Monday, April 29, 2013

Dinosaur predecessors gain ground in wake of world's biggest biodiversity crisis

Apr. 29, 2013 ? Many scientists have thought that dinosaur predecessors missed the race to fill habitats emptied when nine out of 10 species disappeared during Earth's largest mass extinction, approximately 252 million years ago. The thinking was based on fossil records from sites in South Africa and southwest Russia.

It turns out that scientists may have been looking for the starting line in the wrong places.

Newly discovered fossils from 10 million years after the mass extinction reveal a lineage of animals thought to have led to dinosaurs taking hold in Tanzania and Zambia in the mid-Triassic period, many millions of years before dinosaur relatives were seen in the fossil record elsewhere on Earth.

"The fossil record from the Karoo of South Africa remains a good representation of four-legged land animals across southern Pangea before the extinction event. But after the event animals weren't as uniformly and widely distributed as before. We had to go looking in some fairly unorthodox places," said Christian Sidor, University of Washington professor of biology. He's lead author of a paper appearing the week of April 29 in the early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The new insights come from seven fossil-hunting expeditions since 2003 in Tanzania, Zambia and Antarctica, funded by the National Geographic Society and National Science Foundation, along with work combing through existing fossil collections. The researchers created two "snapshots" of four legged-animals about 5 million years before and again about 10 million years after the extinction event at the end of the Permian period.

Prior to the extinction event, for example, the pig-sized Dicynodon -- said to resemble a fat lizard with a short tail and turtle's head -- was a dominant plant-eating species across southern Pangea. Pangea is the name given to the landmass when all the world's continents were joined together. Southern Pangea was made up of what is today Africa, South America, Antarctica, Australia and India. After the mass extinction at the end of the Permian, Dicynodon disappeared and other related species were so greatly decreased that newly emerging herbivores could suddenly compete with them.

"Groups that did well before the extinction didn't necessarily do well afterward," Sidor said. "What we call evolutionary incumbency was fundamentally reset."

The snapshot 10 million years after the extinction event reveals, among other things, that archosaurs were in Tanzanian and Zambian basins, but not distributed across all of southern Pangea as had been the pattern for four-legged animals prior to the extinction. Archosaurs are the group of reptiles that includes crocodiles, dinosaurs, birds and a variety of extinct forms. They are of interest because it is thought they led to animals like Asilisaurus, a dinosaur-like animal, and Nyasasaurus parringtoni, a dog-sized creature with a five-foot tail that scientists in December 2012 announced could be the earliest dinosaur, or else the closest relative found so far.

"Early archosaurs being found mainly in Tanzania is an example of how fragmented communities became after the extinction event," Sidor said. And the co-authors write: "These findings suggest that . . . archosaur diversification was more intimately related to recovery from the end-Permian mass extinction than previously suspected."

A new framework for analyzing biogeographic patterns from species distributions, developed by co-author Daril Vilhena, a UW biology graduate student, provided a way to discern the complex recovery, Sidor said.

It revealed that before the extinction event 35 percent of four-legged species were found in two or more of the five areas studied, with some species having ranges that stretched 1,600 miles (2,600 kilometers), encompassing the Tanzanian and South African basins. Ten million years after the extinction event, the authors say there was clear geographic clustering and just 7 percent of species were found in two or more regions.

The techniques -- new ways to statistically consider how connected or isolated species are from each other -- could be useful for other paleontologists and modern day biogeographers, Sidor said.

In the early 2000s Sidor and some of his co-authors started putting together expeditions to collect fossils from sites in Tanzania that hadn't been visited since the 1960s and in Zambia where there'd been little work since the '80s. Two expeditions to Antarctica provided additional materials, as did long-term efforts to examine museum-held fossils that had not been fully documented or named.

Other co-authors from the UW are graduate students Adam Huttenlocker and Brandon Peecook, post-doctoral researcher Sterling Nesbitt and research associate Linda Tsuji; Kenneth Angielczyk of the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago; Roger Smith, of the Iziko South African Museum in Cape Town; and S?bastien Steyer from the National Museum of Natural History in Paris.

Funding was also received from the Evolving Earth Foundation, the Grainger Foundation, the Field Museum/IDP Inc. African Partners Program and the National Research Council of South Africa.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Washington. The original article was written by Sandra Hines.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Christian A. Sidor, Daril A. Vilhena, Kenneth D. Angielczyk, Adam K. Huttenlocker, Sterling J. Nesbitt, Brandon R. Peecook, J. S?bastien Steyer, Roger M. H. Smith, and Linda A. Tsuji. Provincialization of terrestrial faunas following the end-Permian mass extinction. PNAS, April 29, 2013 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1302323110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/t4B8Gs8a5mE/130429154059.htm

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How Long Should You Spend on Making Tasks More Efficient?

