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The Evolutionary Perspective
Daily Archives: July 29, 2021
MIT and Caltech Create Crazy Carbon-Based Nanotech Alternative to Kevlar – autoevolution
Posted: July 29, 2021 at 8:48 pm
What does all this mean for material science? A whole lot if you ask me. I mean, this is literally going to change to way we produced shielding of any kind, especially for law enforcement agencies. Hang on a second, I'm getting a little ahead of myself here.
A new study by engineers at the above-mentioned institutesdiscovered that nano-architected materials are showing insane promise in use as armor. What are nano-architected materials? Simply put, theyre materials and structures that are designed from precisely patterned nanoscale structures, meaning that the entire thing is a pre-meditated and arranged structure; what you see is exactly what was desired.
Not only this, but the material is completed from nanoscale carbon struts. Arranged much like rings in chainmail, these carbon struts are combined, layer upon layer to create the structure you see in the main photo. So yeah, medieval knights had it right all along, they just needed more layers of something that already weighed upwards of 40 lbs for a full body suit.
To do this, researchers shot laser-induced microparticles up to 1,100 meters per second at the nanostructure. A quick calculation and youre looking at a particle thats traveling at 3,608 feet per second. Want to know more? That's 2,460 miles per hour!
Two test structures were arranged, one with slightly looser struts, and the second with a tighter formation. The tighter formation kept the particle from tearing through and even embedded into the structure.
If thats not enough, and this is a big one, once the particle was removed and the underlying structure examined, researchers found that the surrounding structure remained intact. Yes, this means it can be reused.
To get an idea of where this sort of tech will be taking things, co-author of the paper, Julia R. Greer of Caltech, whose lab led the materials fabrication, says that The knowledge from this work could provide design principles for ultra-lightweight impact resistant materials [for use in] efficient armor materials, protective coatings, and blast-resistant shields desirable in defense and space applications.
Imagine for a second what this means once these structures are created on a larger scale. It will change the face of armor, be it destined for human or machine use, coatings, and downright clothing. Im not saying that suddenly we can stop bullets walking down the street, but it wont be long until funding for large-scale production begins, and what I just said may become a reality. Maybe not for all people at first, but the military will definitely have their eye on this tech.
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Shawn Mendes professes going from atheist to believer in God – CHVN Radio
Posted: at 8:48 pm
Canadian popicon Shawn Mendes recently shared his heart and faith journey during a podcast in which he talks about the power of a Maverick City Music song.
Mendes was on the podcast called Man Enough when he shared his experience after becoming famous from hit single after hit single.
"I had a huge song when I was really young," Mendes says referring to his first single 'Life of the Party.' "Only in the last two years did I realize the power that music is."
Mendes was born and raised in Toronto before making it big in the pop world of music in his early teen years.
"I grew up more or less atheist, now becoming much more spiritual and being sure there's a God. Music was the thing that did that for me."
He turned on a song from aCCM worship band.
"I watched Maverick City Choir singing about God, about Jesus. I'm sitting there watching this YouTube video about Jesus and I just start crying, crying my eyes out."
That moment, Mendes felt a shift and says he felt something leave and lift off him.
"How is something that I've grown up my whole life to believe is fanatic, and not science or the truth, feel like home."
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Schumer met behind scenes with IBM on national chip lab – Times Union
Posted: at 8:48 pm
Schumer also stopped without much fanfare at Albany Nanotech to meet with officials from IBM, NY-CREATES, which operates Albany Nanotech, along with officials from Applied Materials, a manufacturer of equipment used in chip fabs, and the New York State Economic Development Council.
Within the $52 billion USICA funding is $10.5 billion to separately underwrite computer chip research, including the establishment of what will be known as the National Semiconductor Technology Center (NSTC), which IBM and Albany Nanotech are trying to start in Albany, with possible locations in other parts of upstate.
Given the major research and development facility already in place on the (Albany Nanotech campus) and IBMs prominence in semiconductor research and development including their recent development of the worlds first chip with 2 nanometer technology at their (Albany Nanotech)facility Albany is the ideal location for the new NSTC.
Funding for the NSTC would be in the billions and would likely require the construction of new facilities at Albany Nanotech to support those efforts.
Just as he did at Fab 8 a week ago, Schumer brought U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo to Albany Nanotech to meet top executives there. Raimondo is a former governor from Rhode Island who worked in venture capital and business in the past and knows the high tech sector well.
The NSTC would mean $2 billion in federal funding as well as 1,000 jobs for the Capital Region's high-tech sector. That level of economic development impact would be on a par with that of a second fab Fab 8.2 at Malta, which GlobalFoundries plans to build if the USICA passes the House and is signed into law by President Joe Biden.
"IBM commends Sen. Schumer and Secretary Raimondo for their focus on reinvigorating Americas competitive edge in semiconductor innovation and manufacturing, Dario Gil, director of IBM Research said. "As a proud member of this ecosystem, IBM is prepared to take a leadership role to make the NSTC a success.
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Author Marsha West Talks Romance, Suspense, and ‘Happily Ever After’ – Fort Worth Magazine
Posted: at 8:48 pm
Vermont Escape by Marsha West
Two years after the murder of her husband, someone guns down Jill Barlows father, a Texas State Representative. Authorities suspect a connection between the murders but cant find proof. Jill seeks refuge and a new life in a small Vermont town, but she cant escape the mysteries of the past.
Everyone in This Room Will Someday Be Dead by Emily Austin
Gilda, a young atheist, animal-loving lesbian who cant stop ruminating about death, responds to a flyer for free therapy from the local Catholic church but is mistaken as an applicant for the church secretary position. Too embarrassed to correct the priest, shes hired on the spot. With both poignant moments and deadpan humor, Austin gives us a thought-provoking and delightful novel.
A Good Apology: Four Steps to Make Things Right by Molly Howes, Ph.D.
In a world as fractured as ours, effective apologies are an important process in healing and moving forward. Dr. Howes combines research, stories from her practice, and new stories to illustrate the power of an apology and provide readers with the tools to truly make amends and rebuild relationships both in small breaches and large.
5 questions: Marsha West
1. Tell us a little bit about yourself. Give us a snapshot of who you are. Im a retired elementary school principal, former FWISD board member, and theatre arts teacher. I write second-chance romantic suspense, also called seasoned romance. Ive lived in Fort Worth since my husband finished law school in Austin. Our two daughters are grown and live near, giving us plenty of quality time with our three grands. We share our home with a deaf rescue Chihuahua/Jack Russell terrier, Charley, who made his way into my most recent book, Tainted.
The theme of my books is second chances, with my four-part series titled, The Second Chances Series. I believe in happily ever afters. My husband picked up a plaque for me on a trip to Maine stating my philosophy exactly: Everything will be all right in the end. If its not all right, its not the end. The heroines and heroes in my books are in their 40s and 50s with their parents and children playing supporting roles
2. What compels you to write and why romance and suspense? Every writer begins as a reader. Nancy Drew and Dana Girl mysteries were high on my list, and then during high school, I started reading my mothers romance books. Daphne du Mauriers Rebecca hooked me on the wonderful combination of romance and suspense.
