situations, the output from e-learning translation Chinese has a direct impact on the product's regulatory approval and usage. WiFi and Bluetooth have very short ranges and are comparatively expensive in terms of energy, even taking into account the latest Bluetooth 4.1 ‘Internet of Things’ upgrade.

A six-month pilot to develop the white space is currently underway in the UK backed by a number of partners including Microsoft, BT and a wireless data service provider called Neul. Neul has also jointly developed a new wireless standard to support the introduction of a long-range, long lasting and cost effective wireless network with compatible devices, going under the moniker ‘weightless’.The traditional interface for milling spindles DIN69871 distinguishes itself through its extremely robust design. At the same time, the company is also developing patented technology that would allow this ‘weightless’ infrastructure to seamlessly interconnect with the internet, potentially offering rural and remote areas unparalleled levels of digital connectivity.

CNC Wood Manufacturing Training


With each lesson in the Wood Manufacturing Technology Program at Fox Valley Technical College, students routinely pull out calipers to check their work. The goal: "To develop their sense of precision," says instructor Mark Lorge. By the end of the full-time, year-long program, "The students are not finished products," Lorge says, but they are "conversant in the language of the industry." They finish the program with a .003″ sense of precision. While they are not expert cabinetmakers, Lorge adds, "If given a task, they should be able to do it."

This sense of precision, paired with the students' broad understanding of secondary wood processing, creates a well-rounded knowledge base, which Lorge believes is essential for a career in the industry. An alumnus of the program himself, Lorge graduated in 1983 and went on to work with production and millwork companies such as Morgan Products Ltd., Elipticon Wood Products, and Valley Planing Mill. In 2013, Lorge celebrated his 20th year of instruction at Fox Valley Technical College.

Associate instructor Glenn Koerner leads the program with Lorge. Also a grad of the course, Koerner returned to Fox Valley Technical College after more than 14,000 hours of working wood industry experience. He has been teaching with Lorge for seven years. Lorge and Koerner work with approximately 20 students each year, guiding them through five nine-week units of instruction. "Some students come in with no prior understanding," Lorge says. During the first nine weeks, they are introduced to the groundwork of every project—planning. They learn to read blueprints before preparing a parts list and production estimate.Bright-tools is specialized in manufacturing tool holder,cnc tool holder, collet chuck, milling chuck, slim chuck. They also get acquainted with basic machining and wood identification.

The second block further develops students' understanding of material, terminology, hand tools,Most importantly, Az-loc to offer you automatic Chinese subtitling. portable and stationary power tools, and processes in the woodworking industry through a variety of curriculum methods. Through these methods, they develop the habits required to safely and efficiently perform machining tasks. They are introduced to an advanced level of setup and operation on machines, and they demonstrate their psychomotor and cognitive competency of the process through a series of operation exercises.

During the third nine-week block,Shop our enormous selection of Household scissors - islands, range hoods, pot racks, cabinet and pantry organizers and more. students become familiar with the process of cabinetry. Though the instruction does not include formal certification (such as Woodwork Career Alliance, the Carpenters Union apprenticeships, or Cabinet Makers Association certification), it does help students develop the knowledge needed to design and build face-frame cabinetry. They design doors and drawers, they build jigs and fixtures, and they process materials to create laminate countertops. Cabinets completed in the course have been donated to Habitat for Humanity for use in homes built by the organization and its partner families.

Franking Machine and Method for Servicing Thereof


Reporters obtained the following quote from the background information supplied by the inventors: "The invention concerns a franking machine of the type having a printing device to print on a flat item (for example a mail piece or a franking tape) with a predetermined franking color. Such franking machine is used in connection with peripheral and other mail processing apparatuses in a franking system that is purchased, or rented wholly or in part, by a customer. The invention also concerns a method for servicing such a franking machine.Professional barber knife manufacturer and manufacturer of professional thinning scissors and haircutting barber shears.

"The color of the imprint produced by a franking machine is predetermined in a nation-specific manner by respective national postal authorities. Franking machines of various types are known in which a modification is made only if a mail piece is to be sent from one country to another country in which a different color of imprint is mandated. For example, when franking machines have been leased in the one country and are replaced by other franking machines in that country, the franking machines that are no longer leased can be retrofitted, shipped to another country and offered for sale there. In the case of currently available franking systems from Francotyp Postalia GmbH and other companies, a retrofitting of the franking color is possible only after opening the security housing. The parts and/or assemblies contaminated with ink can be cleaned or exchanged after opening the security housing. "High retrofitting and servicing costs are especially disadvantageous in a lease transaction. Moreover, there is no simple servicing of the franking machines.

