Posts Tagged ‘pod57’

Metallurgy: Iron production electrified : Nature : Nature Publishing Group

October 20, 2013

Iron production electrified. New tech for extraction of Fe directly from its oxide w/o C via high-T #electrolysis.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v497/n7449/full/nature12102.html

This piece contains an interesting discussion of new blast furnace technology, which enables one to extract the oxygen directly from iron oxide without the need for carbon or the creation of carbon dioxide as it uses electrolysis. The key idea is being able to do this at very high temperatures.

QT:”
Kerri Smith: Extracting iron from its naturally found form, iron oxide is a hot and heavy business. You throw your iron oxide and some carbon into a blastfurnace and then heat it to 1600 degrees Celsius, out comes iron, worldwide about a billion tons of it a year, but also outcomes carbon dioxide- bad news for the environment. Scientists would like to use other friendlier methods to make iron. This week a team from MIT reports a way to convert iron oxide to iron using electricity. It’s not a new idea. It’s basically a form of
electrolysis which extracts the oxygen leaving pure iron behind. But they’ve gotten over the biggest problem, finding material that can withstand the temperatures of molten metal oxides. Metallurgist Derek Fray at the University of Cambridge in the UK has written a News and Views article about the research. He started by telling me how much CO2, iron production is responsible for. Nature (2013); Nature(2013) ”

http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v497/n7449/full/nature12102.html

The Future of Man–How Will Evolution Change Humans?

September 19, 2013

Interesting but dated read. Discusses how hThe Future of Man @sciam: Interesting but dated; how humans are anti-evolving because of medicine http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-future-of-man #evolution

http://www.scientificamerican.com/sciammag/?contents=2009-jan

Analysis of 6,515 exomes reveals the recent origin of most human protein-coding variants : Nature : Nature Publishing Group

August 31, 2013

QT:”
We estimate that approximately 73% of all protein-coding SNVs and approximately 86% of SNVs predicted to be deleterious arose in the past 5,000–10,000 years.

6,515 #exomes reveals the recent origin of most human protein-coding variants: ~75% #SNVs arose in last ~7.5K yrs
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v493/n7431/full/nature11690.html

Analysis of the bread wheat genome using whole-genome shotgun sequencing : Nature : Nature Publishing Group

August 31, 2013

The bread #wheat genome using… shotgun sequencing: ~5X human, from 3 diff. component genomes, many #pseudogenes
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v491/n7426/full/nature11650.html

Security Now 256 | TWiT.TV – LastPass

August 3, 2013

Great eval of @LastPass on old @SecurityNow episode, highlighting total #encryption approach & plan if company tanks

Also, login grids, 1-time passwords

Steve thoroughly evaluates LastPass, explains why high-security passwords are necessary, and tells us how LastPass makes storing those passwords secure.
http://twit.tv/show/security-now/256

downloaded, synched, listened & posted

Thoughts on O’Shea’s The Brain: A Very Short Introduction

December 23, 2012

Good discussion of lots of technical stuff, including regions of the brain, how nerves work, & artificial neural nets
http://www.amazon.com/Brain-Very-Short-Introduction/dp/B002KE9BPO/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1352690693&sr=1-1&keywords=The+Brain%3A+A+Very+Short+Introduction+%28Unabridged%29