After many years of only reading education-related books, when my mother became ill, I needed the comfort of books with a happily ever after. I said to a friend, Ive read so many, I could probably write one. The friend said, Go for it! So, I did.
3. What do you hope readers experience through your writing? I hope my books uplift readers, providing encouragement, hope, and the strength to keep on keeping on toward their own happily ever after, whatever shape that takes.
4. Has a story or character ever taken an unexpected turn? Vermont Escape is my first published book but the fourth book Id written. I was more than halfway through when one of the supporting characters just took off. It looked like hed end up winning the heroine, but that wasnt my plan. I promised him if hed back off, Id give him his own book. Three books later, he became the hero of Second Act, Book 1 of The Second Chances Series.
5. Whats next for you? My eighth book, Compromise, set in New Hampshire, will release in October of this year. This book was supposed to be a Hallmark-type Christmas book, but on the second page I discovered a murder, and the story became too complex to fit the two-week Christmas format. Ill try again, but this isnt it (though we do have a snowman-building contest and snickerdoodles). Im eager to finish Compromise because another story is rumbling in my head, struggling to get out.
You can find Marsha online at authormarsharwest.wordpress.com and on social media. She loves to connect with readers.
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The Race to the Bottom – IEEE Spectrum
Posted: at 8:48 pm
Contrary to entrenched popular lore, earthshaking inventions hardly ever spring fully formed from the overheated brain of a single supergenius. They blow in with the intellectual zeitgeist, products of an era when many researchers know something big is about to happen and pursue it with the intensity of sharks feasting on a fresh seal carcass.
Thus, for every Alexander Graham Bell, there was an Elisha Gray; for every Thomas Edison, a Joseph Swan. And someday, if nanotechnology makes good on its promise to revolutionize human society, Gerd Binnig will have his Tom Rust. Or, perhaps, Tom Rust will have his Gerd Binnig.
Binnig, a Nobel laureate in physics and a star in IBM Corp.s metamorphosing research apparatus, and Rust, a self-taught engineer who founded a start-up with a staff of 16, are in many ways nanotechnologys least likely pair of combatants. Theyre a couple of mavericks who, after 20 years of hunches, feverish experimentation, and perpetually mutating designs, are now on the brink of what could be nanotechnologys first truly big commercial breakthrough: a memory system that could up the ante in the high-stakes struggle to keep data storage on a par with the pitiless pace of advances in consumer and computing electronics.
With longstanding promises of infinitesimal machines that manipulate matter literally atom by atom, advances in nanotechnology and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) have been the stuff of countless research theses, business plans (mostly failed ones), and science fiction plots. After all, when the atom is your building block, materials of astounding properties, vastly faster and smaller electronics, and even synthetic human tissues are all within the realm of possibility.
So far, though, nanotech and MEMS have delivered much more breathless hype than broadly transformative technology. And thats why the emerging nano- and MEMS-based data-storage application, which is called probe storage, has corporate researchers in a feeding frenzy. Packing Brobdingnagian memories in Lilliputian packages, probe drives are prime candidates to combine the low cost, high capacity, and random-access features of ordinary magnetic hard-disk drives with the low power draw, high data rate, small size, and nonvolatility of solid-state flash memories. In so doing, they could fuel burgeoning markets for super-high-capacity personal media players and pocketable computers with storage far exceeding that of todays desktop models.
Demonstrations in the last few years by companies like IBM and Rusts company, Nanochip Inc., in Fremont, Calif., show that probe drives can cram a terabit (128 gigabytes) into each square inch of memory media. (The industrys standard measure for the density of bits that can be packed onto storage media is expressed in the English unit of inches.) For contrast, conventional magnetic hard drives, such as the one-inch microdrives found in products like the Apple iPod, can at best achieve only 250 to 300 gigabits per square inch. They are subject to the superparamagnetic limit, the density above which magnetic domains are so small that thermal fluctuations interfere with the mediums ability to hold steady magnetization and, therefore, data. The huge capacity of probe systems translates into as many as 125 hours of DVD-quality video recording time, which would allow digital video camera makers to dump those bulky, power-sucking tape drives and shrink camcorders to fit in shirt pockets. Media players that now rely on DVD drives could store 25 movies on a chip and lose the drive altogether.
Developers of probe drives expect that the first generation of deviceswhich could be on the market as soon as January 2007will compete directly with flash memory, now a staple in digital cameras, cellphones, USB key-chain memories, and MP3 players. Flash was a US $4.8 billion market in 2004, according to Gartner Inc. in Stamford, Conn.and its growing, to $8.4 billion by 2008, Gartner predicts.
With a potential market worth billions, IBM and Nanochip have plenty of competition in probe drives. Seagate and Samsung are pouring millions into probe-storage R&D; Hewlett-Packard, Hitachi, and Philips have all explored probe drives over the last few years.
Nevertheless, IBM and Nanochip are unquestionably in the front rank, having worked on the technology longer than any other companies and having logged major prototype milestones in the last year. In recent years IBM has been focusing more and more of its R&D on software that helps corporate computer systems monitor and administer themselves automatically and on services to optimize business processes for corporate clients. Its probe-storage project, called Millipede, is something of a throwback to the days when hardware ruled in Big Blues labs. Since IBM no longer has the facilities to manufacture Millipede devices, the company is considering looking for a partner to commercialize it, according to Karin Vey, communications manager at IBMs Zurich Research Laboratory (ZRL), where the Millipede project is based. Vey emphasizes that IBM has not yet made a final decision about Millipedes commercial future and that it is conceivable that the Millipede technology will not be sold as a product by itself but will find its way into other products. But to knowledgeable outsiders, Millipede seems to be a technology looking for a home, or at least a licensee.
For the privately held Nanochip, meanwhile, the challenge is that of any start-up: getting technology to market before funding runs out. So it isnt much of a stretch to say that the near-term future of one of the most promising memory technologies in decades is in the hands of a colossal multinational that isnt sure what it wants to do with it and a tiny start-up that is burning its venture capital with each passing day.
Supposedly stupendous memory technologies have come and gone before without ever ruffling the commercial market. Holographic memory as a mass-market technology has been just around the corner for at least 25 years. More recently, schemes based on molecules or even bacterial proteins have excited researchers before turning out to have essentially insurmountable manufacturing, longevity, or other problems.
What makes probe memory different is that it is based on proven technologies. Probe memory is an offshoot of the scanning probe microscope, a form of which was invented in 1981 by Binnig (hence his Nobel prize) and Heinrich Rohrer, a Swiss physicist who retired in 1997 after 34 years at ZRL. These nonoptical microscopes, which include the scanning tunneling and atomic force microscopes, scan the surface being examined with the tip of a long, thin wisp of metal or silicon called a cantilever. The cantilevers probe tip is just atoms wide, so it maps surfaces with atomic-scale resolution.