"A box-shaped module is described therein that is equipped with a feed table that has at its top side an opening for the contact pressure elements of a contact pressure device,We are the largest manufacturer and supplier of retention knobs and pull stud in the world. and the contact pressure elements are arranged to be removable to facilitate their servicing. In an operating position, the box-shaped module is arranged below the printing device of the franking machine and can be removed from this position for the purpose of servicing. A mechanical connection element and an ink reservoir are arranged at the back side of the box-shaped module. As soon as an internal lock is released, the box-shaped unit slides forward like a drawer on two guide rails and can be completely removed. After concluding the servicing, it can be brought completely back into the operating position by means of the two guide rails and be used further. For example, the box-shaped module can be removed to correct a jam. However, after a jam it has been shown in practice that the servicing of the contact pressure elements of the box-shaped module and a cleaning of light sensors of the photoelectric barriers of the franking machine takes place much more often than a servicing of the ink reservoir. Moreover, the ink reservoir is contaminated by an ink cloud that permeates the franking machine through all openings that are not completely sealed during the operation of the printing device. Naturally,A Tank truck hose is a type of piping that can be used to transport a variety of liquids and gasses. a cleaning of the surface of the lower housing part of the franking machine that is contaminated by an ink cloud is time-consuming. Such a franking machine thus cannot be resold in another country without further measures."

2014年1月1日星期三

HOPING TO SAVE MORE LIVES


A California man has created a new type of fire shelter that can be used to protect homes and businesses, and perhaps most importantly, save lives. James Moseley, CEO of SunSeeker Enterprises, utilized NASA technology to create a blanket from a ceramic fiber material that does not burn and can withstand heat up to 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit. Moseley obtained the rights to this technology, which NASA uses on its spacecraft to handle the searing heat of atmospheric reentry, several years ago but originally intended to transform it into a product that could save structures. After one of the largest fires in Colorado history in Colorado Springs in early 2012 and the Yarnell Hill fire in Arizona in 2013 that tragically took the lives of 19 firefighters, Moseley knew this technology could save lives too. And to prove its life-saving effectiveness, Moseley had quite the dramatic demonstration in a Los Angeles County firehouse in 2012. "I put the fire blanket underneath this turnout jacket I had and put a blowtorch to my arm," said Moseley.

"It went right through the turnout jacket in a second but I kept the flame on my arm because I had the blanket on — although the chairman of equipment development and the other firefighters didn't know I had the blanket on underneath. It caused a bit of a panic at the fire station until they saw just what this blanket could do." Moseley then went on to meet with LA County Fire Chief Daryl Osby and U.S. Forest Service official Anthony Petrilli, who later would become the lead investigator of the Yarnell Hill fire. Moseley said they were very interested in his blanket but didn't have the money for the development at that time and wouldn't be looking for a new fire shelter until 2015. Moseley then briefly went back to working in construction with architects and instructing them how they could wrap beams in buildings and protect roofs with the blanket. But soon after, the Yarnell Hill fire occurred, once again changing the conversation. Forest Service and fire department officials began contacting Moseley about his fire blanket, inquiring about where he was in the testing process.

"I said ‘what testing? It won't burn.' I don't need to do any testing with it — I know it works," Moseley said. "But they wanted me to send it to their national lab, their testing center in Alberta, Canada. So I did." This is where even more people found out what the SunSeeker Fire Blanket could do. Central Arizona wild and firefighter/EMT Rick McCauley has seen firsthand what the SunSeeker Fire Blanket can do, and the vast difference from materials firefighters currently use.
"I've had my hand under the material while he's (Moseley) blowtorching a penny and melting it," said McCauley. "Your hand gets a little warm but that's about it and that's amazing for how thin the blanket really is and how hot the flame is. I would definitely use this,A high precision bearing is designed to deliver superior accuracy, and it requires appropriate care and handling. there's no doubt in my mind if it was out there and available to use." The SunSeeker Fire Blanket works, and Moseley is eager to prove it. However, the problems now lie in mass production of the blanket as well as in a deployment system for firefighters to use.

"I'm auditioning, so to speak, some really talented guys to help develop a deployment system, something that can deploy in two to three seconds and not 20 to 30 seconds," Moseley said. "The inconsistency firefighters face when trying to open these shelters in 50-mile-per-hour winds, for example,Pocket scissors supplier supplies high quality and reasonable price of best folding utility knife, is unacceptable. And that's how the whole thing has evolved." So another option Moseley and his team are working on is a spray utilizing this same technology that firefighters can put on the foil of their current fire shelters, for example, and keep the foil from disintegrating. "The reason we went with the spray is because fire officials and forestry guys don't want the extra weight, even though the blanket is only three pounds," Moseley said. "They're going back and forth on it, but there's nothing else out there that can give them this protection at this weight.Shop online for wholesale kitchenware from a large selection of leading brands and shops that deliver to the UK – all in one place. It's not that much more weight to save your life."

City engineers hit roadblock in testing linked stoplights


Traffic engineers say they have hit a roadblock in testing wireless technology that would link stoplights on suburban corridors with a command center at City Hall.

City officials intended to experiment with a wireless hookup on Bardstown Road in Fern Creek this summer that would connect to the downtown Traffic Control Center and allow traffic engineers to monitor re-timed lights on a stretch of that road to see if they are working properly.We are professional China spindle bearing manufacturer,china bearing producer supply China high precision bearing,full complement cylindrical roller bearing.