These days everyone wants you to hack your life in order to make your day-to-day existence more efficient. But there are times when the effort's not really worth it?and this chart should help you work out what to spend time on, and what to ignore.

Read more...

    

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/WwUp1Dzyh64/how-long-should-you-spend-on-making-tasks-more-efficient

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Switzerland shuts the door on EU migrants: A new 'us vs. them' in Europe?

News that Switzerland is capping residence permits for Western Europeans reached the Monitor's Europe bureau chief as she was having her own intolerable immigration experience.

By Sara Miller Llana,?Staff writer / April 25, 2013

A cafe is seen in Zurich is seen in this photo taken April 18.

Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters/File

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The anti-immigration class across Europe has found many new adherents as of late, especially in the most economically devastated countries, like Greece and Italy. But now these Europeans might themselves become the unwelcome migrants, at least in Switzerland.

Skip to next paragraph Sara Miller Llana

Europe Bureau Chief

Sara Miller Llana?moved to Paris in April 2013 to become the Monitor's Europe Bureau?Chief. Previously she was the?paper's?Latin America Bureau Chief, based in Mexico City, from 2006 to 2013.

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As I happened to be standing in the most intolerable immigration line that I've ever faced ? more on that later ? I read on my Twitter account that the Swiss government on Wednesday announced a new policy to cap residence permits for all of Western Europe. Switzerland, which is not part of the EU but joined the Schengen bloc that allows freedom of movement of people across European borders, says that it is being overwhelmed by arrivals from across the continent, to the tune of 80,000 people each year.

So it is invoking a ?safeguard clause? it negotiated during the 1999 Schengen treaty talk, which it already implemented for eight Central and Eastern European states. Now, as of May 1, residence permits for the citizens of 17 older EU states, from Germany to Spain, will be capped at 53,700 for a year.

According to the EU Observer, the Swiss said that the million-plus EU residents who live in the country have "had a positive impact ? in particular in terms of consumer spending and on the construction industry," but that restrictions are ?needed to make immigration more acceptable to society.?

The move drew immediate criticism from Brussels. ''The measures disregard the great benefits that the free movement of persons brings to the citizens of both Switzerland and the EU,? Catherine Ashton, EU foreign policy chief, said in a statement.

Is this a new manifestation of intolerance in Europe? The levels of resentment continent-wide against the migrants from Africa and the Middle East are already clearly documented, but in the midst of crisis, is Europe even excluding Europe? And what does that mean for identity and equality moving forward?

The possibility of a new, intra-European divide struck a chord for me, as I experienced my own "us vs. them" moment in France today.

Well, more than a moment. Eight hours, in fact.

That's how long I waited in a Paris prefecture along with Moroccans, Romanians, Malians, Senegalese, Tunisians, and Peruvians ? most of us, like me, there only to get information about what we needed to have with us, only to return and stand in line again.

I got to know my fellow immigrants well as we stood outside. Some around me had been in this line before, but were told they were missing a translation, a photocopy, or any of myriad document requirements that are not posted in their totality anywhere on the Internet ? or even on the wall of the prefecture where we line up ? but rather seem to be, at least from my informal surveys today, requested at the whim of whichever officer is behind the desk. One woman was told to bring back her CV.

Some of my linemates felt the French immigration officials were being deliberately obstructionist.

?They don?t want us to get the carte de sejour,? said the Malian, referring to the permission that allows foreigners to reside in France (and, with it, the right to tap into the country?s amazing social security system).

?They do everything they can to hold us back,? said the Romanian, who was on her third trip here ? and the third day lost on her job as a cleaning woman. Today, she was told that the pay stub she brought didn?t have the minimum number of hours on it, so she needed to bring in another stub. Another lost day of productivity for this poor woman.

Regardless of the motivations, one can see the "us vs. them" motif very clearly at the prefecture. On the one side, masses desperate to get in, and feeling unwelcome all the while. And on the other side of the glass wall, a society wanting to protect a social system that is replicated in few other places in the world.

By the end of the day in the unforgiving sun, some people were clearly losing their cool, me among them. (I, an American, was more indignant about the inefficiency than most, which makes me wonder if that?s a nationality trait, but that's a subject for another time.)

