mix

mix150.com MIX150 DOWNLOAD GAMES PLAYSTATION RIP FILMS

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Smartphones For Students

I used to think that smartphones were a luxury but since I treated myself to one of the latest mobile devices, I am beginning to think differently. Smartphones for students are also becoming a necessity. Yes, they do check their e-mail and chat with their friends on FaceBook but a recent study showed that students who owned smart phones actually study more. Many of them admitted that they study coursework while standing in line, in bed and in the bathroom! Smartphones also save time-no more having to set up a lap top, or worse, spending time visiting a library to find information.

With over half a million apps available students can locate the information they seek right from their desk (or the bathroom!). Young people and students love their smartphones, and with nearly all of these devices you can easily read eBooks - far more convenient than dragging around a bag full of heavy books.

Course books for college and university students are ridiculously expensive. If you have last year's version you're always told to get this year's version, although often little of the information has changed. Hopefully e- publishing will do away with this expensive nonsense - books will be updated online and thousands of trees can breathe a sigh of relief!

The cost for an up-to-date smartphone can be high for many families and internet access will cost every month, but the convenience far outweighs those costs. Many students who can afford to update to the latest device on a regular basis should also think about how they are going to dispose of their present smartphone.

Advertising it on a college bulletin board for sale will probably see them quickly sold - the best kind of recycling. Otherwise used smartphones can be traded in for a new phone, and there are many companies online who buy used phones. The better condition you can keep your phone in the more money you'll get for it.

So if you're a student and you find you have downtime during the day, perhaps standing in line or possibly watching a live sports event, a smartphone can offer the opportunity to study even though you're doing something else. There is also a rumor that Microsoft is working on a mobile version of MS Office for the iPad, and when that materializes students will be able to work on their class assignments just about anywhere.

Learn more about tips on how to sell mobile phone and how to sell iPhone 4 16GB models.


View the original article here

Friday, March 30, 2012

Using a Cell Phone Number Finder - An Overview

Sometimes, we receive a phone call from someone's number and we don't know who is calling us but just their number. Anyone can take help from a good cell phone number finder to find data like the name, address and location of the person who owns the number. You will not be able to find someone's number with traditional methods. As mobile numbers are subject to strict privacy laws, this is not possible. Due to these laws, cell numbers are not made public. Due to the amendments in privacy laws, these directories of cell numbers are only available to investigators and legal officers.

Using private investigators as a cell phone number finder

Earlier, you needed to hire a private eye to trace out anyone's cell number. These expensive private investigators would charge you up to $250 to find the details of the mobile number for you. Their charges are quite high, though many people had to opt for this method, finding no option. There are a couple of directories where the person's names are accessible along with their number. There are a few popular directories of cell phones, which are often used by law enforcement and private investigator agencies.

Using online Cell phone number finder services

There are a few services available that can help you find mobile numbers. Doing a reverse cell phone look up can give you access to information including the name, address and financial details of the phone owner. After a basic search, you have to input some information manually which will be helpful for you to get the data you are looking for. This data includes information like the address, and name of the cell phone owner as well as other details. Websites which offer these services often charge a small fee for giving you the required information. These sites generally charge a single one-time fee or a time-based fee.

Sometimes, there are special offers if you want to do multiple searches to suit your needs. You will have to pay the websites in case of an emergency because they can access the information you need from the databases of phone directories as well as mobile companies. Therefore, a cell phone number finder is a great tool to provide you with all these details. This information is the most important thing that we crave for. If you are looking for a reliable website which offers you such services, you should have knowledge of the website and their services. You need to be sure that the services they provide are reliable and genuine.

Many sites work very efficiently and show great results because they offer the following features:

• The area of the phone number
• Whether the targeted number is of a land line or mobile
• More information about the number

Are cell phone number finder services legal?

To get information about a cell phone owner like his name, address, business as well as other information, you will have to go in for an annual membership. These sites do this to reduce any misuse of their look up services. Your details for registration are required. Although many of us think that cell phone look up services are illegal, this is untrue. The services will give you complete information about the rules and regulations of using their cell phone number finder services.

Get started with the reverse phone number look up. Find all the information about the different options you have if you are planing to cell phone number look up Services.


View the original article here

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Mobile Management Best Practices For Any Business

Mobile management has become a way of life for many businesses. Whether a company sells cat food or catalytic converters, it is likely that its mobile workforce has a mobile phone, laptop computer, smartphone, or a combination of these. Travel is no longer a valid reason for business interruption, so workers must be equipped to do business any time and from anywhere. According to one 2010 survey, half of Western European and North American enterprises support more than two mobile platforms.

Complicating things further is the fact that more than one-half of enterprises support smartphones owned by employees. More companies are finding themselves drafting policies that condone this practice, requiring that they be able to support Android phones, iPhones, Blackberry devices, and Windows Mobile phones. Workers benefit because they may use a device they are comfortable with, while corporate device managers must learn how to manage and support the various operating systems.

