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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

New Technique Turns Viruses Into Useful Tools


Viral films: Complex, highly structured films made using viruses could be used as optical devices and as templates for engineering tissue, bone, and teeth.
Woo-Jae Chung, UC Berkeley

BIOMEDICINE

New Technique Turns Viruses Into Useful Tools

In one simple step, viruses can be turned into sophisticated structures with novel optical or biomedical properties.

  • BY PRACHI PATEL
Researchers have demonstrated a simple, one-step process in which genetically engineered viruses arrange themselves into extremely ordered patterns with distinctive properties, such as color or strength. The technique could be used to make novel optical devices or biological scaffolds to grow soft tissue, teeth, and bone.
The researchers, led by Seung-Wuk Lee, a bioengineering professor at the University of California, Berkeley, used the technique to make structured films. "We want to mimic nature and create many different types of functional structures with a very simple building block," Lee says.
This work is part of a broader effort to make new types of materials using viruses as microscopic building blocks. Researchers at MIT, led by Angela Belcher, a biological engineering and materials science professor, have previously engineered viruses to bind toinorganic materials—something they would never do naturally—and have them assemble intobattery components.
Lee and his colleagues have found a way to fine-tune the arrangement of individual viruses to create sophisticated structures with complex designs all on their own. Using a single virus as a building unit is "pretty exquisite," says Belcher, because its traits can be genetically modified and you can attach many different useful materials to its surface. What's even more important about the new work, which was published in the journal Nature last week, is the precise control over viral self-assembly, resulting in large-scale structures with multiple levels of organization. "This is very beautifully laid out," she says. "They can do so much with a single virus."

The researchers used a rod-shaped bacterial virus, called M13, for their work. First, they dip a flat glass sheet into a saline solution containing the viruses. As they pull the glass out slowly at a controlled speed, the viruses spontaneously configure themselves on the glass surface into orderly patterns. This assembly happens as the solvent evaporates. "Self-assembly is hard to achieve in a systematic way, but what the authors have come up with shows a potentially powerful route to do this," says George Schatz, a chemistry professor at Northwestern University.
By changing the virus concentration in the solution and the pulling speed, the researchers were able to create different structured films. One has regularly placed stripes made of virus bundles in which the viruses are aligned and twisted like corkscrews.
The most complex film has a "ramen-noodle-like" structure that bends light in certain ways. Various pulling speeds change the spacing and width of the viruses in this wavy structure, so that it shows distinct colors. Such films could be used as light reflectors and filters found in displays and photography. The technique could also be used to fabricate photonic crystals and organic photovoltaics.
The researchers also showed that the material could be made into a scaffold to engineer complex tissues. To do this, they genetically tweaked the virus to make it express certain proteins on its surface, which influence the growth of the tissue. They cultured cells on top of the films and found that the cells aligned themselves with the microstructure. What's more, when the films were dipped in a solution of calcium and phosphate ions, the ions mineralized on the film to form a tough material similar to tooth enamel.
"Developing a system like this that could regenerate bone or could be used for growth of materials for teeth is a very possible application," says Belcher.