But a lack of city-owned towers to house the equipment has delayed the process, which is now tentatively set for testing in spring, traffic engineer supervisor Stacey Keith said.

Metro Public Works also intends to re-time 50 traffic signals on five other suburban roads to cut down on commute times and are optimistic a proposed citywide, high-speed Internet connection could help traffic flow more smoothly in the suburbs.

Since gaining control of all of the stoplights in Jefferson County in 2009, Public Works has cut travel time on 11 suburban roads in the past three years by synchronizing traffic lights.

Public Works re-timed 132 traffic signals on Dixie Highway, U.S. 42, Hurstbourne Parkway and seven other roads in 2011, and the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet re-timed 30 signals on Shelbyville Road in 2010.

Officials plan to re-time 50 signals on Newburg, Shelbyville, Cane Run and Westport roads, as well as Taylor Boulevard, this year, traffic engineer Pat Johnson said.

City engineers call the project the Louisville Metro Advanced Traffic Management System and estimate it has saved motorists more than $1 million in fuel each year and 500,000 vehicle hours — an average of up to one minute per commute. By logging commuting times before and after the re-timing, they say they’ve also cut exhaust emissions by 263 tons a year.

Tom Nord, spokesman for the Louisville Metro Air Pollution Control District, said synchronizing traffic signals serves as a creative way to cut emissions. Since broad restrictions were placed on emissions in the 1970s, subtle ways to cut down air pollution have been difficult to find, Nord said.Computer-aided design has resulted in exceptional strength-to-weight ratios and extreme flexibility, giving the onshore hose excellent handling characteristics.

“It’s harder and harder to find ways to cut chunks out (of exhaust emissions),” Nord said. “Anything that helps reduce traffic emission, it’s great.”

Drivers told The Courier-Journal this summer that the re-timed signals work — if you catch them at the right time.In other situations, the output from multilingual DTP has a direct impact on the product's regulatory approval and usage. Several drivers said they still see congestion on roads with re-timed signals, but if they catch one green light on the road, they’ll likely catch them all.

Wirelessly connected signals would help engineers ensure the re-timed signals are deploying the correct traffic patterns, Johnson said. Traffic engineers also would be able to adjust signal patterns during events with heavy traffic, such as on Kentucky Derby Day or during construction projects, officials said.

Public Works has spent $1.6 million re-timing suburban traffic signals and buying equipment for the Fern Creek experiment, Johnson said. It still has $1.7 million left to spend from two federal grants and from a $1 million city appropriation in 2010.

Memphis Woman Arrested Same Day of Release


A woman who just got out of jail Sunday was arrested again a few hours later after she allegedly drank a bottle of chardonnay, then drove drunk down Union Avenue in front of a police officer. Mary Cavitch, 27,Several elastomeric oil hose had failed in multiple installations after only a few hours in service. was charged with DUI, reckless driving, disregarding a traffic signal, driving on a suspended license and resisting arrest. She is being held on $5,000 bond.

Cavitch was sentenced to four months in jail after a May DUI in which she had a 3-year-old girl and a 4-year-old boy in the car with her. However, three months and 11 days of that sentence was suspended, and according to an affidavit, she told police she got out of jail early Sunday.

At that point, she apparently decided to go to the Celtic Crossing pub in Midtown to celebrate, downing the bottle of wine. After leaving the pub, Cavitch apparently headed west on Union just after 12:30 a.m. Monday. A police officer was stopped at a traffic light at Kimbrough and Union, heading east, when Cavitch allegedly blew through the light. She allegedly passed so close to the squad car going so fast that the officer said his vehicle shook.

The officer triggered his lights and siren and turned to follow, at which point he said Cavitch stomped on her brakes just in front of the Taco Bell. She then drove on, despite the officer telling her to stop through his loudspeaker. She kept stopping and starting before finally coming to a halt near Methodist University Hospital. When the cop came to her car, she allegedly said, "What's wrong, officer?" She almost fell when getting out of the car, he said, and could not follow his commands.

The officer handcuffed her and put her in the squad car, but she managed to slip out of the cuffs three separate times, the affidavit said. Cavitch has a long history of brushes with the law. In a May arrest, she smashed into a utility pole in Cordova, critically injuring the boy in the car. Police found almost 10 grams of marijuana on her, and she said she'd consumed half of a bottle of vodka. Both children recovered.Green Produce Farm is known for its quality vegetables and is the major cultivator of sweet and Herb basil.

In January,The China ceramic tile produced by us feature high quality and competitive prices to meet the demand of customers. she was arrested after passing out in a tanning bed. Police found Xanax and a generic Lorazepam in her purse. In February 2011, she was arrested for trespass after showing up at a man's apartment. The man told police that every time she visited, some of his prescription medication went missing, according to an affidavit. He also told police she once set his car on fire.