Researching the user population and developing policies based on it is the foundation for other best practices. A good mobile device policy is as applicable to a delivery truck driver as it is to the CEO. Segmenting the user population should be part of this step. According to experts, 80 percent of employees are overmanaged and oversecured when it comes to mobile devices, while 20 percent of the most important workers are underprovisioned. In addition, diverse devices should be available to meet the needs of different workers.

One of the best things a company can do, say the experts, is to invest in a device management solution or a managed service. This should provide administrators with a single, Internet-based, method of access for security and management operations. Businesses may have the option to select from a generic or proprietary solution and should weigh the costs and benefits of each. In all cases, the vendor should take a hands-on approach with clients, offering support after the sale.

Any company with mobile devices should clearly outline the procedures for requesting, using, and returning these. Employees should also know how to obtain additional applications and services for the devices in their possession. Everyone within the mobile workforce must be made aware of what constitutes appropriate use of a device and what the consequences are for inappropriate use. Device managers must be consistent in their enforcement in order for the policy to be effective.

Strict policies regarding failed authentications, passwords, and data encryption are recommended. The general rule of thumb is that ten failed authentication attempts should lock data or even wipe it from the device. A stolen mobile device should be able to be locked or wiped remotely. Corporate data should be encrypted at all times and the amount of data stored on the device can even be limited using document portals.

Reducing telecommunications expenses is a major goal of mobile management. Device managers can share this responsibility with department and team leadership as well as individual employees. By engaging in best practices, businesses ensure successful management of the various mobile devices deployed throughout the workforce.

If you are concerned about the security practices of your employees who use company mobile devices, it may be time to call in a mobile management specialist to ensure security is not breached. Gill Technologies is a mobile management specialist that can show you how to keep your network devices secure. For more information, visit Gill-Technologies.com today!


View the original article here

Introduction to Reverse Phone Directories and Their Importance

Many people have reported that they get fake calls from different numbers that cannot be located by the official directories available in different countries. Most of these calls are received from cell phones, so land line companies cannot locate them and, according to their rules, are also unable to give any information about the cell phone user. You can also get the advantage of reverse phone directories if you are getting the calls from advertising companies. Such companies usually call using internet services and thus it is quite difficult to identify their location and block them.

reverse phone directories are not available in hard copies, but can be purchased online in the software form. These directories show the ownership of the cell phone numbers and land line numbers. Thus such directories are of real help to all people even if they have nothing to do with the intelligence organizations. You do not need to find the name of the person or any other detail to ask about the number. You can just enter the number in the directory and you will get the list. Sometimes, such fake numbers do not belong to any specific person and the directory managers have to find out the user themselves. However, it is their responsibility and none of the users have to do this. The one thing that must be kept in mind is that you must not delete the log from your phone so that you can show it as evidence after finding out the person using the directory. You might also get the other contact details like home address and the location of the person from these directories.

Another advantage of using such directories offering reverse phone look-up services is that you can check the comments of people regarding that number. Most probably the number that is annoying you will also be calling other people in the area. Thus sharing your comments and checking the comments of other people regarding the number will be a great help to you. You do not have to wander around the offices of the intelligence and telecommunication companies to get the desired information. You just need to login in the directory and enter the number. This will fetch all the information that is available to you. It is a fact that most of the time the information is authentic and reliable.

It is said by some people that these services are just fake. However, this is not the fact as nowadays directories are being used by many people who are taking advantage of it and also they are sharing their comments about the number from which they get calls. You can check their comments online and thus it is up to you whether you want to be at ease by using the directory or you want to let them bother you by calling your number. This is not only annoying but some of the times it may also become a threat if the caller gets the information about you and thus use your number for illegal purposes.

reverse phone directories are not available in hard copies, but can be purchased online in the software form. You are able to also assist other persons by while using reverse phone lookup database. Visit: http://www.callcatalog.com/


View the original article here

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

One of the world's smallest electronic circuits created


A team of scientists, led by Guillaume Gervais from McGill's Physics Department and Mike Lilly from Sandia National Laboratories, has engineered one of the world's smallest electronic circuits. It is formed by two wires separated by only about 150 atoms or 15 nanometers (nm). This discovery, published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, could have a significant effect on the speed and power of the ever smaller integrated circuits of the future in everything from smartphones to desktop computers, televisions and GPS systems.


This is the first time that anyone has studied how the wires in an electronic circuit interact with one another when packed so tightly together. Surprisingly, the authors found that the effect of one wire on the other can be either positive or negative. This means that a current in one wire can produce a current in the other one that is either in the same or the opposite direction. This discovery, based on the principles of quantum physics, suggests a need to revise our understanding of how even the simplest electronic circuits behave at the nanoscale


In addition to the effect on the speed and efficiency of future electronic circuits, this discovery could also help to solve one of the major challenges facing future computer design. This is managing the ever-increasing amount of heat produced by integrated circuits. Well-known theorist Markus Büttiker speculates that it may be possible to harness the energy lost as heat in one wire by using other wires nearby. Moreover, Buttiker believes that these findings will have an impact on the future of both fundamental and applied research in nanoelectronics.


Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:


Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:



The above story is reprinted from materials provided by McGill University.


Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

D. Laroche, G. Gervais, M. P. Lilly, J. L. Reno. Positive and negative Coulomb drag in vertically integrated one-dimensional quantum wires. Nature Nanotechnology, 2011; 6 (12): 793 DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2011.182

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.


Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.


View the original article here

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

New '3-D' transistors promising future chips, lighter laptops

 Researchers from Purdue and Harvard universities have created a new type of transistor made from a material that could replace silicon and have a 3-D structure instead of conventional flat computer chips.


The approach could enable engineers to build faster, more compact and efficient integrated circuits and lighter laptops that generate less heat than today's. The transistors contain tiny nanowires made not of silicon, like conventional transistors, but from a material called indium-gallium-arsenide.


The device was created using a so-called "top-down" method, which is akin to industrial processes to precisely etch and position components in transistors. Because the approach is compatible with conventional manufacturing processes, it is promising for adoption by industry, said Peide "Peter" Ye, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue.


A new generation of silicon computer chips, due to debut in 2012, will contain transistors having a vertical structure instead of a conventional flat design. However, because silicon has a limited "electron mobility" -- how fast electrons flow -- other materials will likely be needed soon to continue advancing transistors with this 3-D approach, Ye said.


Indium-gallium-arsenide is among several promising semiconductors being studied to replace silicon. Such semiconductors are called III-V materials because they combine elements from the third and fifth groups of the periodic table.


"Industry and academia are racing to develop transistors from the III-V materials," Ye said. "Here, we have made the world's first 3-D gate-all-around transistor on much higher-mobility material than silicon, the indium-gallium-arsenide."


Findings will be detailed in a paper to be presented during the International Electron Devices Meeting on Dec. 5-7 in Washington, D.C. The work is led by Purdue doctoral student Jiangjiang Gu; Harvard doctoral student Yiqun Liu; Roy Gordon, Harvard's Thomas D. Cabot Professor of Chemistry; and Ye.


Transistors contain critical components called gates, which enable the devices to switch on and off and to direct the flow of electrical current. In today's chips, the length of these gates is about 45 nanometers, or billionths of a meter. However, in 2012 industry will introduce silicon-based 3-D transistors having a gate length of 22 nanometers.


"Next year if you buy a computer it will have the 22-nanometer gate length and 3-D silicon transistors," Ye said.


The 3-D design is critical because the 22-nanometer gate lengths will not work in a flat design.


"Once you shrink gate lengths down to 22 nanometers on silicon you have to do more complicated structure design," Ye said. "The ideal gate is a necklike, gate-all-around structure so that the gate surrounds the transistor on all sides."


The nanowires are coated with a "dielectric," which acts as a gate. Engineers are working to develop transistors that use even smaller gate lengths, 14 nanometers, by 2015.


However, further size reductions beyond 14 nanometers and additional performance improvements are likely not possible using silicon, meaning new designs and materials will be needed to continue progress, Ye said.


"Nanowires made of III-V alloys will get us to the 10 nanometer range," he said.


The new findings confirmed that the device made using a III-V material has the potential to conduct electrons five times faster than silicon.


Creating smaller transistors also will require finding a new type of insulating layer essential for the devices to switch off. As gate lengths shrink smaller than 14 nanometers, the silicon dioxide insulator used in conventional transistors fails to perform properly and is said to "leak" electrical charge.


One potential solution to this leaking problem is to replace silicon dioxide with materials that have a higher insulating value, or "dielectric constant," such as hafnium dioxide or aluminum oxide.


In the new work, the researchers applied a dielectric coating made of aluminum oxide using a method called atomic layer deposition. Because atomic layer deposition is commonly used in industry, the new design may represent a practical solution to the coming limits of conventional silicon transistors.


Using atomic layer deposition might enable engineers to design transistors having thinner oxide and metal layers for the gates, possibly consuming far less electricity than silicon devices.


"A thinner dielectric layer means speed goes up and voltage requirements go down," Ye said.


The work is funded by the National Science Foundation and the Semiconductor Research Corp. and is based at the Birck Nanotechnology Center in Purdue's Discovery Park. The latest research is similar to, but fundamentally different from, research reported by Ye's group in 2009. That work involved a design called a finFET, for fin field-effect transistor, which uses a finlike structure instead of the conventional flat design. The new design uses nanowires instead of the fin design.


Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:


Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:



The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Purdue University. The original article was written by Emil Venere.


Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.


Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.


