Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Graphene Miracle #5,347: It Can Repair Itself Entirely Unassisted [Science]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5925058/graphene-miracle-5347-it-can-repair-itself-entirely-unassisted

Graphene Miracle #5,347: It Can Repair Itself Entirely UnassistedThere seems to be little that graphene can't do. While previous studies have shown that it can repair itself, with a little assistance from heat or pressure, new research suggests that it can actually fix holes in its structure entirely unaided.

The research, carried out at the University of Manchester, shows that graphene manages to absorb loose carbon atoms in its vicinity to repair holes in its structure. Amazingly, they just appear to snap into place, as if by magic.

In fact, the researchers noticed the effect by accident. They were trying to understand how and why holes formed in the sheets of graphene when they added metal contacts to the material. To their surprise, they noticed that when stray carbon atoms were near the holes, they quickly filled the gaps, in turn repairing the sheet.

The finding, published in Nano Letters, is both amazing and incredibly useful. Because graphene is so thin—just a single layer of carbon atoms—it is incredibly easily damaged. This research suggests that it should be possible to heal repairs in a fairly controlled fashion. [Nano Letters via BBC]

Image by CORE-materials under Creative Commons license

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OnLive reaffirms support for Marvell powered ARM Google TV boxes

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/11/onlive-reaffirms-support-for-marvell-powered-arm-google-tv-boxes/

While there has been a lot of speculation recently about which platforms the OnLive Google TV app will support for gameplay, the company is confirming support for / collaboration with Marvell's 1500 HD SoC Google highlighted for its v2 hardware. While no specific devices are mentioned, there's a Marvell brain in the Sony Google TV box we recently reviewed and the upcoming Vizio Co-Star, so unless a manufacturer blocks it, we'd expect to be able to install it and get playing -- Gaikai purchases notwithstanding. Not mentioned in the press release (after the break) is LG's custom CPU for its Google TVs, but since we've already got video evidence of it running there, we're simply left waiting for the app to launch for the full console gaming experience sans-console.

Continue reading OnLive reaffirms support for Marvell powered ARM Google TV boxes

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OnLive reaffirms support for Marvell powered ARM Google TV boxes originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 08:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Griffin's MIDIConnect now available at $80 to make beautiful music with your iDevice (video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/11/griffins-midiconnect-now-available-80-dollars/

Griffin's MIDIConnect now available at $80 to make beautiful music with your iDevice

Inspiration can strike from anywhere, and now you can use a proper musical instrument to channel it with MIDIConnect, available from Griffin Technology for $80. The unit allows you to twang, pluck or tickle a MIDI instrument on the go directly into GarageBand and other iOS music apps, and also reverses the flow -- allowing your Cupertino device to send a MIDI signal and become keys, drums or a guitar itself. For hygiene's sake, however, we probably wouldn't take our portable composing quite as far as the video below the break shows.

Continue reading Griffin's MIDIConnect now available at $80 to make beautiful music with your iDevice (video)

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Griffin's MIDIConnect now available at $80 to make beautiful music with your iDevice (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 08:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rovio's Amazing Alex arrives on Android and iOS July 12th, bosses everywhere weep for lost productivity (video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/11/rovio-amazing-alex-arrives-on-android-and-ios-july-12th/

Rovio's Amazing Alex arrives on Android and iOS July 12th, bosses everywhere weep for lost productivity video

It's finally happening: after roughly two and a half years, Rovio Mobile is weaning itself off of its addiction to avians. The company's first non-bird title in what feels like an eternity, Amazing Alex, will be reaching the official stores for both Android and iOS come July 12th. Strictly speaking, Rovio is taking something of a shortcut to bringing this Incredible Machine-style puzzler to market: it bought the rights to Casey's Contraptions and enlisted the developers, Miguel Friginal and Noel Llopis, to bring the title into the Rovio family. While that means it's not quite as fresh as it could be, the game has already piqued our interest and could be exposed to many (many, many) more players. While we wait, we'll pour one out for the managers and supervisors bound to lose hours of work from staff trying to finish just one more level.

Continue reading Rovio's Amazing Alex arrives on Android and iOS July 12th, bosses everywhere weep for lost productivity (video)

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< a href="http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/11/rovio-amazing-alex-arrives-on-android-and-ios-july-12th/">Rovio's Amazing Alex arrives on Android and iOS July 12th, bosses everywhere weep for lost productivity (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 08:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Researchers store memory bit on a lone molecule, could pave the way for petabyte SSDs

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/11/researchers-store-memory-bit-one-molecule/

Researchers store memory bit on a molecule, get 50,000 times denser storage than hard disk The Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) just deflated the size of a bit down to a solitary nanometer -- the length of an organic molecule. The international research team managed it by first embedding a magnetized iron atom into a molecule made up of 51 atoms, then taking advantage of so-called memristive and spintronic properties. By applying a current, they flipped the atom's magnetic charge, altering the resistance of the molecule as well -- which they subsequently measured, storing a bit. Compared to a typical magnetic drive which needs 3 million atoms per bit, a device made this way could theoretically store 50 thousand times as much data in the same size -- and would be an all-electric device, to boot. If the research ever pans out, a terabyte magnetic drive could turn into a 50 petabyte solid state unit -- hopefully ready in time for all those 4K home movies you'll need to store one day soon.

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Researchers store memory bit on a lone molecule, could pave the way for petabyte SSDs originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 03:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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