02.12
Tech
News Digest
Compiled By IEEE-USA
Staff
The following is a roundup of technology-related
news and notable developments with a focus on electrical
engineering, computing and information technology and allied
fields reported during January 2012. Items are excerpted
from news releases generated by universities, government
agencies and other research institutions. Highlighted topics
include:
-
Congressionally-Mandated Report Examines the
Federal Role in U.S. Innovation and
Competitiveness
-
Comments Released on Access to Federally
Funded Scientific Research and Data
-
DARPA Seeks New Power Dynamic for Continuation
of Moore’s Law
-
Research Paves Way for Portable Power
Systems
-
Power Generation is Blowing in the
Wind
-
10-second Dance of Electrons is Step Toward
Exotic New Computers
-
Particle-free Silver Ink Prints Small,
High-Performance Electronics
-
Theory Explains How Graphene Could Improve
Electronic Shelf Life
-
NIST Issues Cloud Computing Guidelines for
Managing Security and Privacy
-
New Center Developing Computational
Bioresearch Tool
-
Iowa State Engineer Wants to ‘Sculpt’ More
Powerful Electric Motors and Generators
-
'Open-source' Robotic Surgery Platform Going
to Top Medical Research Labs
-
LED Lights Point Shoppers in the Right
Direction
-
Researchers Devise New Means for Creating
Elastic Conductors
-
NIST to Support Agency Efforts to Implement
Best Practices for Standards Activities
1) Congressionally-Mandated
Report Examines the Federal Role in U.S. Innovation and
Competitiveness
On 6 January 2012, the U.S. Department of
Commerce (DOC) issued a new report highlighting key policy
priorities to sustain and promote American innovation and
economic competitiveness. The report, The Competitiveness
and Innovative Capacity of the United States, examines the
historic role of federal investments in research, education
and infrastructure in driving the nation's economic
competitiveness, business expansion and job creation, and
argues for continued strong support for those three areas as
well as manufacturing.
For more information, see: http://www.nist.gov/director/competes-011012.cfm
2) Comments Released on Access
to Federally Funded Scientific Research and Data
In late January, the President’s Office of
Science and Technology Policy released over 450 public
comments received in response to two Requests for Information
on “Pubilc Access to Peer-Reviewed Scholarly Publication
Resulting from Federally Funded Research” and on “Public
Access to Digital Data Resulting from Federally Funded
Scientific Research.” IEEE was among the organizations
who commented. Comments will be reviewed by the Task
Force on Public Access to Scholarly Publications and the
Interagency Working Group on Digital Data, who have been
tasked by Congress to make recommendations for an
Administration policy on public access.
For more information, see: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2012/01/30/your-comments-access-federally-funded-scientific-research-results
3) DARPA Seeks New Power
Dynamic for Continuation of Moore’s Law
In the past, computing systems could rely on
increasing computing performance with each processor
generation. Following Moore’s Law, each generation
brought with it double the number of transistors. And
according to Dennard’s Scaling, clock speed could increase 40
percent each generation without increasing power
density. This allowed increased performance without the
penalty of increased power. “That expected increase in
processing performance is at an end,” said DARPA Director
Regina E. Dugan. “Clock speeds are being
limited by power constraints. Power efficiency has become the
Achilles Heel of increased computational capability.”
DARPA’s Power Efficiency Revolution for Embedded
Computing Technologies (PERFECT) program seeks to improve
power efficiency for embedded computer systems, providing more
computing per watt of electrical power. To increase awareness
of this program and attract potential researchers, DARPA has
scheduled a Proposers’ Day workshop 15 Feb. in Arlington,
Va.
For more information, see: http://www.darpa.mil/NewsEvents/Releases/2012/01/26.aspx
4) Research Paves Way for
Portable Power Systems
Developments by hydrogen researchers at the US
Department of Energy's Savannah River National Laboratory are
paving the way for the successful development of portable
power systems with capacities that far exceed the best
batteries available today. SRNL's advances in the use of
alane, a lightweight material for storing hydrogen, may be the
key that unlocks the development of portable fuel cell systems
that meet the needs for both military and commercial portable
power applications.
For more information, see: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/drnl-srp010912.php
5) Power Generation is Blowing
in the Wind
By looking at the stability of the atmosphere,
wind farm operators could gain greater insight into the amount
of power generated at any given time. Power generated by a
wind turbine largely depends on the wind speed. In a wind farm
in which the turbines experience the same wind speeds but
different shapes (such as turbulence) to the wind profile, a
turbine will produce different amounts of power.
For more information, see: https://www.llnl.gov/news/newsreleases/2012/Jan/NR-12-01-03.html
6) 10-second Dance of Electrons
is Step Toward Exotic New Computers
An international team of researchers including
scientists at Princeton University have achieved a 100-fold
increase in the ability to maintain control the spins of
electrons in a solid material, a key step in the development
of ultra-fast quantum computers.