The Pioneers of Probe:Nanochip founder and CTO Tom Rust (left) and CEO Gordon Knight are vying for the nanotech-storage prize. Nobel laureate Gerd Binnig (far right), inventor of the scanning probe and atomic force microscopes, is the driving force behind IBMs Millipede project.Photos: Pat Mazzera; Christian Dietrich
Basically, a probe memory uses arrays of dozens or hundreds of these same tips to write, read, and erase nanoscale bits in neat columns on a piece of storage medium made of specially engineered plastic or an exotic alloy. Depending on the probe-drive design, either the storage medium or the probe-tip array is mounted on a moving platform, which scans the stationary component to align the tips with either bits to be read or locations where bits are to be written. To write, read, or erase data, the tips are heated and then pressed onto the medium. Because the tips are so fine, the bits occupy spaces on the medium just 10 nanometers wide, or roughly the width of 100 hydrogen atoms.
Like a hard disk drive or an optical disc drive, a probe-drive system accesses data at random locations by reading current through the tips as they pass over the bits to determine whether they are 1s or 0s. Control circuitry aligns the mechanical components with nanometer precision, and error-correction codes ensure the integrity of the data being written and read. The basic concept has been proved over and over by both IBM and Nanochip. The game now is making the memory devices cheaply by the millions and fabricating probe tips that, despite their extreme delicacy, can withstand the wear of tens of thousands of read/write cycles.
The story of probe storage begins with Binnigs co-invention of the scanning tunneling microscope (STM) 24 years ago. It let researchers see, for the first time, surface features down to the atomic scale. With a voltage applied to it, an STMs ultrasharp tip, which is very close to but not touching a sample of conductive material, attracts electrons from the materials surface atoms, resulting in a weak current. Since the amount of current depends on the distance between the tip and the surface, measuring the current as the tip scans the sample provides the data necessary to plot a three-dimensional picture of the samples surface.
It was Nobel-quality work, but Binnig was already looking for something better: he wanted to image insulators as well as conductors. He was drowsing on his couch while on sabbatical in 1985 when he literally dreamed up the idea of the atomic force microscope, or AFM, which would eventually become the basis for probe-storage technology. In the process of creating these two nonoptical instruments to image materials on the atomic scale, he had stumbled on a means to manipulate, as well as characterize, matter at the nanoscale. In effect, he had opened a window on what the physicist Richard P. Feynman famously termed the bottom, in his 1959 talk at the annual meeting of the American Physical Society about the problem of manipulating and controlling things on a small scale.
Throughout the 1980s, atomic manipulation with STM probes fascinated researchers. Several labs, including ones at AT&T, Stanford University, Hitachi, and the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology, used STM probes to build crude features on surfaces atom by atom. But it wasnt until 1990, when Nature published the now famous picture of the letters I-B-M spelled out in 35 xenon atoms, that it really hit home with people outside the insular STM research community: you could use probes to move individual atoms around in a highly controlled manner [see photo, SmallBlue].
Smalll Blue:Donald M. Eigler and Erhard Schweizer at IBM's Almaden Research Center spent 22 hours writing the IBM logo with a scanning tunneling microscope, pushing around 35 xenon atoms on a nickel surface.Image: IBM
Among the people most impressed by IBM writ small was Nanochip founder and chief technology officer Tom Rust. If you could use probe tips to create orderly patterns on surfaces, he reasoned, it followed that you could use those same STM probes to write and read data. I saw what IBM had done with a scanning tunneling microscope and spelling out I-B-M,he says, and that inspired me to use probes to build a disk drive.
It was 1991, and Rust, an engineer who had spent most of his career working on hardware and software for displays, had just devoured K. Eric Drexlers nanotech manifesto Engines of Creation (Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1986). He was looking for a way to engineer Drexlers ideas into products when IBM, his future rival, provided the answer. Though he had no experience with nanotechnology, he plunged into it with the fervor of a true believer.
Rusts divergent career had begun in 1975, when, as an undergraduate computer science major at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, he took on a consulting gig for Magnavox Co. to build one of the first graphic cathode-ray-tube displays. He soon dropped out of college to create arcade video games and eventually went on to run a series of small businesses that produced 3-D solid modeling and animation hardware and software. This phase of his career culminated in a commission from the government of Singapore in 1990 to build a $2 million laser-dappled musical water fountain that now gushes on Sentosa Island, off Singapores coast.
Then, infected by Drexlers visions of nanomechanical assemblers that could fabricate any kind of material or machine from the atoms up, he caught the nanotechnology bug and holed up for several weeks in the library stacks at the University of California, Berkeley, and Stanford University doing what he had done his whole lifeteaching himself something new. He quickly concluded that he would have to use some sort of MEMS-based device as a platform for his STM probe, so he delved into technical journals to learn MEMS design and manufacturing.
After hearing that Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, in California, had an STM, Rust contacted the lab and learned of a U.S. Department of Energy program that provided $5000 grants to small businesses so they could access lab facilities and services. Rust applied, and soon he found himself at Livermore developing a write-once medium on which an STM could make 30-nm diameter donuts, his first nanobits. For that he and Joanne Culver, his research partner and wife, were awarded U.S. Patent No. 5453970, but further investigation and extensive reading quickly led him to shift from his original STM concept to another technology invented by Binnig at IBM, the atomic force microscope.
Both map the topography of the surface of a material using a sharp-tipped cantilever, but in contrast to the STM, the AFM maps the surface of a material with laser light. As the probe scans the sample surface, the electron clouds orbiting the atoms at the tip bump the ones orbiting the atoms on the samples surface, ever so slightly deflecting the cantilever. A photodetector records the laser light reflected off the cantilever, providing the data necessary to determine the amount of deflection, and to create a 3-D image of the surface topology.
While intrigued with the idea of using an AFM tip in direct contact with a surface to read and write bits, Rust knew that the speed of the tip skimming over a spinning disk would quickly grind the tip down. So he designed a MEMS device that would hold the tip and help it nimbly skip over the rotating platter, touching down only where it needed to write a bit, until it ran out of travel. Then the MEMS platform would hop backward over the medium, not unlike the automated stylus arm on a turntable, which at the end of a record picks up and moves back to the starting position.
One day I was looking at the complexity of this and thought, well, this is crazy! says Rust with a chuckle. Instead of skip-hopping heads over a spinning disk, he figured he could have the MEMS platform move up and down and side to side over a stationary storage material, radically cutting down on component complexity and power consumption. The Nanochip was born.
Rust built the first MEMS devices in 1994 with a 0.8-micrometer process traditionally used for making chips. He designed and built four platforms per die, with eight cantilevers on each, along with some electronic controls. It was, he admits, a dismal failure that taught him a lot about MEMS and chip design and fabrication, including the fact that the Nanochip (or IBMs Millipede for that matter) doesnt need to be made by the worlds most advanced 90-nm chip fabrication process. An old 1-mm fab is perfectly capable of making MEMS scanners and AFM tip arrays, a major reason that researchers are confident theyll be able to fabricate probe drives cheaply.
