Friday, June 2
Beyond the Reach of American Bombs
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Near a peak of the Zagros Mountains in central Iran, workers are building a nuclear facility so deep in the earth that it is likely beyond the range of a last-ditch U.S. weapon designed to destroy such sites, according to experts and satellite imagery analyzed by The Associated Press.
The photos and videos from Planet Labs PBC show Iran has been digging tunnels in the mountain near the Natanz nuclear site, which has come under repeated sabotage attacks amid Tehran’s standoff with the West over its atomic program.
With Iran now producing uranium close to weapons-grade levels after the collapse of its nuclear deal with world powers, the installation complicates the West’s efforts to halt Tehran from potentially developing an atomic bomb as diplomacy over its nuclear program remains stalled.
Completion of such a facility “would be a nightmare scenario that risks igniting a new escalatory spiral,” warned Kelsey Davenport, the director of nonproliferation policy at the Washington-based Arms Control Association. “Given how close Iran is to a bomb, it has very little room to ratchet up its program without tripping U.S. and Israeli red lines. So at this point, any further escalation increases the risk of conflict.”
The construction at the Natanz site comes five years after then-President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew America from the nuclear accord. Trump argued the deal did not address Tehran’s ballistic missile program, nor its support of militias across the wider Middle East. READ MORE...
Thursday, June 1
Electricity From Thin Air
Sure, we all complain about the humidity on a sweltering summer day. But it turns out that same humidity could be a source of clean, pollution-free energy, a new study shows.
"Air humidity is a vast, sustainable reservoir of energy that, unlike solar and wind, is continuously available," said the study, which was published recently in the journal Advanced Materials.
“This is very exciting,” said Xiaomeng Liu, a graduate student at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, and the paper’s lead author. “We are opening up a wide door for harvesting clean electricity from thin air.”
In fact, researchers say, nearly any material can be turned into a device that continuously harvests electricity from humidity in the air.
Air 'contains an enormous amount of electricity'
“The air contains an enormous amount of electricity,” said Jun Yao, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst and the paper’s senior author. READ MORE...
Our Great Civilization Called Democracy
Most people with business degrees or backgrounds are conservative and most people with liberal arts degrees or backgrounds are liberals. Our two parties are Republicans and Democrats respectively. There are a group of socialists who side with the Democrats and there is a wing of the Democrats that is progressive but not quite socialistic.
Basically, the Republicans want a small central government that favors business and the Democrats want a large central government that favors labor... although the lines between the two are sometimes blurred, making if difficult to know what side you are really on.
The Democrats want to tax the wealthy to pay for all the programs that they want to give the not so wealthy and don't seem to understand that the wealthy have their money hidden away in off shore bank accounts to AVOID TAXES.
The Conservatives do not trust the rest of the world and want a strong military to protect us against aggression from countries like China and Russia and Middle Eastern Terrorists.
For several decades both the Democrats and Republicans tried to CHANGE THE REST OF THE WORLD INTO OUR BRAND OF DEMOCRACY, not fully understanding nor appreciating the fact that those other countries did not want our brand of Democracy. Consequently, the rest of the world, dislikes us.
While we disagree with each other at home, the rest of the world is preparing to take us over economically as well as with military force if the economy side does not work. Americans laugh at that idea and believe it will never happen.
ALL GREAT CIVILIZATIONS EVENTUALLY COLLAPSE...
Drone Attacks on Russia
Dwindling military resources and a dearth of new targets have left Russian President Vladimir Putin struggling to respond to a rise of troubling drone attacks on Moscow.
Several analysts have noted in recent days that Putin has attempted to downplay dramatic attacks on the Russian capital – for which Ukraine has explicitly denied any responsibility, at least publicly.
Yet Putin’s response appears to discount that theory.
Instead of maximizing the attacks for propaganda purposes, the Russian leader’s reaction appears to be an attempt “to avoid exposing the limited options he has to retaliate against Ukraine,” the independent Institute for the Study of War concludes in a new analysis note.
The analysis points to Putin’s explanation earlier this week that Russian forces struck the Ukrainian military intelligence headquarters two or three days previously. READ MORE...
Wednesday, May 31
The Pixel Watch
disappointing battery life, but if leaked details turn out to be correct, that’s a problem Google plans to fix with the Pixel Watch 2.
As with the original Pixel Watch, Google is expected to announce its second Wear OS-based smartwatch sometime later this year closer to the holiday shopping season.
Goodbye Samsung Exynos, Hello Qualcomm Snapdragon
The original Pixel Watch arrived with a Samsung Exynos 9110 chipset under the hood, which was already at least three years old at the time, having shown up in Samsung’s own smart wearables a few years prior.
East Tennessee
So, I have lived in Tennessee for thirty-three years. Actually, I was born in Raleigh, NC and within the year moved up to Alexandria, Virginia where I remained for 15 years before moving to Cairo, Egypt for high school (1962-1966). In 1966, I went to college in North Carolina and remained there until I left in 1990 or 24 years.
I have lived the longest in East Tennessee, specifically between Greeneville and Knoxville and just off of Interstate 81.
Our community is full of retirees which makes it nice because there are no loud parties, no loud music, and no loud cars blasting up and down the roads. Most of the people stay inside but when they are outside, they are neighborly. Not only are they friendly but they like to help out with projects if you need their help.
From our location:
- It is 2 miles to a Walmart Super Center and Lowes
- It is 28 miles to Knoxville Restaurants
- It is 20-30 minutes to Buc-ee's
- It is 40 minutes to UT Hospital
- It is 50 minutes to Tyson-Mcghee airport
- It is 3 hours to Nashville
- It is 75 minutes to Bristol Raceway (Nascar)
- It is 4 hours to Atlanta, Georgia
- It is 60/90 minutes to Dollywood/Gatlinburg
- It is 2 hours to Cherokee Casino
Windows Drivers
Microsoft is dealing with a couple of unrelated processor driver problems that are causing headaches for some Windows users.…
AMD acknowledged the problem and outlined a solution.
Meanwhile, Microsoft issued a temporary fix for a situation where the integrated camera app on some mobile devices, such as Surface Pro X tablets, running on certain Arm-based processors stopped working. The workaround developed by the software maker gets the camera up and running again, though it isn't a complete fix.
Tuesday, May 30
Long Lasting Phone Batteries
Phone batteries tend to wear out after only a few years, but the problems don’t end there: the batteries contain heavy metals, which can be damaging to the environment if they are disposed of incorrectly. And yet, figuring out how to dispose of your old phone correctly can be a daunting task. Luckily, researchers in Australia may have just found a way around all of that.
The team of researchers from the RMIT School of Engineering used a nanomaterial called MXene to create a battery that could last up to nine years. ScienceDaily reports that this battery could become a viable alternative to the industry standard lithium-ion batteries, which wear out very quickly and are a challenge to recycle.
MXene has high electrical conductivity, similar to graphene, but with even more benefits because of how malleable it is, according to the researchers.
“Unlike graphene, MXenes are highly tailorable and open up a whole range of possible technological applications in the future,” Professor Leslie Yeo, the lead senior researcher on the project, told ScienceDaily. READ MORE...