Peter Nixon
I'm involved in music and multimedia.

 



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Peter Nixon

  Wednesday, 30 April 2003



Kick Ass Commercial. Without a doubt, one of the best car commercials I've ever seen. Flash 6 required

[Adam Curry: Adam Curry's Weblog]
12:29:30 AM    

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  Monday, 28 April 2003



'No Fly' List Is Challenged in a Lawsuit. Civil rights advocates want the government to explain how people wind up on a list used to prevent those suspected of having terrorist links from boarding commercial flights. By Eric Lichtblau.

[New York Times: International]
11:55:36 PM    

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  Sunday, 27 April 2003



The sharpest ever optical image of molecular vibrations. PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE
The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News
Number 629 March 19, 2003
by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein, and James Riordon

The sharpest ever optical image of molecular vibrations, revealing details as small as 20 nanometers, has been produced by a Rochester-Harvard-Portland State collaboration. The image shows individual carbon nanotubes with single-atom-thick walls (see figure at http://www.aip.org/mgr/png/2003/182.htm ). Looking beyond this result, the researchers are striving for even higher sensitivity, which could supply very useful images of proteins, only 5-20 nanometers in size. Other, non-optical imaging techniques, such as scanning tunneling microscopy, can show smaller details, but this is the highest resolution image that uses light, a probe that can potentially extract lots more information. The researchers employed a sophisticated version of "near-field optical microscopy," in which a small probe (in this case, a gold wire with an extremely narrow tip) is placed very close to the surface. With the wire only a few nanometers away from the surface, researchers circumvented the usual roadblock to resolution, known as the "diffraction limit," in which optical details are ordinarily limited to half the wavelength of the light being used. In their technique, called "near-field Raman spectroscopy," the researchers shine laser light at the gold wire. The light strikes the wire's electrons, which then generate electric fields. These fields interact with vibrating atoms in the sample, which then release light of specific colors (frequencies). The spectrum of frequencies provides information on the chemical composition and molecular structure of the sample. From this information, an image can be created. In designing their probe, the researchers made use of the "surface-enhanced Raman scattering effect," in which the interaction with atomic vibrations is greatly increased by the use of nanometer-sized metal particles (in this case, the tip itself). In the future, researchers hope to use their technique to determine presently unknown structural details of carbon nanotubes, such as the different ways the nanotubes can interconnect with one another. With better resolution, the researchers hope to take detailed pictures of proteins in cell membranes. Such data can potentially shed new insights on how proteins act in a cell membrane and offer clues for designing better drugs. (Hartschuh et al., Physical Review Letters, 7 March 2003)

[David Harris: Science news]
3:31:37 PM    

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  Saturday, 26 April 2003



Using cosmic-ray muons to detect uranium.

A very interesting story published today in Nature looks at how physicists could construct a detector for uranium hidden inside other containers (such as trucks or ships) only using cosmic ray detectors.

Essentially, natural cosmic ray are tracked before and after they pass through the object being investigated. Deflections of the cosmic rays can be used to reconstruct a density image of the contents of the object. Seeing as uranium is particularly dense, it shows up strongly in the image.

Nature paper (subscribers only)

Nature Science Update report

[David Harris: Science news]
5:33:40 PM    

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  Thursday, 24 April 2003



American Physical Society March 2003 meeting.

We were busy at the APS March meeting in Austin... lots of foreign journalists present, many of whom have written up research presented at the meeting. As usual, the US press is not much interested in covering science, with some exceptions such as the Dallas Morning News which had three reporters present.

Get a taste of the stories from our press information:
Research presented
Press conferences

And have a look at some of the more in-depth stories on the web:

Superheroes make physics fun (Nature Science Update)

Better breast cancer screens? (Nature Science Update)

Green plans for tiny tech (Nature Science Update)

Why Life Is a Four-Letter Word (ScienceNOW)

How Cool Is That? (ScienceNOW)

Left-handed materials offer new angle for technology (Dallas Morning News)

Language of life may be spelled out with RNA (Dallas Morning News)

Bending light backwards (New Scientist - print only)

Chill out with the magnetic refrigerator (New Scientist - print only)

Optical tweezers pluck out cancer cells (New Scientist - print only)

Tool may light way to cure for cancer ; U. of C. lasers can sort particles (Chicago Tribune - for purchase)

Forscher: Negativer Brechungsindex existiert (Wissenschaft.de)
Researcher: Negative refractive index exists (Google translation)

There are other stories floating around - German National Radio has a handful for example.