For the next two years, Rust shuttled across San Francisco Bay between his house in Oakland and the Stanford campus, where he paid to use MEMS fabrication equipment to prototype his designs and tweak the fabrication process. By 1996, he had made enough progress to impress his deep-pocketed friend Jerry Fiddler, founder of Wind River Systems Inc., a software company in Alameda, Calif. With Fiddlers backing, Rust phased out his computer graphics business and incorporated his new endeavor as Nanochip.
The notion of using the AFM not only to characterize a surface but also to manipulate materials at the atomic scalethe foundation of probe storagewas a serendipitous byproduct of the AFMs development, Binnig says. We always made mistakes and then you produced a little indentation in the samples. So the manipulation was always a side effect, and in the early days it was clear this would also be important.
In the early 1990s, a researcher at IBMs Almaden Research Center, Dan Rugar, used an AFM probe to write and read bits. Like Rust, Rugar initially used a spinning disk. In Rugars setup, a laser heated the probe tip, which in turn pressed into a rotating polycarbonate disk, softening it and creating a shallow pit representing a bit, in this case a 1. Rugars prototype stored 30 Gb/in2, but there was no way to erase and rewrite data.
And there was no readily apparent way around the potential showstopper, the slow data rate of a single mechanical AFM probe tip, which takes about a microsecond to write or read a bit, something flash memories and hard disk drives do in a nanosecond.
Rust used a few probes operating in parallel to increase the data rate. Binnig thought bigger. Why not have thousands of cantilevers working in parallel? he recalls asking colleagues around 1994. If you have a thousand probes, youre a thousand times faster on a chip that is three by three millimeters, and youre competitive with flash and its 2- to 10-megabytes-per-second data rate.
Market competitiveness wasnt on the agenda when Binnig and his colleague Peter Vettiger first kicked around ideas like this when they played for the ZRL soccer team in the late 1970s. After games they would often grab a beer in a nearby pub. Their conversations inevitably came around to the same idea: the fabrication and operation of large-scale micro- and nanomechanical devices on a single chip.
Those ideas sat in cold storage during the 1980s, while Binnig invented the AFM, spent time in the United States, and eventually started up the IBM physics group at the University of Munich, in Germany. It wasnt until Binnig returned to Zurich in 1994 that he and Vettiger got serious about turning their nano musings into a real device. Soon after Binnigs arrival, fellow footballer and Nobel laureate Rohrer organized the first of many brainstorming sessions that focused on creating large AFM probe arrays on a single silicon chip for highly parallel and ultradense data storage.
IBM had just sold off its laser unit, for which Vettiger, an IEEE Fellow, had been in charge of technology research. Keenly aware that IBM was in the throes of a major change, he and Binnig understood that they needed to focus on research projects with a near-future payoff. They decided to pool their talents and the resources of the science and technology and the systems departments at ZRL. They officially established the Millipede project in 1996, the same year that Rust incorporated Nanochip. The race was on.
In the 1990s, IBM, which pioneered the modern hard disk drive with the 3340 Winchester in 1973, was a major player in data-storage hardware. But for the 21st-century company, Millipede is a throwback. With the acquisition of PricewaterhouseCoopers and the sale of its hard drive business to Hitachi, both in 2002, Big Blue is focusing on software and services. Nowadays, it routinely pairs researchers with consultants to reengineer the guts of a corporate computer system or to make a supply chain more efficient. The Millipede work, however, brings glimpses of the old IBM research system, where researchers published profusely and left hardly any ramification of an invention unexplored.
In stark contrast, Nanochip has maintained a much lower profile, quietly pumping out only enough patent applications and prototypes to entice investors, technology partners, and potential customers. The Nanochip architecture is designed in-house. Everything else is contracted out: the fabrication, the storage media, the control and interface electronics, the error-correction codes, and the packaging. This strategy, company executives insist, will allow Nanochip to quickly mix and match components to meet the needs of a smart-phone maker one day and a digital-camcorder company the next.
Such a low-overhead business model is the difference between a fabless, VC-funded start-up that must produce a fast return on investment and a research program that will go on regardless of the products ultimate commercial fate, according to Evangelos Eleftheriou, the Millipede project comanager. Eleftheriou, an IEEE Fellow, says that in theory finely controlled cantilever arrays can manipulate anything on the molecular and atomic scales, from engineering individual proteins to writing lines on a chip that are an order of magnitude thinner than todays best optical lithography can produce.
By 1998, the millipede team had fashioned an array of 25 silicon cantilevers with aluminum heaters near the tips. The device could read bits but not write them. The team wanted to write a 1 by heating a cantilever tip and pressing it into the polymer medium to form a shallow pit. A zero would be easyjust leave the bit location untouched.
The inability of the 25-cantilever array to write 1s was caused by the passage through the cantilevers of high current, which forced the aluminum ions in the heaters to clump together, creating voids that inhibited the conduction needed to warm the tips. The answer here, the researchers found, was to make the heaters out of silicon too.
Another problem cropped up around the same time: the current needed to heat each probe tip could not be confined to a single cantilever. When current was sent to a cantilever, some leaked out. Eventually that leaked current accumulated and flowed all over the array, wreaking havoc with signals or causing short circuits. The uncontrolled flow of current would only get worse with more tips packed closer together, and the next milestone, a demonstration of a 1024-tip array, was coming up.
In solid-state memories, the flow of current is controlled by transistor switches, but the temperatures used to create the probe tips would destroy any transistors the Millipede team might try to integrate onto the cantilever.
Vettiger and colleague Michel Despont proposed that each Millipede cantilever have a Schottky diode, rather than a transistor, to restrict the current flow. Unlike a transistor, the diode could withstand the thermal processing necessary to create the adjacent tip. The metal-semiconductor-junction Schottky diode allows the current intended for its assigned cantilever to flow through it with almost no loss (Schottky diodes have especially low forward-voltage drop). The diode also blocks the flow of current in the reverse direction, sealing the cantilever off and keeping stray current from running amok on the device. In effect, the diodes allow cantilevers to be addressed individually for read, write, and erase functions.
After integrating the Schottky diodes, the team discovered that a curious thermal phenomenon gave them an unanticipated bonus. The tips scan over the medium to detect bits, interpreting pits as 1s and flat locations as zeroes. When a tip dips into a pit, the temperature, and therefore the cantilevers electrical resistance, drops, reliably and very sensitively indicating a 1. When the tip scans a flat location, the temperature, and therefore the resistance, is unchanged, indicating a zero. The team had been using piezoresistive sensors at the base of each cantilever to convert the mechanical strain of a tip dipping into a pit into a change in resistance that could be read as a bit. With their new thermomechanical sensing mechanism in hand, the IBM researchers could dispense with the piezoresistive sensors.
In May 1998, equipped with the new silicon heaters and the integrated Schottky diodes, the team demonstrated an array of 1024 cantilevers that could read and write on a polymer surface. IBM, with Millipede, was out in front of the probe drive pack, followed by a team at Carnegie Mellon University, in Pittsburgh, and Hewlett-Packard Co., in Palo Alto, Calif., which eventually abandoned its program.