Five Ways to Create a Creative Office Space


DESIGN 

After moving into our second office space in one year, everyone here at {e} realizes the importance of working in a creative environment to create good work and stay inspired. Suppose your office is getting ready to make a big move or just needs a “creative” makeover. In that case, I hope this post will give you a place to start and guide you toward making your office space (or any space for that matter) a creative place that keeps you motivated while maintaining high functionality.
1. EVALUATE YOUR SPACE
Before you begin to design your space, evaluating what is already there is a good idea. A great place to start is by asking yourself the following questions:
  1. What is the room’s basic shape?
  2. What shape/style is the furniture that is going in the space?
  3. Are there any built-ins?
  4. What are the positions of the doors/doorways?
  5. What are the positions of the windows?
  6. What is the look (or lack of) architectural details?
  7. Is there a focal point (Ex. fireplace)?
  8. What is the size and height of the space?
  9. What are the existing colors/desired colors?
  10. What is the lighting in the space?
  11. Is there a specific feel you desire for the space?
Once you have the answers to these questions, you will have a basic understanding of what you already have, what you need, and hopefully a good direction to head in.
2. COVER THE BASIC PRINCIPLES
Once you have completed the basic evaluation of your space, it is time to look at the Basic Principles of Design.
  1. Harmony: A consistent theme among furnishings and arrangements
  2. Rhythm: Orderly patterns among materials, objects, and placements
  3. Emphasis: Highlights visual focal points
  4. Scale: Furnishings dimensionally related to each other and their environment
  5. Balance: Furnishings distributed in a way that’s comfortable to the eye
The basic principles serve as a type of a cheat sheet when you are just starting to work on your space. Once you have an idea of the direction you are headed you can go back and ask yourself if the space meets all of the criteria of the principles. If yes, then good job! If not, then just go back one step at a time, fix the one area that did not fit the criteria, and re-evaluate.
3. CHOOSE YOUR “INSPIRATION PIECE”
More often than not, choosing an inspirational piece can help you make some of the most significant decisions when designing your new space. Examples of this may be a piece of artwork, a specific fabric, a plant, your company logo, etc. Picking an inspirational piece can help by offering a colour palette, a style, and even an overall feel. Here at {e}, we chose our company business card, website, and blog with our almost fetish for all things vintage. We matched our paint colours to those used on our printed materials and website. Have you ever felt like drawing on the walls? Well, we can! We loved the idea of what other companies had been doing with chalkboards, Coudal and Carsonified. So we decided to paint sections of the wall behind each desk to make notes to ourselves or even doodle an idea (By the way, it works great!). The concept leads to the theme of our blog (or virtual chalkboard). We love the combination of new and modern technologies with items that have some life to them (look a little on the beat-up side.) This helped us in some of the major stages of designing our space, picking our colour palette, style and feel, and even furniture placement.


 
4. CHOOSE YOUR COLOR PALATE
There are endless ways to choose your color palate. I will cover just a few of those, but feel free to post a comment or email me if you want more information.


 
A) Pick your color temperature: (Hint: picking a color can be determined by the amount of natural lighting in your space or your climate.)
  • Warm colors: red, orange, and yellow
  • Cool colors: violet, blue, and some greens
  • Neutral: any blend of complimented colors (as a general rule, green is the most neutral of all colors.)
B) Do you want to create optical illusions?
  • To make a space seem taller, paint the ceiling a cool color and lighter than the walls.
  • To make a space seem smaller, paint the ceiling a darker color than the walls.
  • To make a room seem wider, paint the side walls a cool and light color while painting the end walls in a dark and warmer color.
C) What color scheme do you prefer?
  • Monotone: single pale color palate (Ex. beige)
  • Monochromatic: single vibrant colour palate (Ex. red)
  • Analogous: Adjacent colours on the colour wheel (Ex. red, orange, yellow)
  • Complementary: Contrasting colours (Ex. red with green)
This is just the start of the endless options colour can offer. My advice is don’t be afraid of colour and remember you can always paint over paint if you mess up the first time.
5. ADD THE FINAL PERSONAL TOUCHES
This one is the easiest step! All this means is to add the things to the space that make it your own such as plants, pictures, and your favourite small trinkets (just make sure to distinguish trinkets from clutter.) The personal touches make each space unique, so don’t be afraid to express yourself.




 
Here at {e} house studio, we have been lucky to have the beautiful architecture of Charleston’s historic buildings as our blank canvas, enabling us to create our ideal office space using a combination of new and the old. Whatever your space offers you, embrace it, create it, and make it your own.
Some information is taken from:
“Room Redux, The Home Decorating Workbook,” by Joann Eckstut and Sheran James.