?But this can?t be!? I kept saying. ?How can people waste an entire day in a line ? and for nothing! Just to come back and stand in the line again??

?Welcome to France,? said the Malian, smiling.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/oDdxIU-utNE/Switzerland-shuts-the-door-on-EU-migrants-A-new-us-vs.-them-in-Europe

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Friday, April 26, 2013

Social Media Marketing Tips That Take Your Business To The Next ...

Social Media Marketing Tips That Take Your Business To The Next Level

If you know how to go about using social media marketing, you can build your customer base. Even if you are already running a successful business, you can benefit from learning social media marketing. The advice of this article will offer you many ways to improve your business and bottom line, using social media marketing.

If you use social media for personal use, you have probably seen a variety of altered and Photoshopped advertisements and images. This use of images is very clever and can draw potential buyers to your products or website. Once you lure them in, they will be more likely to click through to your site and buy one of your products or services.

TIP! You will not have a successful social media campaign if you do not have a good understanding of your target audience. Your best bet is to learn as much as possible about your target market, including their social media preferences and behaviors.

Social Media Marketing

Remember that results are not instant when using social media marketing. It takes some time in order to come up with a solid strategy for social media marketing. Prior to announcing major social media efforts, take the time to get as many people as possible signed up to your Facebook and Twitter accounts. Also, it?s wise to make your social media page known via other marketing methods.

TIP! Your social profiles should be used as a gateway that gets subscribed followers to buy your services and products. Let them know about new locations or discounts you have going on.

Be flexible in how often your page is updated. When launching a major campaign or new product, plentiful updates are critical. If not much is currently happening, though, you should curb your posting so you aren?t posting poor quality content that can hurt your brand.

Monitor and evaluate your progress. It is important to generate statistics of the activity produced and the number of followers gained on a weekly basis. Try linking these figures to your actions and pinpoint the best decisions you have made to develop better strategies. You have to keep track of all of your results to know what is working or not.

TIP! Try to focus on the things that people want when you are marketing through social media. Respond to customer complaints and feedback immediately so your customers know you are listening to them.

If comments are left on social media sites, reply to them. This is especially true for any negative comments. If people feel like what they have to say matters to your company, they are more likely to trust in your products and brand. Always get back to customers as soon as you can so they don?t feel ignored.

When dealing with social media marketing, it is important that you can handle not only positive comments, but negative ones as well. When your follows like you it?s great, but people will complain as well. Don?t simply ignore these comments. Embrace them, and assist your unhappy customers.

TIP! See what the competition is up to. Find them on the different social media sites and note their techniques.

Social Media

If you have a blog for your company, then when you update your blog with new content, post it on your social media sites after you publish. By back-linking to your blog, you will be able to tell your social media followers that you have new content available.

TIP! Special offers should be advertised on social networks. Your customers will search for your Facebook pages if they have incentives and discounts on them.

Social media marketing is all about social interaction, so don?t neglect to speak with people on a face-to-face basis. Or PC-to-PC, more accurately. People get frustrated when talking to a faceless company. When a customer is speaking to a live person, they realize that the company cares.

Consider hosting giveaways through your profiles on social media sites. By hosting a giveaway you will gain many new followers. All you need to do is figure out what you would like to give away, and post links on some of the many popular profiles that feature freebies.

TIP! Learn about how broad social media marketing is if you want to use it correctly. You can become better acquainted with your customers by using social media.

Social Media

One great, easy way to increase your social media followers is to add exclusive offers, coupons and discounts for people that ?like? your page or follow you. This practice works to improve not only your social media profile, but also your bottom line. Special offers encourage customers to connect with you and to make more purchases.

TIP! Prior to posting any content that represents your business on a social media marketing site, be sure to carefully review it all. Social media is very viral, and a little mistake can spread quickly.

Be patient. People should trust what you?re doing and whatever it is you are trying to sell. Relax and try to gain the trust of one person at a time. After a while, you will see your customer list begin to grow.

Social Media

TIP! A surefire way to create buzz around your company products is to conduct online Q&A sessions about the product. You can effectively teach your customers about your range of products or services while creating content for your website via FAQ entries.

Read up on social media marketing. Maybe you are already familiar with Facebook, but it is best to know that marketing through a social media site is a lot different than just chatting up your friends. Also, look on the Internet for pertinent advice from professionals in this field.