Meanwhile, back in California, Silicon Valley was erupting with the irrational exuberance of the dot-com bonanza. Although Rust now had three employees, he was doing most of the design, layout, mechanical work, and simulations of the Nanochip himself. He had just completed the first prototype that successfully integrated cantilevers, tips, and a moving platform, and was about to test it with the charge-based storage medium he was using at the time, when personal tragedy struck.
In August 1999, Rusts wife, Joanne, who at the time was helping Rust manage Nanochip Inc., died of breast cancer. Some people might have found solace in religion or alcohol. Rust glommed onto the Nanochip.
After my wife died, I realized that I could make a contribution by developing something that could hopefully benefit everybody in some large-scale way, he says. Money was never an objective for me. I was doing this with a larger scheme of things in mind.
Going back to work a few months after his wife passed away, Rust was determined to commercialize the technology. So he hired a new management team to guide the business through its next phase. Then, just as Rust was getting back into a working groove, corporate skullduggery almost torpedoed Nanochip altogether.
The company had linked up with an investor that gave the company enough working capital for it to continue development on a limited scale and to engage an outside contractor to make a controller for the Nanochip (an effort that ultimately failed).
Around the same time, for reasons Nanochips current executives are legally barred from discussing, the companys cash suddenly evaporated, leaving Rust alone and deep in the red.
Despite the bleak circumstances, Rust clung to the notion that the Nanochip had a commercial future and decided to put together yet another management team. Id watched over the years the enormous growth in the uses of atomic probes for so many different analytical applications, says Rust. That in itself kept me believing that the technology would get there.
Within a few months of Nanochips near collapse, Rust met Gordon Knight, who, like many Silicon Valley executives in 2002, was looking for a job after the dot-com implosion. Knight, founder of three optical disc storage companies and former CEO at Maxoptix Corp., in Louisville, Colo., was willing to work for Nanochip without pay until he could find some funding. He quickly orchestrated a deal with a Malaysian concern, AKN Technology Bhd, in Penang, which came through with $1.8 million, enough for Rust and Nanochip to pay off some debts and produce a prototype.
By the time the company showed the prototype to potential second-round investors last year, it had gone through as many changes as Rust had.
Even as his company was fighting for survival in 2000, Rust was in the lab, reengineering the Nanochip. In contrast to Millipede, where the storage medium sits on a MEMS platform that moves in relation to a stationary array of probe tips, the Nanochips probe-tip arrays are on platforms that move in the x and y directions in relation to a stationary storage medium. Whereas Millipedes probe tips use electrostatic forces to move up and down on the z-axis, bringing them into contact with the medium, as late as 2000, Rust was controlling each cantilever with an actuator that vibrated each tip up and down the z-axis, to put the tips in contact with the medium. A piezoresistive sensor attached to each cantilever sensed the tips position on the z-axis, information that was fed to the external controller to tell it where the tip was in the read/write process.
Like Rusts original rotating-disk storage device, the mechanism was too complex to be made commercially. He decided to get rid of the sensors and vibrating actuator. Instead he chose passive cantilevers that are spring-loaded against the storage medium at all times, with an electrical connection to facilitate heating and bit sensing.
Then Rust spotted another opportunity for simplification. At the time, the charge-based media he was using required a capacitance sensor and some accompanying electronics. By switching to media that had a much larger signal output, Rust could dump those components, slashing 30 to 40 percent from the manufacturing cost.
Its the kind of challenge that IBM would handle by throwing together a team of the worlds foremost materials scientists and industrial physicists and giving them orders to invent a new miracle material. But Rust had to find something off the shelf, which he did at Ovonyx Inc., in Sunnyvale, Calif. The company sells a storage material made of germanium-antimony-tellurium (GeSbTe), or GST, a member of a class of substances called chalcogenides. Its used in rewritable CDs and DVDs and is even the basis of yet another flash competitor, the Ovonic Unified Memory, which Ovonyx is developing with Intel, STMicroelectronics, and BAE Systems.
The Nanochip:In this prototype Nanochip device made in 2004, probe-tip arrays are arranged on 16moving platforms (right). The probe tip (close-up, top) reads and writes data. This prototype chip is capable of storing data at a density of 1terabit per square inch. The micrograph close-up (center) shows one of the 16platforms with the silicon cantilevers bending upward; they are spring-loaded against the storage medium (not shown) and are moved horizontally by actuators surrounding the edge of each moveableplatform.Images: Nanochip
When heated by an AFM probe tip, the GST material quickly switches between stable amorphous and crystalline phases. The two states have very different electrical resistances: amorphous is high, crystalline is low. To write data, the tip heats the chalcogenide past its melting point; when the substance is quenchedthink hot steel plunged into cold waterthe heated region is in an amorphous state. To make it crystalline again, the tip heats the region to just below the melting point for a few nanoseconds to allow the atoms to form crystalline structures. To read data, the probe detects whether the resistance is higha 1 at a crystalline bit spaceor lowa zero at an amorphous one.
We discovered that we could produce incredibly tiny bits, much smaller than what we had ever thought we could do, says Rust, of those heady days in early 2003. We had been planning on 25- to 40-nm-diameter bits, and we were right off the bat doing bits that were as small as 10 or 15nmacross.
On 21 May 2003, Rust and company tested the new prototype. After writing some bits on the GST media, they switched into read mode and had the device scan for data. The data wasnt always there, Rust recalls. But on several of the scans the data was clearly there, at the correct timing position.
After seven more months of tweaking and testing, in February 2004, the GST-based Nanochip prototype impressed investors to the tune of more than $20 million in second-round funding from JK&B Capital, Microsoft, New Enterprise Associates, and Nanochips old benefactor, AKN [see photo, The Nanochip].
While nanochip was landing millions in funding, Gerd Binnig was putting on a little show in his office at ZRL. With a gleam in his eye, he produced a sponge and a golf ball and explained that a big challenge for Millipede is that the repeated heating and scraping of the tips against the media could wear out both at an unacceptable rate. Binnig had been working on the problem in his kitchen late one recent evening. He had been contemplating a ruined roasting pan, a casualty of his quest for a simple way to model the storage media half of that interaction. Undaunted by his past failures or the prospect of spousal wrath, he took another pan, shaved some candles down to their wicks, and put the collected wax in the oven to melt. Then Binnig dunked a sponge in the hot liquid and let it cool and harden. Binnig pressed a golf ball into the wax-soaked sponge, put a weight on top of it, and waited. The ultimate rewritable medium had just recorded its first bit.
I took the ball out when it was cooled down, and there was this nice indentation, he recalls. And when I raised the ball off the sponge and heated the sponge up again, the indentation popped up. The springiness of the sponge takes care that it always comes up, and the viscosity of the wax lets you switch back and forth from liquid to solid, depending on temperature.
Thus, in IBMs current probe-storage system, the AFM tips act as nano-golf balls. They record, read, and erase bits on a mediumwhich corresponds to the waxy sponge. In the IBM system, the medium is actually a heavily cross-linked polymer, in which long stringy molecules are linked together by chemical chains to form a single giant molecule.