HOW TO BECOME A MILLIONAIRE IN THE NEXT 10 YEARS




Does it seem like becoming a millionaire is an unattainable dream? Perhaps it is not. Leigh Gallagher from SmartMoney magazine shares a strategy which if employed can make you a millionaire in just 10 years. Find out her recommendations here!
CBS News highlights…
Leigh Gallagher, senior editor at SmartMoney magazine, visited The Early Show Thursday and said, with the right strategies, many families can boost their savings to seven figures in 10 years. She gave co-anchor Harry Smith a roadmap to success.

Health
What it’s worth: $84,000
“Most people don’t really think about the links from your health to your wealth. But it has a surprising effect,” Gallagher said. “If you have good health habits, you eat well, you don’t smoke, you’re not overweight, obviously, you’ll have lower medical bills. Besides that, studies have shown that people that maintain those habits actually earn more over a long period of time.”
Spending
What it’s worth: $50,000
Gallagher says the average American household spends about $75,000 each year, which includes everything from housing to mocchacino. The first place to try cutting back is with your mortgage.
“If you just adjust your mortgage, get an adjustable rate mortgage for a few years, lower your percentage point by 1 percentage point, that over 10 years will save you about $22,000,” she said.
Another place to cut spending is on your cars. “A lot of people these days like to lease new cars,” said Gallagher. “If you just substitute a pair of used cars every five years for leased cars you’ll save, over 10 years, around $31,000.”
Saving
What it’s worth: $535,000
“You need to maximize your 401k,” said Gallagher. “That’s the best weapon at anyone’s disposal by far. If you put away 15 percent of your salary, we looked at a couple making a combined income of $120,000. Fifteen percent, over 10 years, before any investment gains, can add up to $397,000.”
Investing
What it’s worth: $478,000
The next question is how to invest this savings. Gallagher suggests putting the bulk of it, 80 to 90 percent, into mutual funds that track stock market indexes, and investing the rest more aggressively.
Career
What it’s worth: $171,000
Gallagher suggests working hard to double the amount of your annual raises, which might mean pushing yourself harder on the job. “It means going above and beyond,” she told Smith. “You can’t just do your job. You have to do your job times two. But if you do that and double your raise, that’s a very big deal.
Picking lottery numbers
Avoid 3, 7, 19
If you’re still convinced that the road to riches is through the lottery, you might as well do it right. Gallagher suggests avoiding the “lucky numbers,” three and seven, and avoiding 19, which occurs in every adult’s birthday.
Get more great information at CBS News!

HOW TECHNOLOGY CAN MAKE YOUR BUSINESS BETTER




Have you heard of an all in one computer? If not, you should learn about them. They have existed for ten years but the highlight is that they are much better now than they were then, as well as cheaper. Find out how they can serve your business here!
Entrepreneur explains…
1. They save space. Businesses are often tight on space and the best part about these computers is that there’s no separate, bulky tower. Owners want to save money by occupying less real estate, and since more of our staff is mobile, we don’t even need much space any more. In smaller quarters, you’re going to want any space-saving solution you can find. While notebook computers are great, you’ll find that when you’re at your desk for hours you want a larger monitor with a full-powered computer. An all-in-one computer can be your answer here.
2. Touch screens can improve communication. Not only are the touch screens that most all-in-ones have now functional wonders, they can also improve interactions between you, the computer and your customers, or others you work with. For example, a client or colleague in a product demo or training session is likely to be more engaged in your conversation when they touch the screen than when they use a mouse or keyboard.
Beyond running traditional Windows programs (like watching a video or your accounting program) you can work with a developer to create custom software for your industry. For example, maybe you’re a baker and you want to enable walk-in customers to choose a cake and its decorations through the touch screen of your all-in-one computer.
3. They look good. Let’s face it, all-in-one computers are thin and sleek. Depending on your industry (such as hotels, banking or hospitals) you might need to have a computer in a public place. Instead of having multiple components, a one-piece, touchscreen computer can help make your lobby, reception desk or other public place look much better.
Get more information at Entrepreneur!