View the original article here

Monday, March 26, 2012

S-t-r-e-t-c-h-i-n-g electrical conductance to the limit

Individual molecules have been used to create electrical components like resistors, transistors and diodes that mimic the properties of familiar semiconductors. But according to Nongjian (NJ) Tao, a researcher at the Biodesign Institute at ASU, unique properties inherent in single molecules also may allow clever designers to produce novel devices whose behavior falls outside the performance observed in conventional electronics.


In research appearing in a recent issue of Nature Nanotechnology, Tao describes a method for mechanically controlling the geometry of a single molecule, situated in a junction between a pair of gold electrodes that form a simple circuit. The manipulations produced over tenfold increase in conductivity.


The unusual, often non-intuitive characteristics of single molecules may eventually be introduced into a broad range of microelectronics, suitable for applications including biological and chemical sensing electronic and mechanical devices.


Delicate molecular manipulations requiring patience and finesse are routine for Tao, whose research at Biodesign's Center for Bioelectronics and Biosensors has included work on molecular diodes, graphene behavior and molecular imaging techniques. Nevertheless, he was surprised at the outcome described in the current paper: "If you have a molecule attached to electrodes, it can stretch like a rubber band," he says. "If it gets longer, most people tend to think that the conductivity will decrease. A longer wire is less conductive than a shorter wire."


Indeed, diminishing conductivity through a molecule is commonly observed when the distance between the electrodes attached to its surface is increased and the molecule becomes elongated. But according to Tao, if you stretch the molecule enough, something unexpected happens: the conductance goes up -- by a huge amount. "We see at least 10 times greater conductivity, simply by pulling the molecule."


As Tao explains, the intriguing result is a byproduct of the laws of quantum mechanics, which dictate the behavior of matter at the tiniest scales: "The conductivity of a single molecule is not simply inversely proportional to length. It depends on the energy level alignment."


In the metal leads of the electrodes, electrons can move about freely but when they come to an interface -- in this case, a molecule that sits in the junction between electrodes -- they have to overcome an energy barrier. The height of this energy barrier is critical to how readily electrons can pass through the molecule. By applying a mechanical force to the molecule, the barrier is lowered, improving conductance.


"Theoretically, people have thought of this as a possibility, but this is a demonstration that it really happens," Tao says. "If you stretch the molecule and geometrically increase the length, it energetically lowers the barrier so electrons can easily go through. If you think in optical terms, it becomes more transparent to electrons."


The reason for this has to do with a property known as force-induced resonant tunneling. This occurs when the molecular energy moves closer to the Fermi level of the electrodes -- that is, toward the region of optimal conductance. Thus, as the molecule is stretched, it causes a decrease in the tunneling energy barrier.


For the experiments, Tao's group used 1,4'-Benzenedithiol, the most widely studied entity for molecular electronics. Further experiments demonstrated that the transport of electrons through the molecule underwent a corresponding decrease as the distance between the electrodes was reduced, causing the molecule's geometry to shift from a stretched condition to a relaxed or squeezed state. "We have to do this thousands of times to be sure the effect is robust and reproducible."


In addition to the discovery's practical importance, the new data show close agreement with theoretical models of molecular conductance, which had often been at variance with experimental values, by orders of magnitude.


Tao stresses that single molecules are compelling candidates for a new types of electronic devices, precisely because they can exhibit very different properties from those observed in conventional semiconductors.


Microelectromechanical systems or MEMS are just one domain where the versatile properties of single molecules are likely to make their mark. These diminutive creations represent a $40 billion a year industry and include such innovations as optical switches, gyroscopes for cars, lab-on-chip biomedical applications and microelectronics for mobile devices.


"In the future, when people design devices using molecules, they will have a new toolbox they can use."


Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:


Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:



The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Arizona State University.


Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

Christopher Bruot, Joshua Hihath, Nongjian Tao. Mechanically controlled molecular orbital alignment in single molecule junctions. Nature Nanotechnology, 2011; DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2011.212

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.


Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.


View the original article here

How To Sell An Old Smartphone And Make It Look Great

Our phones are a big part of how we live. We take them around with us everywhere we go, and have them on all them time. And since people often see us with them out, it's important for us to make sure that they are also aesthetically appealing and will fit in with our general look. In order to do this, before we sell a used smartphone we will need to customize the way it looks and feels. And there are plenty of ways to do so. Here are a few of the ways that work the best.

First of all, one place to begin is by having a good cell phone cover. To help sell an old smartphone, you will then need to have it covered to prevent it from getting scratched or scuffed. Although this is not absolutely necessary, it helps a lot in maintaining the look of your cell phone. And a cell phone cover can make your phone look a lot better as well. Even though phones come in a lot of different sizes and colors, there are also many ways to modify the way they look. This means that to sell an old smartphone, you can then find a cover of any color to change up entirely the way your phone looks. There are a lot of styles to choose from, giving you a lot of looks to consider.