To write a 1, the cantilevers designated to write a bit are heated to 400 C using resistive heaters integrated next to the tips. Simultaneously, a voltage is applied to a capacitive platform that sits between the two prongs of each wishbone-shaped cantilever, creating an electrostatic force that bends the cantilevers up and brings the tips into contact with the polymer. The hot tips press into the polymer and soften it, forming pits that measure a few nanometers in depth and 10 to 15 nm in diameter and are linearly spaced at 20-nm intervals.
To read data, a second resistive heater next to each tip is heated to about 200 C. When a tip moves into a pit, the cantilever and heater come closer to the polymer substrate, which cools the heater more efficiently. As a result, the heaters resistance changes, and this change is detected by readout electronics. Because cooling is more efficient when the tip is in a pit, a 1 is detected as a decrease in resistance resulting from a decrease in temperature. But since the temperature differences, and therefore the resistance changes, are infinitesimal, data are processed by advanced error-correction codes before they are written and after they are read.
TheMillipede:In this small-scale prototype of the Millipede device (above), the scanner array has thirty-two 600-nanometer-long silicon cantilevers (above, right), honed to just a few atoms at the tip (right). The cantilevers sit on a stationary platform facing up toward the 6.4- by 6.4-millimeter recording medium (not shown)a 100-nm-thick cross-linked polymer bound to a silicon substrate and suspended by silicon springs 500 nm above the probes like a miniature trampoline. The polymer is moved in thexandydirections relative to the probes by built-in electromagnets, while electrostatic forces bend individual cantilevers upward to contact the polymer. To write a 1, the cantilevers designated to write a bit are heated to 400 C by resistive heaters integrated next to the tips. Simultaneously, a voltage is applied to the capacitive platform at the center of each cantilever, bending it up and into contact with the polymer. The hot cantilever tips press into the polymer and soften it, forming pits a few nanometers deep and about 15 nm in diameter. The pits are spaced at 20-nm intervals. To read a 1, a second resistive heater next to the tip is heated to only about 200 C. When a tip finds a pit (a 1) at its read location, the tip moves into the pit, and the cantilever and heater come closer to the polymer substrate, which cools the heater. As a result, the heater's resistance changes, and this change is detected by readout electronics as a 1. For a zero, this resistance does not change. In the November 2004 demonstration, this text was converted into binary data of 1s and zeroes and sent to the Millipede prototype. The prototype successfully stored the text in the form of pits and flat bit spaces to indicate 1s and zeroes, respectively, at a density of 517 gigabits per square inch.Photos: IBM; Illustration: Bryan Christie
There are two ways to erase data. One involves placing a 400 C tip in a pit and heating it until the polymer springs up, as Binnigs model showed; the other requires a hot tip to press into the polymer near a pit, forming a new bit and in the process filling in, and erasing, the neighboring pit.
The storage media, along with the rest of the Millipede device, passed its first comprehensive test in a small-scale prototype demonstration held this past November. The critical componentsthe probe array, microscanner for moving the storage medium, servomechanism, analog electronics, detection circuitry, digital signal processor, and error-correction codesall worked together to achieve an important milestone: the successful storage and retrieval of a text message at an areal density of 517 Gb/in2. Not only did the assembly work as promised, but the whole control process worked, too [see photo and diagrams, The Millipede].
Though clearly pleased with the success of the Millipede demonstration, held in front of IBM brass, project managers Johannes Windeln and Eleftheriou arent satisfied. This isnt over. This is a small demonstrator, and there are many issues that we have to work on, Eleftheriou said afterward in a phone interview. Chief among them is improving the control of the MEMS microscanner to subnanometer precision, so that it can clearly and reliably write at areal densities as high as 1 Tb/in2. To compete with flash, the team also has to make tradeoffs among parameters such as the number of tips in a system, power consumption, and read- and write-data rates.
So whats next? This is a research group, not a development laboratory, Eleftheriou replies when asked about Millipedes next milestone. It is our job in research to understand a new technology and bring it to a point where a development group can make a product out of it.
Manufacturability will determine whether or not consumers will ever slot Millipede or Nanochip memories into their media players or camcorders. According to Marlene Bourne, a MEMS analyst at In-Stat, Scottsdale, Ariz., manufacturability hinges on component complexity. While the Nanochip is very similar to the Millipede, it doesnt have as complex an array of tips, she says. I think theyre quite a ways down in terms of complexity.
Bourne knows the basic concept behind the Nanochip but not much more, which is just the way Nanochip likes it.
Our investors are pretty edgy about us talking, says Nanochip CEO Knight. Theres no point in advance publicity, and then if youre late, everybody starts throwing stones at you. Though he cautions that the company still has a lot to do before it samples beta units, Knight says hes confident the Nanochip will be on the market within two years.
Bourne is more skeptical about the near-term prospects for probe storage, but she is convinced it will ultimately emerge, perhaps five or six years from now, as a strong competitor to flash. Unfortunately, the time to market for most MEMS devices is a lot longer than people would like, she says. I have no doubt that at some point there will be a MEMS rival to flash memory on the marketif not these two specific architectures, then something very similar. Its just a question of when.
It is also still a question of who. Seagate Technology LLC, in Scotts Valley, Calif., has an active probe-storage program based on technology developed at Carnegie Mellon. But theres also Samsung Group, in Seoul, South Korea, the worlds top manufacturer of DRAM chips, which has been presenting papers recently on its probe-storage research. And Samsung holds the most recently granted U.S. patent for a probe drive, No. 6762402, issued on 13 July 2004, which if nothing else indicates that the race to the bottom is still wide open.
Gerd Binnig and his colleagues described the Millipede system in great technical detail in The MillipedeNanotechnology Entering Data Storage, by P. Vettiger et al., IEEE Transactions on Nanotechnology, March 2002.
You can follow Tom Rust and Nanochips progress at http://www.nanochip.com.
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Jordan Peterson, Lawrence Krauss, and the God Hypothesis – Discovery Institute
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Photo: Lawrence Krauss, in Science Uprising, Discovery Institute.
Recently, Canadian psychologist-turned-public-intellectual Jordan Peterson hosted popular physicist Lawrence Krauss on his podcast. Peterson, on the other side of a health crisis, has been engaging an eclectic array of intellectuals to keep himself sharp while he promotes his new book, Beyond Order. As a scientist whos become known for politically incorrect opinions, Krauss was a natural conversation partner for the controversial professor, and the two got along well. Maybe too well, as Peterson allowed Krauss to repeat various talking points unchallenged.
Take me back to the beginning, Peterson asks, meaning 14 billion years back, to the beginning of time. Naturally, Krauss is only too happy to oblige by playing his greatest hit for the professor. He presents himself as the cautious, reasonable scientist who rewinds the tape only as far as he can extrapolate his own understanding of the laws of physics, unlike those excitable religious types who think they can tell you what happened at t = 0. But from t = 0.000000.1 onwards, the laws of physics can explain everything beautifully. This is the difference between science and religion.
Here Peterson asks a question: Those laws, did they come into being along with the universe?