Inside the DIY Weapons Workshop of the Libyan Rebels



A visit to one of the makeshift arms factories that helped liberate the country
Fix-Up Firepower Libyan rebels stripped antiaircraft guns from planes and mounted the repurposed cannons to the beds of pickup trucks Xinhua/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
This weekend, the leader of Libya’s governing National Transitional Council, Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, announced that the country was officially “liberated.” After eight months of civil war, Sirte, the last loyalist city and Col. Moammar Qaddafi’s hometown, fell to former rebel control on Thursday. In the midst of chaotic fighting, NTC forces caught the ex-Brother Leader hiding in a drainage pipe.
Grainy but graphic YouTube videos of Qaddafi’s capture show Libyan fighters slapping, spitting and cursing their former despot. When Qaddafi made it to Misrata, Libya’s third largest city, he was dead. Conflicting reports on how exactly he was killed continue to circulate, but an autopsy showed it was a bullet to the head. Libya’s new leadership has said Qaddafi died in a crossfire, but most suspect he was killed by his captors. That hasn’t stopped thousands from queuing to see the mercurial leader’s body laid out on display in a storage cooler.
Jalil’s speech marked a way forward for the embattled country, setting a timeline for national elections in 2012. But now, Libya’s new leadership faces its newest challenge: disarming regional brigades and convincing the citizenry to turn in their weapons.
To take down the Qaddafi military, former rebels formed makeshift militias to clear large expanses of desert as well as urban blocks. In order to pose a real threat to Qaddafi’s conventional force, men from across the country ransacked regime weapons stockpiles and carted off any arms they could find. They formed regional militias and modified old weapons in innovative ways. Today, the weapons used to vanquish the loyalist army are everywhere.
Former fighters brandishing AK-47s and FN FAL rifles are just the tip of the iceberg. When I was in Libya in September, heavy weapons mounted on trucks were all over the place. Weapons modification garages were churning out new ideas and fixing their weapons for the final Sirte offensive.
Former rebels took apart 14.5mm machine guns from Russian-designed ZPU-4 antiaircraft weapons and mounted each one on a pickup truck. They did the same with ZU-23mms, Soviet anti-aircraft twin-barreled autocannons, and Grad multiple rocket launchers. They took 106mm recoilless rifles and sawed off the truck cab to make space for the cannon.
The trucks are a sight in themselves, armored by welded sheets of steel painted green, red and white, the colors of the revolutionary flag. Fighters from Regional militias drove in small convoys, their brigade name displayed prominently across the sides of their vehicles. Crammed with guns, grenades and ammo under their legs, everyone that could get it had a heavy artillery in the back.
I visited Misrata’s central weapons modification workshop after Libya’s third largest city threw off a three-month siege by loyalist troops. They took all the arms they could get their hands on and made them more lethal. They had fought for their lives on the city’s main thoroughfare that spring.
Arif Abuzed was an engineer in the national Libyan Steel Company. When the revolution began the 47-year-old decided he was too old to fight on the frontline, so he started using his expertise to help alter weapons. He joined Misrata’s central modification workshop in May. He told me he got some of his inspiration from watching television, seeing how other fighters across Libya were using weapons and trying to improve on their tactics.
Abuzed’s favorite was the improvised, shoulder-fired rocket launcher that was designed for use against armored vehicles. Initially, the workshops affixed the UB-32, a launcher designed to fire Russian S-5 rockets from a helicopter, on a truck. But they found they couldn’t hit designated targets properly—rockets from the middle of the pod shot straight while the outer ring curved to the side.
They discovered they could remove the 68mm rockets and shoot them out of a makeshift tube triggered by a button and nine-volt battery from their shoulder. Now easily mobile, it can take out tanks from a range of six miles and one battery lasts about 50 launches. “They’re effective and they’re easy to handle,” Abuzed told me, beaming with pride.
“We were all civilians, engineers, technicians, store keepers, ladies' fashion retail owners, and drivers," he explained on a narrow wooden bench over the cacophony of saws and blowtorches in the workshop’s welding room. "We never wanted to do this, it was a necessity."
Ali Mohamed, the workshop’s assistant director, was a truck driver before the revolution; he owned his own autorepair shop. He told me his weapon of choice is the 23mm. “It’s the most intimidating," he said. “It has an impact on whatever it hits and since it’s automatic, it can fire multiple hits.”
The 35-year-old has a nine-month-old son and a five-year-old daughter. His blue eyes light up when I asked, back in September, what would happen to his newfound weapons expertise next?
“When the war is over, I’m going to remove all I’ve seen and bury it. Erase it from my memory, we’re peaceful people,” he said, almost pleading, after he spent the morning guiding me through various weapons systems and modifications.
Now, over a month after I met Mohamed, the war is officially over and Libya is free. In Misrata, Libyans gaze at the body of their former despot. Somewhere Mohamed is probably rejoicing. After eight months of civil war, the world will be watching to see if former rebels like Mohamed make good on their promises.