Also, one other thing you can do to change the way your phone looks is to get stickers or decals. Depending on the model of phone you have, there are a number of stickers you can choose from. Some are even tailored to specific phones, and you can look them up to help you sell your used smartphone. Stickers can say anything, from generic designs to logos of your favorite team or college, to your own name. Look up in advance to find out more about what kind of material you should have your stickers made out of; the best materials can depend based on what your phone is made out of. For instance, metal backed phones often work better with thin, cellophane stickers, where as a plastic phone may work better with a thicker material for its sticker.

Finally, some phones allow you even more decorating options. To try to sell your used smartphone and give it a distinctive look, one thing you can do with it is have it engraved. Especially for phones where part of the surface is made out of metal, etching on the surface is one thing that will really make it distinctive. This is a service that is often provided by phone resellers, and can include designs from various sources, whether just your name or a custom pattern. Consult with your local cell phone reseller, you can even ask them as soon as you finish with selling a used smartphone, or you can also look elsewhere, such as online through internet sources that let you send your phone to them.

Sell cell phone

100% Reliable, Trackable, and Insured. Thousands of people sell us their iPhone or laptop; students, families, businesses, and organizations.


View the original article here

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Taking Quality Pics on Your Android

When the first Android debuted a few years back, smart phone cameras were promising but still very rudimentary. Things have changed quite a bit since then. Nowadays, Android cameras can match or exceed the capabilities of many point and shoot cameras in terms of picture quality and features. Still, taking amazing photos with an Android isn't always a cakewalk. Despite the advanced features of many built-in phone cameras, they're still not quite as good as true stand alone models. Here are a few helpful tips to take the best photos possible with your Android.

Ditch The Digital Zoom
While it may seem like a terrific idea at first, the zoom function on your camera is actually a hindrance to taking good photographs. That's because of the way your phone's camera is set up. The optics are fixed, so it doesn't have a telephoto lens like a traditional digital camera. What that means is that your on-board camera uses digital zoom to merely enlarge the size of each pixel in the image you capture. That leads to fuzzy pictures that aren't crisp and clear. If you're taking a picture of something far away, just move closer.

Use Your Flash
Obviously, your LED flash is great for taking photos in low-light environments or at night. But many neglect to use it during the day for better pictures. In extremely sunny conditions outdoors, bright overhead light creates a lot of shadows on your subject. Using your flash to "fill" the shadowy areas makes for better daytime photos. You'll notice sharper details right away when you start using the flash in daytime shots. The only downside is reduced battery life, so use it sparingly.

Improve Your Software
Your camera's default photography application may be fine for basic shots, but there's plenty of software on the Android Market to help you take get the most out of your hardware. CameraZOOM FX is an award-winning app that can help you take pictures in even the most challenging situations. Big Camera Button is another nifty application that helps you to avoid taking shaky photos. It's an application that allows you to take pictures by simply tapping your screen rather than pushing an actual button on the side of your phone.

Final Thoughts
While smart phone camera technology has improved steadily with each passing year, how well your digital photos come out still depends heavily on environment. In other words, you'll probably still want to carry at least a point and shoot compact with you for more difficult shots. But the day is fast approaching when entry-level cameras will be all but obsolete. Until that day arrives, these tips should serve you well in taking the best photos possible with your Android.

Britney Fuller is a writer who enjoys writing on a number of different verticals. For more on Android apps, BD Techie offers readers information on note-taking on your Android.


View the original article here

Saturday, March 24, 2012

First molybdenite microchip

 Molybdenite, a new and very promising material, can surpass the physical limits of silicon. EPFL scientists have proven this by making the first molybdenite microchip, with smaller and more energy efficient transistors.


After having revealed the electronic advantages of molybdenite, EPFL researchers have now taken the next definitive step. The Laboratory of Nanoscale Electronics and Structures (LANES) has made a chip, or integrated circuit, confirming that molybdenite can surpass the physical limits of silicon in terms of miniaturization, electricity consumption, and mechanical flexibility.


"We have built an initial prototype, putting from two to six serial transistors in place, and shown that basic binary logic operations were possible, which proves that we can make a larger chip," explains LANES director Andras Kis, who recently published two articles on the subject in the scientific journal ACS Nano.


In early 2011, the lab unveiled the potential of molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), a relatively abundant, naturally occurring mineral. Its structure and semi-conducting properties make it an ideal material for use in transistors. It can thus compete directly with silicon, the most highly used component in electronics, and on several points it also rivals graphene.


Three atoms thick


"The main advantage of MoS2 is that it allows us to reduce the size of transistors, and thus to further miniaturize them," explains Kis. It has not been possible up to this point to make layers of silicon less than two nanometers thick, because of the risk of initiating a chemical reaction that would oxidize the surface and compromise its electronic properties. Molybdenite, on the other hand, can be worked in layers only three atoms thick, making it possible to build chips that are at least three times smaller. At this scale, the material is still very stable and conduction is easy to control.