Use as many social media outlets as possible to market yourself. Although Facebook might be the most effective and popular tool, you should not minimize the marketing magnitude of other lesser sites such as twitter and Myspace. The greater your exposure, the better likelihood your efforts will succeed.

TIP! Letting your employees have blogs on the business website is among the more effective strategies you can wield in social media marketing. Employee blogs will give your customers a unique view into the personality of your business.

To create a place in social media marketing, these hints will benefit you. By implementing these methods into your business strategy, you are certain to notice an increase in the number of customers your business handles. When you really put the necessary time and effort into it, social media will prove to be a very successful and lucrative method of marketing for you.

Get your free website analysis (valued at $97) ? 1-888-513-5974 (tell us that you seen our ad on the website)

Source: http://4thgc.com/social-media-marketing-tips-that-take-your-business-to-the-next-level/

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Make Boomsa for the Motherland!

Russia's First Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev (left) and President Vladimir Putin (center) attend the opening ceremony of the Year of the Family in Moscow's Kremlin, Dec. 24, 2007. Russia's First Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev (left) and President Vladimir Putin (center) attend the opening ceremony of the Year of the Family in Moscow's Kremlin, Dec. 24, 2007.

Photo by Ria Novosti/Reuters

In February, the R&B group Boyz II Men performed a show in Moscow. Several Western media outlets claimed that the concert was done at the behest of Vladimir Putin, as part of his campaign to get Russians to make boomsa for the motherland?the idea being that the sweet, smooth grooves of ?I?ll Make Love to You? would be a nice warm-up act for Valentine?s Day.

This was something of a hoax: It?s not clear that Putin actually had anything to do with the booking. Or that the Moscow concert was anything other than a routine tour stop for the group. But the Boyz II Men story caught on because it fit in with some of the outlandish measures Russia has taken in recent years to boost its low fertility rate.

Putin began his natalist campaign in 2008, declaring it the "Year of the Family.? There were billboards and placards encouraging people to have children. A park in Moscow debuted special benches designed to gently slide couples closer together, all the better for canoodling. July 8 was designated ?Family, Love, and Fidelity Day,? a new holiday created to encourage family formation. This was the third holiday Russia had created for such a purpose: In 2007, Sept. 12 was named ?Family Contact Day,? a day on which workers were given time off and encouraged to, like, totally do it. Women having babies nine months later, on ?Give Birth to a Patriot on Russia Day,? won fabulous prizes ranging from TVs to an SUV.

Russia has also instituted some more traditional natalist policies; for instance the government began a program that pays mothers $10,000 for the birth of a second child. Putin?s stated goal is that ?the three-child family should become the norm in Russia.?

He is not the first Russian leader to worry about the country?s fertility rate. In 1944, as Russians were being ground up in the war against Germany, Josef Stalin created the ?Motherhood Medal? for women who bore six children. (That was for the First Class order; only five children were required for Second Class. You can pick a medal up pretty cheap on eBay.) In 1955, Nikita Khrushchev surveyed the nascent Western overpopulation mania and declared it a ?cannibalistic theory? invented by ?bourgeois ideology.? He continued: ?Their concern is to cut down the birth rate, reduce the rate of population increase. It is quite different with us, comrades. If about 100 million people were added to our 200 million, even that would not be enough.?

The old Soviet regime rolled out a series of childbearing incentives: First, lump-sum payments for the birth of children. Then increased state benefits for families with children, including bonuses for housing and work allowances. In 1981 the Politburo offered women a full year of partially paid leave for having a baby. In 1986 it upped the ante to a year-and-a-half ?s worth of leave.

None of it worked, then or now. The Soviet Union?s fertility rate?that?s the average number of children a woman bears during her lifetime?declined throughout the ?50s, ?60s, and ?70s. The only brief period of increase came during the late 1980s. And then it resumed decline.

Putin?s initiatives haven?t fared any better. The Russian government declared demographic victory in 2012 because there was an increase in the crude number of births. ?The demographic programs enacted in the past decade are, thank God, working,? Putin said. But most demographers believe this is a statistical ghost?the slight spike in fertility rates during the late ?80s created a relatively fat cohort of women now in their prime childbearing years. So while the number of births has increased thanks to the size of this cohort, Russia?s total fertility rate has remained very low. The CIA World FactBook puts it at 1.61. The replacement fertility rate?the number of births the average woman must have in order to hold population constant?is 2.1. Which is why Russia?s population has been declining for several years now. And will continue to decline in another year or two, once the statistical ghost has been given up.