For more information, see: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/pues-tdo011612.php
7) Particle-free Silver Ink
Prints Small, High-Performance Electronics
University of Illinois materials scientists have
developed a new reactive silver ink for printing
high-performance electronics on ubiquitous, low-cost materials
such as flexible plastic, paper or fabric substrates. The
reactive ink has several advantages over particle-based inks:
low processing temperature, high conductivity, and the ability
to print very small features.
For more information, see: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/uoia-psi011212.php
8) Theory Explains How Graphene
Could Improve Electronic Shelf Life
By taking advantage of the thermal conductivity
of graphene, research by UT Dallas engineers could lead to
more efficient cooling of electronics, producing quieter and
longer-lasting computers, and cellphones and other
devices.
For more information, see: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/uota-teh010912.php
9) NIST Issues Cloud Computing
Guidelines for Managing Security and Privacy
On 24 January, the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) finalized its first set of
guidelines for managing security and privacy issues in cloud
computing. The Guidelines on Security and Privacy in
Public Cloud Computing (NIST Special Publication 800-144)
provide an overview of the security and privacy challenges
facing public cloud computing. It also presents
recommendations that organizations should consider when
outsourcing data, applications and infrastructure to a public
cloud environment. The document provides insights on threats,
technology risks and safeguards related to public cloud
environments to help organizations make informed decisions
about this use of this technology.
For more information, see: http://www.nist.gov/itl/csd/cloud-012412.cfm
10) New Center Developing
Computational Bioresearch Tool
University of Chicago scientists are working on
a technique that might lead to a new, dramatically simpler way
to predict molecular motion inside a cell. The team will
pursue that goal with an initial $1.5 million Phase I grant
from the National Science Foundation to launch the new Center
for Multiscale Theory and Simulation..
For more information, see: http://news.uchicago.edu/article/2012/01/27/new-center-developing-computational-bioresearch-tool
11) Iowa State Engineer Wants
to ‘Sculpt’ More Powerful Electric Motors and
Generators
Dionysios Aliprantis took up an imaginary hammer
and chisel and pounded away at the air. "Think of the
ancient Greeks and their sculptures," said the Iowa State
University assistant professor of electrical
and computer engineering. Now apply the
idea of a sculptor precisely chipping away at stone to the
electric motors that run our machines and generate our
electricity. Aliprantis is working to develop computer
modeling technology that will show engineers how to chip away
at the surfaces of electric motors to create new designs and
shapes that can increase power generation. "The goal is
to get more power out of the same size motor," he said. "Or,
that could mean getting the same power with a smaller motor."
Aliprantis is quick to say he's not looking for
a huge improvement in a motor's performance. "I'm looking for
a little bit of increase, maybe 5 percent or 1 percent," he
said. "But multiply that number by the number of hybrid cars,
let's say, and you could get savings in the billions of
dollars. The potential here could be huge."
For more information, see: http://www.news.iastate.edu/news/2012/jan/electricmotors
12) 'Open-source' Robotic
Surgery Platform Going To Top Medical Research Labs
Robotics experts at the University of
California, Santa Cruz and the University of Washington have
completed a set of seven advanced robotic surgery systems for
use by major medical research laboratories throughout the
United States.
For more information, see: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/uoc--rs011212.php
13) LED Lights Point Shoppers
in the Right Direction
Looking for an item in a large department store
or mall can be like searching for a needle in a haystack, but
that could change thanks to a hybrid location-identification
system that uses radio frequency transmitters and overhead LED
lights, suggested by a team of researchers from Penn State and
Hallym University in South Korea. The team envisions
large stores or malls with overhead LED light fixtures, each
assigned with a location code. At the entrance, a computer
that is accessible via keyboard or even telephone would
contain a database of all the items available. The system
consists of the location-tagged LEDs and combination
photodiode and Zigbee receiver merchandise tags. The request
for an item goes from the computer through the many jumps of
short radio frequency receivers and transmitters placed
throughout the mall. The RF/photodiode tag on the merchandise
sought, reads its location from the overhead LED and sends the
information back through the wireless network to the
computer.
For more information, see: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/ps-llp012312.php
14) Researchers Devise New
Means for Creating Elastic Conductors
Researchers from North Carolina State University
have developed a new method for creating elastic conductors
made of carbon nanotubes, which will contribute to large-scale
production of the material for use in a new generation of
elastic electronic devices. Potential applications
include devices that can be incorporated into clothing,
implantable medical devices, and sensors that can be stretched
over unmanned aerial vehicles.
For more information, see: http://news.ncsu.edu/releases/wmszhuconductors/
15) NIST to Support Agency
Efforts to Implement Best Practices for Standards
Activities
On Jan. 17, the White House issued a memorandum
recognizing the role of the National Institute of Standards
and Technology (NIST) in helping agencies implement best
practices for standards development activities to address
national priorities. The memo clarifies how federal agencies
should work with the private sector in standards development,
and it stresses the importance of public-private partnerships
to the U.S. standards system and promoting innovation.
See White House memorandum at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/memoranda/2012/m-12-08.pdf
For more information, see: http://www.nist.gov/director/standards-012412.cfm
Comments may be submitted to todaysengineer@ieee.org.
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