Not as greedy


MoS2 transistors are also more efficient. "They can be turned on and off much more quickly, and can be put into a more complete standby mode," Kis explains. Molybdenite is on a par with silicon in terms of its ability to amplify electronic signals, with an output signal that is four times stronger than the incoming signal. This proves that there is "considerable potential for creating more complex chips," Kis says. "With graphene, for example, this amplitude is about 1. Below this threshold, the output voltage would not be sufficient to feed a second, similar chip."


Built in flexibility


Molybdenite also has mechanical properties that make it interesting as a possible material for use in flexible electronics, such as eventually in the design of flexible sheets of chips. These could, for example, be used to manufacture computers that could be rolled up or devices that could be affixed to the skin.


Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:


Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:



The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. The original article was written by Sarah Perrin.


Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal References:

Branimir Radisavljevic, Michael Brian Whitwick, Andras Kis. Integrated Circuits and Logic Operations Based on Single-Layer MoS2. ACS Nano, 2011; 111110093932007 DOI: 10.1021/nn203715cSimone Bertolazzi, Jacopo Brivio, Andras Kis. Stretching and Breaking of Ultrathin MoS2. ACS Nano, 2011; 111116094409009 DOI: 10.1021/nn203879f

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.


Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.


View the original article here

Friday, March 23, 2012

iPhone Tips - Re-Explained

Since inception, iPhone has been one of the most popular mobile devices ever. With it, the need for assistance on how to use them increases. Unlike easy to use Android and Symbian phones, the iPhone which uses apple iOS is more complex and needs to be studied properly. Here are some tips and tricks on how to use the iPhone.

Changing the Spotlight Search Result Order

You can change your iPhone's Spotlight Search functionality according to your choice. Why go for application by any software development company? It can be done this way as provided below:

1. Click on "Settings"

2. Go to "General"

3. Select "Spotlight Search"

4. Select any the bars icon of your choice and list them up according to your choice.

This will help you save time in future by providing you search results according to what you prefer.

Locking Screen Orientation

Screen orientation is one good function that can help users view videos and images optimally but this option can be a nuisance when you are on bed reading on your phone in portrait mode. You can stop the wobbling of your iPhone screen by performing the following steps:

1. Tap on the home button twice

2. Scroll to the screen on the left where you will see a square gray icon with a circular arrow on the far right.

3. Tap on it to lock the screen.

Do the same to unlock again.

Changing to White on Black Display

Are you bored of the simple default display of your iPhone? You can change the black on white display to white on black and that can be done easily as given below.

1. Tap on 'Settings"

2. Go to "General"

3. Then to "Accessibility"

4. Now toggle "White on Black" to "On".

This one falls under the iPhone's Accessibility features as it offers a high contrast, more easy-to-view display, but it can also be employed just to make your phone look a little different.

Creating Home screen Icon for Any Website

This is another great option for iPhone users that will be of great use when it comes to a particular website you are found of. This option allows you to create an icon for the website if the website doesn't have their own iPhone application and you don't need the help of any web application development company or any software development company. This option will help you add a simple one touch shortcut for any webpage to your iPhone's Safari browser's home screen. It can be done the way provided as below.

1. Simply load the page

2. Click on the "+" button on the home screen

3. Select "Add to Home Screen"

4. Label the shortcut with something appropriate

Opening and Saving PDF in iBooks

You can save any PDF in iBooks so that you can read it from there and that is done as below.

1. Press and hold on the PDF icon

2. You will be shown an option "Open in iBooks"

3. Tap on the option

4. The PDF will be ported over and will be available for view in the application

Turning iBooks Into Audio Books

Another iPhone's accessibility options for the visually impaired users. It is also called the "VoiceOver" feature. This feature reads aloud what is on the phone's screen. This feature makes the turning of iBooks into Audio Books.

To activate VoiceOver you may perform the following steps:

1. Tap on "Settings"

2. Go to "General'

3. Then go to "Accessibility"

4. Toggle "VoiceOver" to "On"

You can then control the speed of narration. Once turned on, you will have your iBooks read out to you. Now you can see how unworthy it is to download audio books from any web application development vendor.

There are lot more iPhone tips and tricks. Surf online or you can explore your phone yourself and get to know new things.

I am a freelance content writer who is currently working on projects like web application development mobile application development, etc. for a software development company based in India.


View the original article here

5 Things You Should Never Delegate

Delegation is the assignment of authority to another person to carry out specific activities. Not everything can be delegated. And the type of things to be delegated depends on your level and stage in business.

There is no shame in asking for help. As your business grows you will need an assistant. Besides that, even when you are small, you still need help so as to create more time for items that are of long-term value like reports, eBooks, courses and books.

It's difficult to do this when you are bogged down with routine tasks. Delegation allows you to use your time and skills optimally. However, here are five things you should never delegate fully.

1. Your Marketing.

If you want to build a success mobile marketing business, then you're going to the head of MARKETING.