Krauss hedges his bets in reply. Maybe they pre-existed, maybe they dont. Those are metaphysical questions. Metaphysical questions are above his pay grade, he wishes to stress. Right before saying its not just possible but quite likely that our universe arose from nothing, no space, no time, and maybe no laws. At the least, we can say confidently that it has all the properties we would expect to observe in a 14-billion-year-old universe that came into being spontaneously, without any supernatural shenanigans. This isnt a proof, but it at least makes Krausss claim sound more plausible.
Richard Dawkins has famously made similar comments, insisting that the world appears exactly as it would on the assumption that it was guided by nothing but blind, pitiless indifference. Both Dawkins and Krauss are technically correct that if this were in fact true, it would lend support to the atheistic hypothesis, while not deductively proving it.
Of course, as Stephen Meyer and others have argued at length on multiple occasions, and as Meyer directly addresses with specific attention to cosmology in Return of the God Hypothesis, we arent obliged to concede any such thing. Indeed, the floor is open for us to make exactly the opposite claim, that in fact the probability of our evidence given the God hypothesis is greater than the probability of that same evidence given the atheistic hypothesis. In Bayesian probability terms, the ratio of the first quantity over the second is top-heavy.
Meyer opens his new book with a memorable anecdote about debating Krauss live while battling a fierce migraine. The forum topic was Whats Behind It All? God, Science, and the Universe. So far from approaching the topic with scientific humility, Krauss spent ten minutes on pure ad hominem for the entertainment of his fan club in the audience, making it clear that just because he appeared on stage with Meyer, this didnt mean he thought the ideas or the person were worth debating. (The trick worked rhetorically to Krausss advantage, but Meyer credits that crucible for the inspiration that would lead him to write Return of the God Hypothesis.)
Naturally, the irony is rich here. In conversation with Peterson, Krauss repeatedly harps on the importance to the true scientist of admitting when a hypothesis or a theory is wrong, indeed the excitement of it. We could all stand to learn how to handle being wrong, he believes. Everyone would be better off, our mental health would improve, our kids would be tougher, and we would become less arrogant, more fair-minded and reasonable people. People who dont speculate about things above our pay-grade. Just like Lawrence Krauss.
Of course, theres nothing wrong with being a scientist who has opinions about metaphysical questions. People like Steve Meyer arent the ones saying that scientists should stay out of their lane and never think about philosophy or religion. The problem is not that Larry Krauss clearly has his opinions about things other than physics. The problem is that he insists Steve Meyer cant have his or, at the least, that they shouldnt be taken seriously. Why? Because religious dogma stops people from asking questions, like good scientists should.
I agree that good scientists should not stop asking questions. So heres a question for Lawrence Krauss: What happened at t = 0? Or are we not allowed to ask that question? That sounds a bitwell, dogmatic.
Having dipped his toe in philosophy and religion, Krauss makes a foray into psychology later in the podcast when he discusses some peoples difficulty with finding meaning in a universe where science has proven the relative pointlessness of mankind. (He makes a typically cringey stab at history of ideas along the way, repeating the hackneyed line that mankind used to think he was at the center of the universe. In fact, the center of the universe was regarded as the position of least privilege in ancient thought, but somehow this chestnut still persists in the pop atheist world.) People write to Krauss all the time in some distress, saying that while they no longer believe in fairy tales, this has left them in an unhappy place, wondering what to do with their sense of loss.
Krauss, for himself, is quite happy, and he wishes he could help his correspondents be happy too. As the old bus advertisement said, he wants them to stop worrying and enjoy their lives. Yes, growing out of fairy tales is sad, but isnt that a process we all go through, like the moment when we realized there really is no Santa Claus? Its the same way here. To him, the loss people feel over losing their religion should be felt as a gain. Knowing your existence is an accident should make you feel lucky. Knowing your time is short should make you value it all the more.
Of course, this is a well-worn secular humanist line. On the surface, it sounds bracing, a blast of cold reality that stings and refreshes at the same time. But in the end, its an ill-fated attempt at positive scripting. Nothing can ultimately address the sinking feeling that comes with the realization that Macbeth was right: Life truly is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, ultimately signifying nothing. The best you can hope for is that youll psych yourself out successfully enough to not have to think about that too much.
Unfortunately, Dr. Peterson declined to take Krausss invitation for feedback on his pop psychologizing. However, Krauss plans to invite Peterson on his own podcast soon, where they can discuss this at more length. Im very much looking forward to that. Meanwhile, my next post will explore where they disagreed in this podcast, as they discussed the question of whether science is nested in religion.
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Column: Something to Think About (7/23/21) – Chronicle Times
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By Nicholas J. Brewer
As my family and I were traveling to New Orleans not too long ago, we crossed the section of the United States known as The Bible Belt. As we saw billboards and advertisements about Jesus, damnation, and so forth, a question began to surface in my head.
What do non-Christians think of when they see these signs, or hear similar ads playing on the radio or television? This sparked me to do some research, and I discovered a trend that has been going on for the past several years or so.
More and more Christians are actually leaving the religion entirely. Given the current events that have happened within the last decade or so from accusations of pedophilia to rampant homophobic tendencies, I can't say I'm all that surprised. Most now former Christians are now doing one of two things.
Some move to a more open minded religion such as Wicca or a branch of Paganism. For those unfamiliar with it, Wicca is a neopagan religion that was founded in 1954 by a man named Gerald Gardner, and takes its origins from pre-Christian religions. The only difference between a Pagan and a Wiccan from doing research was that Wiccans believe in the Rule of Three, which is essentially a karmic retribution clause from the world, that whatever energy you put into the world, the world will send three times as much back at the person, while Pagans do not believe in it. Otherwise, both are rather open minded as to what practitioners can do.
Others may tend to remove themselves from religion entirely, becoming atheist. Some have even grouped together to form a non-theistic religion known as The Satanic Temple, with the main hub in the United States, and several chapters in Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom, It was founded by a man with the new name of Lucie Greaves, having changed it due to death threats being received by him and his family from overly religious Christians.
The group focuses on encouraging a state of benevolence and empathy among all people, regardless of race, gender, sexuality, creed, religion, and so on. They tend to use satire, theatrical plays, humor, and sometimes legal action to generate attention and prompt people to reevaluate their fears and perceptions, and to highlight religious hypocrisy and encroachment on religious freedoms. The only reason theyre even called The Satanic Temple was so they could irritate Christians and show how ridiculous some of them could be.
I'm unsure if anyone else found this interesting, but I found researching this topic rather fascinating. This isn't meant to be a anti-christian column in any way, as I've met plenty of Christians in my lifetime who are genuinely kind and caring. Im just simply making a researched observation.
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Technology assisting CMPD with uptick in bomb-related calls in Charlotte – WSPA 7News
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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (FOX 46 CHARLOTTE0 Technology is helping CMPDs bomb squad save a life. Theyre using robots instead of people to handle bombs that are real or fake.
Sergeant Chad Strong says it comes in handy as the department is seeing an increase in the number of calls about illegal bombs being found in Charlotte.