Russia?s situation isn?t unique. Fertility rates began falling in Western, industrialized countries in 1968. By 1975, every Western First World nation was below the replacement rate. Over the course of the next two decades, massive fertility decline spread worldwide: In 1979, the global fertility rate was 6.0; today it?s 2.52 and still declining. While the lay press has spent the last 30 years fretting about increasing world population, the academic community has been largely concerned with the opposite. Because when you look at just the top-line number you miss the more important, rate-based trends. So today, most population models suggest we are currently at ?peak child,? as economist Hans Rosling puts it. That is to say, the world currently has about 2 billion children and that number is likely to decline over time, not increase. Which means that all of our remaining population gains?in terms of the absolute number?will come from increased life expectancy.

Which in turn means that the world is actually headed toward population decline. I?ve written a whole book about this?What to Expect When No One?s Expecting?but don?t take my word for it. Slate contributor Jeff Wise wrote an excellent piece distilling the academic research just a few months ago.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=4c187f4865ba65d759f7a0d9c90a0dd1

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Distro Issue 88: TechShop makes its mark on American manufacturing

Distro Issue 88: TechShop makes its mark on American manufacturing

There's a hackerspace in San Francisco that's equipping hardware startups with the tools they need to get up and running for a mere $125 per month. A brand new issue of our weekly visits TechShop to take a gander at the industrial revolution that includes the likes of Square among its successes. On the review front, the Samsung Galaxy S 4, Nokia Lumia 720 and ASUS Cube all get put through their respective paces. In the first installment of Eyes-On: Classic Edition, we take a peek back at a dapper handset from 2009. All of this and more awaits your swipes via any of the download libraries below.

Distro Issue 88 PDF
Distro in the iTunes App Store
Distro in the Google Play Store

Distro in the Windows Store

Distro APK (for sideloading)
Like Distro on Facebook
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Source: iTunes, Google Play, Windows Store

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/E364oGujfpk/

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Apple docked $118,000 by China court for violating authors' copyrights

Apple docked $118,000 by China court for violating authors' copyrights

Apple will have to pay three Chinese authors a total of $118,000 for stocking their books in its App Store without a proper say-so, according to China Daily. A court ruled that it was Apple's job to verify that third-party uploads met copyright requirements and that it had the means to do so since all the books in question were best-sellers. Apple's attorney declined to comment, but the court also suggested that similar online retailers should learn from the case "and improve their verification system" -- bringing perhaps another headache to would-be e-book stores in that nation.

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Via: ZDNet

Source: China Daily

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/25/apple-docked-by-china-court/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Nanowires grown on graphene have surprising structure

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

When a team of University of Illinois engineers set out to grow nanowires of a compound semiconductor on top of a sheet of graphene, they did not expect to discover a new paradigm of epitaxy.

The self-assembled wires have a core of one composition and an outer layer of another, a desired trait for many advanced electronics applications. Led by professor Xiuling Li, in collaboration with professors Eric Pop and Joseph Lyding, all professors of electrical and computer engineering, the team published its findings in the journal Nano Letters.

Nanowires, tiny strings of semiconductor material, have great potential for applications in transistors, solar cells, lasers, sensors and more.

"Nanowires are really the major building blocks of future nano-devices," said postdoctoral researcher Parsian Mohseni, first author of the study. "Nanowires are components that can be used, based on what material you grow them out of, for any functional electronics application."

Li's group uses a method called van der Waals epitaxy to grow nanowires from the bottom up on a flat substrate of semiconductor materials, such as silicon. The nanowires are made of a class of materials called III-V (three-five), compound semiconductors that hold particular promise for applications involving light, such as solar cells or lasers.

The group previously reported growing III-V nanowires on silicon. While silicon is the most widely used material in devices, it has a number of shortcomings. Now, the group has grown nanowires of the material indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs) on a sheet of graphene, a 1-atom-thick sheet of carbon with exceptional physical and conductive properties.

Thanks to its thinness, graphene is flexible, while silicon is rigid and brittle. It also conducts like a metal, allowing for direct electrical contact to the nanowires. Furthermore, it is inexpensive, flaked off from a block of graphite or grown from carbon gases.

"One of the reasons we want to grow on graphene is to stay away from thick and expensive substrates," Mohseni said. "About 80 percent of the manufacturing cost of a conventional solar cell comes from the substrate itself. We've done away with that by just using graphene. Not only are there inherent cost benefits, we're also introducing functionality that a typical substrate doesn't have."