Marketing is the lifeblood of any company. You must be the face of the company; the vision carrier; the relentless passionate man or woman who sees no obstacles that can derail a dream. Get help but be fully in charge of your marketing.

2. Your Finances.

Most mobile marketers like to make the money but are not keen on 'dealing with the money'. They feel this is the work of the accountant.

You need to have the figures on your fingertips. The cost of ads and their returns; the advertising costs of various outlets; your lead generation costs; the lifetime value of clients. These are things you need to know every day.

3. Leadership.

You will have to provide leadership to your teams. After all you are the president and what you do is likely to be noticed and interpreted in different ways. You must be aware that your team members are watching and you must be careful about your words and actions.

4. Business development.

You must mentor your long-term associates for better productivity. It is difficult to pass on the responsibility if you want the best performance from individuals who help you make money.

High performance individuals always want to evolve and develop and if you can't allow this, they will leave. They are not necessarily motivated by money.

5. Your values.

The ethics, integrity of your business and what you stand for should be something you articulate all the time. You must be committed to this and be seen to be ready to die for it. It is difficult for someone else to be passionate about your values as you would be.

Mary Wilhite is a Mobile Marketing Specialist, also known as the Mobile Marketing Queen. Teaching small businesses, entrepreneurs, and internet marketers how to attract better customers with mobile marketing devices. Get more of her mobile marketing tips, tricks, and strategies today. Just click here http://marywilhiteblog.com/


View the original article here

Thursday, March 22, 2012

First molybdenite microchip

Molybdenite, a new and very promising material, can surpass the physical limits of silicon. EPFL scientists have proven this by making the first molybdenite microchip, with smaller and more energy efficient transistors.


After having revealed the electronic advantages of molybdenite, EPFL researchers have now taken the next definitive step. The Laboratory of Nanoscale Electronics and Structures (LANES) has made a chip, or integrated circuit, confirming that molybdenite can surpass the physical limits of silicon in terms of miniaturization, electricity consumption, and mechanical flexibility.


"We have built an initial prototype, putting from two to six serial transistors in place, and shown that basic binary logic operations were possible, which proves that we can make a larger chip," explains LANES director Andras Kis, who recently published two articles on the subject in the scientific journal ACS Nano.


In early 2011, the lab unveiled the potential of molybdenum disulfide (MoS2), a relatively abundant, naturally occurring mineral. Its structure and semi-conducting properties make it an ideal material for use in transistors. It can thus compete directly with silicon, the most highly used component in electronics, and on several points it also rivals graphene.


Three atoms thick


"The main advantage of MoS2 is that it allows us to reduce the size of transistors, and thus to further miniaturize them," explains Kis. It has not been possible up to this point to make layers of silicon less than two nanometers thick, because of the risk of initiating a chemical reaction that would oxidize the surface and compromise its electronic properties. Molybdenite, on the other hand, can be worked in layers only three atoms thick, making it possible to build chips that are at least three times smaller. At this scale, the material is still very stable and conduction is easy to control.


Not as greedy


MoS2 transistors are also more efficient. "They can be turned on and off much more quickly, and can be put into a more complete standby mode," Kis explains. Molybdenite is on a par with silicon in terms of its ability to amplify electronic signals, with an output signal that is four times stronger than the incoming signal. This proves that there is "considerable potential for creating more complex chips," Kis says. "With graphene, for example, this amplitude is about 1. Below this threshold, the output voltage would not be sufficient to feed a second, similar chip."


Built in flexibility


Molybdenite also has mechanical properties that make it interesting as a possible material for use in flexible electronics, such as eventually in the design of flexible sheets of chips. These could, for example, be used to manufacture computers that could be rolled up or devices that could be affixed to the skin.


Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:


Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:



The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne. The original article was written by Sarah Perrin.


Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal References:

Branimir Radisavljevic, Michael Brian Whitwick, Andras Kis. Integrated Circuits and Logic Operations Based on Single-Layer MoS2. ACS Nano, 2011; 111110093932007 DOI: 10.1021/nn203715cSimone Bertolazzi, Jacopo Brivio, Andras Kis. Stretching and Breaking of Ultrathin MoS2. ACS Nano, 2011; 111116094409009 DOI: 10.1021/nn203879f

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.


Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.


