Monday, April 12, 2010

Virus Helps Researchers Split Water into Hydrogen and Oxygen

Source: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-04/virus-helps-researchers-split-water-hydrogen-and-oxygen

Viruses generally get a bad rap, but they can also be very helpful little machines. For instance, bacteriophages have been engineered to clear up infections that seemed otherwise untreatable, and genetic material from viruses has been used to ease biofuel production. Now a team at MIT is using a modified virus to assemble the biological nano-scaffolding necessary to split water into its constituent hydrogen and oxygen atoms.

Of course, other means to split water into hydrogen and oxygen exist, but none of them are as efficient or simple as the method plants use to oxidize water through photosynthesis, requiring energy from outside the system to carry the process to fruition. Meanwhile, efforts to extract the photosynthesizing components from plants for use in harnessing solar power have been largely unsuccessful.

So the MIT team decided to engineer a virus to imitate plants' oxidizing machinery by artificial means. Using a zinc porphyrin pigment and iridium oxide catalyst, the team was already able to mimic nature's own photosynthesizers, which are very efficient at flipping solar power into fuel for water-splitting reactions within plants. But for efficient water-splitting, those catalysts and pigments must be arranged in a very particular way.

Therein lies the team's innovation: an engineered bacterial virus known as M13 that serves as a sort of self-assembling biological scaffold, spacing the porphyrins and iridium such that oxygen production increases fourfold. The pigments capture sunlight and transfer that energy down the length of the virus the way a wire transfers electricity from one end to the other. That energy in turn powers the iridium reaction that splits the oxygen from the water.

The process still lacks a critical step: once the splitting is complete, the oxygen has been siphoned from the water but the hydrogen is left split into its component electrons and protons. The team is currently exploring other biomimicking systems that might reassemble those building blocks into usable, storable hydrogen atoms. An actual commercial process that produces hydrogen from water as efficiently as plants do is likely years away, but the MIT team hopes to have a working, self-sustaining device that can perform the entire water-splitting process in the lab within two years.

[MIT News]

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Site Speed Now a Factor in Google Rankings [Search]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5514997/site-speed-now-a-factor-in-google-rankings

Site Speed Now a Factor in Google RankingsGoogle announced in an official blog post that, a few weeks back, they began considering site response speed in a web page's ranking in search results. Google has been all about speed for some time, but this subtle introduction could eventually mean big things for sites that put a priority on swift loading—and for those that don't seem to care at all. Right now, the speed ranking only effects fewer than one percent of search queries, Google reports, and only those in English through the Google.com page. [Official Google Blog via Search Engine Watch]

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Index Your Files Catalogs Local and Networks Files for Speedy Search [Downloads]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5515039/index-your-files-catalogs-local-and-networks-files-for-speedy-search

Index Your Files Catalogs Local and Networks Files for Speedy SearchWindows: If all you need is local search you have many great search tools to choose from—like the lightning-fast Everything—but it gets sparser when you look for local and networked. Index Your Files covers both bases effectively.

Index Your Files excels at indexing local, attached, networked, and even indexing drives you won't have real-time access to for easy search. While the previously mentioned Everything will always win with raw speed—it accesses the HDD file table for crazy-fast file finding—Index Your Files builds databases of every drive you point it at and keeps those databases accessible even after you've disconnected from an external hard drive, turned booted down your file server, and so on. Since it's portable you could even index hard drives at work and search them at home.

Index Your Files supports searches based on name, size, date, location, and advanced search using Boolean operators. You can switch between the indexes of different disks—or searching them all—by simply checking or un-checking them beneath the search box. Index Your Files is free, portable, and Windows only. Have a favorite search tool to share? Let's hear about it in the comments.

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QSynergy Makes Multi-System Control Easier and Prettier [Downloads]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5515093/qsynergy-makes-multi+system-control-easier-and-prettier

QSynergy Makes Multi-System Control Easier and PrettierWindows/Mac/Linux: It continues to amaze, just how easy it is to control multiple computers with a single keyboard and mouse with Synergy. QSynergy clamps a crisp, generally easy-to-grasp interface onto Synergy, giving it the update its long deserved.

QSynergy isn't the first update to Synergy we've come across—Synergy-Plus added some updates and bug fixes to the original. QSynergy adds a few bonus features of its own, but its main benefits involve how easy it is to install on Windows, Mac, or Linux systems, and the setup tools and design put into it. Arranging the left-to-right arrangement of multiple systems is done with a grid interface, the crude, Windows-98-era options panels are cleaned up, and with just a little tweaking, you're managing multiple computers as if they were just multiple monitors on one grand Mother Brain.

QSynergy is a free download for Windows, Mac, and Linux systems. Thanks for the tip MePerson!

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Mandatory Password Changes Costs Billions in Lost Productivity [Passwords]

Source: http://lifehacker.com/5515133/mandatory-password-changes-costs-billions-in-lost-productivity

Mandatory Password Changes Costs Billions in Lost ProductivityBig enterprises that force their workers to change their access passwords on a regular basis, and adhere to complex rules when they do, might be their own worst enemy. At least that's how Boston Globe editor Mark Pothier sees it, and he cites a Microsoft research paper as part of his argument against that and other seemingly perfunctory IT rules. We prefer using a solid root password and subtle variations to implement secure passwords, along with easy-but-secure browser tools. What does your own office require of your passwords, and do you think it helps or hurts? [Boston Globe via Gizmodo]

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