The researchers pump gases containing gallium, indium and arsenic into a chamber with a graphene sheet. The nanowires self-assemble, growing by themselves into a dense carpet of vertical wires across the surface of the graphene. Other groups have grown nanowires on graphene with compound semiconductors that only have two elements, but by using three elements, the Illinois group made a unique finding: The InGaAs wires grown on graphene spontaneously segregate into an indium arsenide (InAs) core with an InGaAs shell around the outside of the wire.

"This is unexpected," Li said. "A lot of devices require a core-shell architecture. Normally you grow the core in one growth condition and change conditions to grow the shell on the outside. This is spontaneous, done in one step. The other good thing is that since it's a spontaneous segregation, it produces a perfect interface."

So what causes this spontaneous core-shell structure? By coincidence, the distance between atoms in a crystal of InAs is nearly the same as the distance between whole numbers of carbon atoms in a sheet of graphene. So, when the gases are piped into the chamber and the material begins to crystallize, InAs settles into place on the graphene, a near-perfect fit, while the gallium compound settles on the outside of the wires. This was unexpected, because normally, with van der Waals epitaxy, the respective crystal structures of the material and the substrate are not supposed to matter.

"We didn't expect it, but once we saw it, it made sense," Mohseni said.

In addition, by tuning the ratio of gallium to indium in the semiconductor cocktail, the researchers can tune the optical and conductive properties of the nanowires.

Next, Li's group plans to make solar cells and other optoelectronic devices with their graphene-grown nanowires. Thanks to both the wires' ternary composition and graphene's flexibility and conductivity, Li hopes to integrate the wires in a broad spectrum of applications.

"We basically discovered a new phenomenon that confirms that registry does count in van der Waals epitaxy," Li said.

###

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: http://www.uiuc.edu

Thanks to University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127884/Nanowires_grown_on_graphene_have_surprising_structure

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Thursday, April 25, 2013

Amazon first quarter profits fall to $82 million as sales jump 22%

Amazon's Q1 for 2013 was a bit of a mixed bag. The company saw net income drop 37 percent year-over-year to $82 million, though its net sales were up 22 percent to $16.1 billion. The sequential drop in profits was small (from $97 million) considering Q4's holiday inflation. Product sales accounted for the vast majority of that income, with its various branded services only pulling in $2.8 billion. The United States is still the company's biggest market, with $9.4 billion of that sales revenue coming from here. The rest of the globe only accounted for $6.7 billion, though media was particularly strong in those markets. Media sales were $2.55 billion over seas and just $2.51 billion in the US. Looking over the numbers, its clear that Amazon has a steady stream of reliable income that is continuing to grow. In fact, the company expects another quarter of double-digit growth year-over-year for Q2. But, as we've learned, there are also huge expenses involved. And guidance for next quarter tops out at $10 million in net income -- and a potential loss of up to $340 million (though such a steep fall seems unlikely). Unfortunately, there are no specific numbers for its various kindle products buried in the report (which you'll find after the break), but hopefully the 5PM ET call will offer a comprehensive breakdown. Updates from which you'll find after the break.

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Source: Amazon

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/qWCfbsc5TsI/

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Report: Amazon Has a Kindle TV Streaming Box on the Way

Bloomberg Businessweek is reporting that Amazon will soon be announcing its own streaming box to pair up with its Amazon Instant Video and video on demand. More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ped6AXtBHTA/bloomberg-amazon-has-a-kindle-streaming-box-on-the-way

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

'Star Trek Into Darkness' Character Posters Blast Off Into Dailies!

It's hard to say whether people are more excited to finally see "Star Trek Into Darkness" or to just be done anticipating it. It seems like we've been dying to see this one for forever, right? Also, find out why Christopher Nolan's "Interstellar" will be a straight-up beautiful movie in today's Dailies! » Portraits of [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/04/23/star-trek-into-darkness-character-posters/

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Deal of the Day: 73% off DICOTA Hard Cover for iPhone 4S and iPhone 4

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/cB4Hlmb6Q0E/story01.htm

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Daft Punk's New Single Totally Sounds Like a Michael Jackson Disco Jam

Fans of forward-looking music have at least two things to be excited about this spring: new albums from Boards of Canada (which is teasing fans with the rarest vinyl released this year) and Daft Punk, whose Random Access Memories is set for a May 20th release. More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/gy5org8I6cM/daft-punks-new-single-totally-sounds-like-a-michael-jackson-disco-jam

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