[David Harris: Science news]
12:22:18 PM    

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Special Contact Lenses Could Allow Diabetics to 'See' Glucose Levels

Monitoring blood sugar levels can be a pain in the finger.

[Scientific American]
12:18:13 PM    

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Lest we forget the net

Some history.

[The Age: Technology]
12:13:54 AM    

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  Wednesday, 23 April 2003



Ullrich storms back with first win since 2001

A 53km solo breakaway in the Tour of Cologne!

[Eurosport: Cycling]
11:01:46 PM    

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The spaser: a laser analog for nanotechnology.

Just as a laser can fire tightly focused light at a point, a new proposed device, the "spaser" will shoot surface plasmons (localized energy fluctuations on the surface of materials) on a nanoscale. The spaser beams could be used for probing nanostructures where a laser would not be suitable. Laser light is created in an optical cavity consisting of mirrors whereas the spaser emission comes from a quantum dot, acting as an effectively pointlike source of energy, driven by electrical current. The process by which the spaser works is analogous to the laser [^] they both use the "aser" parts of their names, Amplification by the Stimulated Emission of Radiation.

Journal article: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v90/e027402

[David Harris: Science news]
10:41:09 PM    

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OpenBSD loses funding due to anti-war statements

That about wraps it up for free speech.

[The Age: Technology]
10:26:56 PM    

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  Tuesday, 22 April 2003



The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift. -- Albert Einstein

Talent is an asset and little Albert has it.

Sparks

[Rick@Leaders.net: Quotes]
12:30:34 AM    

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maelstrom

I had to post something.

[Dictionary.com Word of the Day]
12:23:31 AM    

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  Saturday, 5 April 2003



DVD to the rescue

DVD is saving record companies.

[The Age: Technology]
1:01:37 AM    

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stentorian.

[Dictionary.com Word of the Day]
12:53:09 AM    

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A Dinosaur with a Taste for Its Own Kind

[Scientific American]
12:47:26 AM    

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Making Educational Software and Web Sites Accessible. The World Wide Web is a tool that has a myriad of uses for any type of person, so it should be accessible to everyone. In order to help Web designers and software authors accommodate people with disabilities, this site offers a series of guidelines that explains how to effectively serve these types of users.

[Educational Technology]
12:37:55 AM    

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A Formidable Enemy: Dust. In an arena where a violent dust storm can stall an advance, forecasting is an essential element of military planning. By Andrew C. Revkin.

[New York Times: International]
12:29:45 AM    

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Researchers Put Rogue Proteins to Work Assembling Nanowires

[Scientific American]
12:24:52 AM    

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Apple drops in Forbes 500, takes No. 381The Macintosh News Network]
12:19:25 AM    
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  Friday, 4 April 2003



SOAP's too slow for capital markets

A suggestion that web services provided by SOAP are just too inefficient.

[Australian IT - Business]
11:22:01 PM    

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New Drug May Mitigate Peanut Allergy

Given how deadly peanuts, and slight exposure to peanuts can be for some people (kissing a peanut eater for example) this has to be good news.

[Scientific American]
2:28:06 AM    

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emolument.

[Dictionary.com Word of the Day]
2:23:57 AM    

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'Dead Zone' Waters Stymie Fish Reproduction

I used to perform a very complex tune called "Lack of Oxygen" with Chris Finnen. Its complex time signatures made it a particular stumbling block for drummers; at one stage we used it to audition them.It seems that lack of oxygen may well be a bigger problem for fish.

[Scientific American]
2:05:31 AM    

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Scripting the Unscriptable in Mac OS X (10-Mar-2003; 15.2K)

This is a very interesting article that illustrates a pet theme of mine; that if you develop with disability in mind you will benefit all users.

[TidBITS]
1:43:07 AM    

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  Wednesday, 2 April 2003



Brains of Auto Experts Treat Cars like Faces

Apparently the part of the brain that is hard-wired for facial recognition (so we know our Mum) is what petrol heads use to recognise cars. Don't look too close, I say.

[Scientific American]
12:28:34 AM    

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