We start with the robot if we can do everything without sending a bomb tech downrange we will try and do it, Strong said. It can do anything that a one-armed person can do it.
Most of the bombs found turn out to be fake but police say its still raising concern for the people who find them.
Authorities responded to a call last week where they found a replica of a military explosive on Queens Drive.
If you find them, please call us dont touch it, just leave it where it is, Strong said. Right now, CMPD has 13 certified bomb technicians who have gone through extensive training to detect if the bomb is active or not.
Wearing heavy custom gear and clothing protects them against explosions if they happen. The custom suit weighs about 85 pounds. Police say calls into the department have gone up as more large-scale events start to happen in the Queen City.
Normally they would respond to about 60 calls a year, now its more than 100 and growing. Officials remind people that bombs and some fireworks are illegal in North Carolina and say most people who make them at home are more curious versus looking for a way to hurt people.
If you know of anyone thats using manufacturing or has possession of illegal homemade or improvised fireworks, please call us because the danger to the public is very great, Strong said.
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Occams Razor & Technology Disasters And Why We Refuse To See The Elephants In The Room. – Forbes
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The elephants in the room are people. But theres a resistance to see the elephants or deal with the often obvious steps necessary to solve people problems. As the pace of technology accelerates, digital competition explodes, and the need for agile leadership grows, companies must revisit and reimagine how it recruits, rewards and manages their technology teams including especially executive leadership.
Simplest Explanations Are Still the Best
Hard Or Easy Way With Directional Arrows Pointing Two Directions Meaning Difficult And Simple ... [+] Strategy
TheOccams Razorprinciple stated that plurality should not be posited without necessity.The principle givesprecedenceto simplicity:of two competing theories, the simplerexplanationof an entity is to be preferred.The principle is also expressed as entities are not to be multiplied beyond necessity.There are similar principles out there, notably the KISS principle keep it simple, stupid which most likely finds its origins in similarminimalistconcepts, such asOccam's razor,Leonardo da Vinci's simplicity is the ultimate sophistication,Shakespeare's brevity is the soul of wit,Mies Van Der Rohe's less is more.Bjarne Stroustrup's make simple tasks simple!, orAntoine de Saint Exupry's it seems that perfection is reached not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.Colin Chapman, the founder ofLotus Cars, urged his designers to simplify, then add lightness.Heath Robinsonmachines andRube Goldberg's machines, intentionally overly-complex solutions to simple tasks or problems, are humorous examples of non-KISS solutions, including Einsteins "make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler.
The point?When it comes to enterprise technology, we insist on attributing failure to anything but the obvious.Sure, there are a few analyses that focus on the simplest explanations, but by and large we like to explain failure around methods, tools, techniques, technologies, networks, platforms, data anything we believe we can define and measure.Our obsession with capability maturity models is a perfect example of how we aggregate competencies into measurable frameworks.Agile is a surefire methodology to fix broken software projects!ERP is perfect for integrating accounting and finance!Project Management Certifications will make us better project managers!And so IT goes.
What Humans Believe
Things We Believe
Were not good at this.We often want to believe things that have no basis in fact or even reality.Like the earth is flat, Covid vaccines make us magnetic and left-wing democrats consume babies. On the not-as-crazy list are what tens of millions of Americans actually believe, such as:
The Kicker
Why such a long list? Well, its not long. There are at least fifty more things I could have listed. Its important to understand that many of the same people who believe these (and many other things) run projects, companies and government agencies.Many of the people who believe these things are technology consultants, run technology companies and manage technology projects.To assume otherwise, defies Occams core principle and other common-sense notions of likelihoods, not to mention any statistical measures of probability.Stated differently, whats the probability thatnoneof the believers of any of these (and so many other) things run technology companies, manage technology projects or consult? It gets worse.When we delve into the psychological profiles of many of our friends, associates and leaders, it gets horrifyingly messy. Whats the probability that none of the people in your professional orbit believe any less-than-factual things and have no personality challenges?
The point?
The simplest explanations for why so many enterprise technology projects fail in addition to all of the conventional explanations are traceable to people.Before you rip out and replace all of your methods, tools, techniques, frameworks, data, platforms and technologies, look closely at the people in the room. Study the belief systems, the personalities and relationships exhibited (noting that many are hidden), and think about how all these influence planning, decision-making, promotions, investments and, yes, technology project failures.
The Elephant in the Room
A businessman says, "I suppose I'll be the one to mention the elephant in the room".
I started this analysis a while ago when I attempted to explain why so many technology projects fail.I offered that it was all about the people, all the time, and that the lack of the right talent, poor executive support and an anti-technology corporate cultures explained more about failure than the old favorites, like scope creep, requirements mismanagement, etc.Its the long way of saying that incompetent people with strange world views (and other traits) can be damaging to project success (not to mention corporate success). Who knew?Everyone and thats the elephant in the room so few of us are willing to see.How many people do you know have no business doing what theyre doing?I stopped counting years ago.William of Ockhamhad it right:the simplest explanation is usually the best. Our problem is we just refuse to see it.
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Occams Razor & Technology Disasters And Why We Refuse To See The Elephants In The Room. - Forbes
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How technology can generate advisory services and creative thinking – Accounting Today
Posted: at 8:47 pm
Over the last decade, technological advancements have grown exponentially. As a result, we have been relieved of the mundane tasks that used to eat up all of our time, and we are now able to focus our attention on different areas of work. We have more time to solve bigger problems, or simply lay bigger and stronger plans for the future.
The time we receive back from using technology to automate tasks has elevated our society in many ways, but at its core, it can be simply unlock the potential for more creativity. We are able to solve things that are important for you, or your client, whereas you might not have had time to do so without technology. For example, we now have tools that help with automating tasks, leading to improved workflows, and allowing you to serve clients more efficiently. Technology gives us that time back, and allows us to refocus our attention somewhere else.
The extra time technology has given you back means more opportunities to focus on advisory services at your firm. This helps build client relationships and offers insights beyond just completing tax returns. You now have space to think creatively to solve client problems, develop long-term, specific goals with each client, and offer a more tailored approach to ensure their goals are achieved.
The time you get back when utilizing technology also serves a purpose in a creative way. It frees up your brain to focus on industries or topics you are passionate about that can be beneficial in the long run for you or your client. It cements you as a knowledgeable partner, and one your clients can seek out advice from on new laws, investing advice, and more when working together to map out their long term goals and their definition of success. You could even use this as a chance to further educate yourself on different industries and become an expert in offering advice in new areas. Creative thinking helps inspire outside-the-box ideas that can come in handy during client problems or long-term planning.
In addition, all these new tools and technology give professionals more power behind their client relationships. Giving us access to data insights and AI helps us seek out and offer the best advice to our clients. It allows us to analyze client information, find patterns, project where targets need to be, and more.
Technology creates more space in our schedules to allow for new and exciting opportunities. It cultivates an environment that allows creativity to flow more freely and fosters exploration into other outlets of interest for both the benefit of you, and your clients. In the end, it leads to powering prosperity for both firms and clients.
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How technology can generate advisory services and creative thinking - Accounting Today
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