To Save Fuel, Cars Will Drop Off Drivers, Then Search For Parking Spaces on Their Own



No more circling the block
Parallel Parking Parallel and not parallel parking at a market in Tel Aviv. upyernoz via Flickr
Automakers are doing all sorts of things to cars to make them smarter and more autonomous, as regular readers are aware. Here’s a new one: GM wants to take self-parking cars to a new level, letting them drop off their drivers and go off in search of empty spaces on their own. It’ll be more fuel-efficient than having humans circle the block waiting for a spot to open up, GM says.

Fuel efficiency is one of the promised benefits of increasingly intelligent cars, which could cut down on fuel consumption by predicting where drivers will go, re-routing around predicted traffic jams and traveling in convoys. Smarter cars would also be able to communicate with each other, preventing collisions and congestion.
We have seen several self-parking car concepts, and GM has demonstrated the technology with its EN-V concept, says Technology Review. But self-parking has mostly been limited to some bleeping sounds as an SUV glides into a tight parallel space — the driver is still there and can resume control at any time.
This new concept lets the driver hop out, leaving the car to drive itself to the nearest available empty space — even if that’s several blocks or even miles away, Tech Review says. When it’s time to leave, the driver can summon his or her car via a smartphone app, and it will reappear KITT-style to whisk its driver away. GM's Electrical and Controls Integration Lab is developing the technology to make this possible.
For anyone who has ever tried to park in, say, New York or San Francisco, this sounds mighty handy. But would you trust your empty car to go find a safe spot to bide its time while you go about your business? In some ways that may be a greater leap than the technology itself.
[Technology Review]

Most People Are In Favor Of Wild Geoengineering Projects



Chemicals in the Atmosphere sirqitous via Flickr
A majority of people in Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States support studying ways to reflect sunlight as a method to cool the planet, according to a new study. Researchers at Harvard and two Canadian universities say nearly three-quarters of survey respondents approved of geoengineering research.

The survey, which was just published although it was conducted last year, focused on solar radiation management, a type of geoengineering that seeks to increase the Earth’s albedo by creating clouds or through other means. Support for the technique was spread across the political spectrum, the researchers say. But people who defined themselves as politically conservative expressed the strongest opposition to geoengineering.
Only eight per cent of people could correctly define what geoengineering means, with about 45 per cent able to determine the alternative term “climate engineering,” which is apparently easier to figure out.
The survey findings come at an exciting time because a solar radiation management experiment that was supposed to start this month in the UK was just delayed by 6 months to address concerns by critics. The Stratospheric Particle Injection for Climate Engineering (SPICE) project plans to loft a gigantic balloon towing a garden hose to spew particles into the atmosphere to reduce global warming. An initial proof-of-concept test would use a kilometre-long hose spraying water droplets.
However, the survey, conducted online, didn’t get too specific regarding this method or others. The survey asked 18 questions of 3,105 participants, two-thirds of whom were from the U.S. Of those respondents, 72% supported further geoengineering research. But 75 per cent of respondents thought the Earth’s climate is “too complicated to fix with one technology,” the study says.
The survey findings are published in the journal Environmental Research Letters.
[BBC]