View the original article here

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Great Cell Phones for Seniors

AT&T has two cell phones for seniors, the Pantech Ease and Pantech Breeze III. There is another AT&T cell phone, the Nokia 6085, that is senior friendly and although it is no longer in their product line up you should still be able to find them through some dealers or private party sources such as eBay. The Pantech Ease features a user friendly interactive touch screen, slide out QWERTY keypad, voice activated GPS (a great feature that will make sure that you always reach your destination safely), easy to use texting for those who want this ability, is blue tooth as well as TTY/TTD compatible and is M3, T4 hearing aid (HAC) rated. The Pantech Breeze III has intuitive menus, labels that are clear and easy to read, Audience earSmart (TM) that enhances your voice and suppresses noise and quick call keys so that you can program numbers that you use frequently and wish to access easily. This phone is also Bluetooth and TTY/TTD compatible plus it is M4, T4 hearing aid (HAC) rated. The Nokia 6085 offers a large keypad that is easy to operate, is TTY and hearing aid compatible. The dealers who are selling this phone seem to be offering an unlocked version, which means that you can choose the best service plan for your needs. If you shop for a Nokia 6085 on eBay you may find some that are unlocked and some that still require you to use the AT&T service plan.

The Pantech Ease and Pantech Breeze III are very similar in terms of features, the main difference is that the Pantech Ease has a slide out QWERTY keypad, which means that the entire front case of the phone is able to be used for the display and the Pantech Breeze III is a flip phone, which allows the keypad to be a bit larger, plus when the phone is closed there is a handy display on the outside of the case that shows the time. Both of these phones are geared towards the seniors who are comfortable with technology, but since they are very compact and easy to carry around even if you don't use all of the features offered they are both quality phones that have been well received in the marketplace.

There are some very handy accessories available for these phones, which include:

For the Pantech Ease

Memory card, car charger, vertical carrying case with clip, horizontal carrying case with clip, ultra-slim vertical black pouch and a variety of decorative gel skins and protective covers.

For the Pantech Breeze III

Car charger, black leather case holder with belt clip and belt loop, fitted leather case and a variety of hard case covers.

Timothy Johnson
AT&T offers two very well designed cell phones for seniors plus an older model that we can still recommend. To fin out about these phones, their features and accessories please visit the following site.
http://www.cellphones4seniorsrwise.com/


View the original article here

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Text Message Monitoring Apps - How to Monitor Your Employee's Text Messages

Monitoring the text messages and other activities of your employee is a good method to ensure that the person is not abusing their privileges or doing other underhanded stuff during working hours. Company cell phones are becoming quite popular and they are great when it comes to improving efficiencies. For example, a sales person on the road could easily be contacted at any time during the day therefore he can be quickly alerted to change route when necessary. However, the same way it is can be used as an advantage it can also be a distraction or a method to communicate messages to the competition.

This is why more employers are interested in the company's mobile phone activities which are similar and as beneficial to observing their worker's computer.

How to get started monitoring text messages?

The first thing which is needed is a special app known as a cell phone surveillance program. These apps when installed on the company's mobile will start to record each and every text message sent or received. As the communication is captured the software will then send the data to the employer via email or to a special surveillance account. This will allow the user to read the text messages; view the phone number in the communication; time and date of the communication.

Since everything is available on the web as a manager you will be able to view the details of the transmissions anywhere providing you can get onto the internet. This means no one will be able to play hanky panky without you knowing it even when you are out of the state or country. Another bonus to this type of technology is the additional features. It can include call history, website tracking and more. However, most companies are usually interested in the cell phone gps tracking feature in which you can actually keep an eye on the location of the worker on a map.

This would mean no straying off route for the sales man or delivery person without your knowledge. By combining the surveillance features you will have a better idea of the productivity than just monitoring their text messages alone.

How do I find an app?

Plenty are available and like most things your search will have to start in a popular search engine under either cell phone surveillance or text message monitoring software. There are quite a few options out there but generally what you will be looking for is something which is compatible with the smart phone and can get the job done. The price will usually be between 50 and 100 bucks for a good application. If anything you can look for a good review website which deals with this technology so that you can have a side by side comparison.

For more information on monitoring text messages then you should visit http://monitortextmessagesguide.com/.


View the original article here

Monday, March 19, 2012

Know More About Reverse Phone Number Lookup

What if you could trace the person who has been calling you up at wee hours of the night and disturbing you? Sounds great, right? The reverse phone number lookup feature makes it possible for you.

Now consider the following situations:

· You are deep in your sleep and suddenly you hear your phone ring. You receive the call, only to find no one answering from the other end. You get irritated but you cannot figure out who the person was!

· You catch your spouse talking to somebody at strange times of the night. When you question him/her, your partner gets baffled and ends up quarreling with you. You are desperate to find out if he/she is cheating on you!

· You are interrupted in your work several times during the day by a phone call. The person on the other end pretends to ask for people, whose names you have never heard of, and who may possibly not even exist! Once again, you want to know who this person is!

· You are in a meeting and your mobile phone has to be kept on 'silent' mode. Meanwhile, you miss a few calls, but don't know who it was. It might have been important, but you missed it! You wish you could have found it out!

What is common in all these cases is that you cannot find who the caller is. Through the reverse phone number lookup facility, you can obtain the details of the person to whom the phone number belongs.

There are many websites which provide the service of reverse phone number lookup. All you need to do is to input the number and you can easily access the information on any person giving you blank calls. Most of these sites are free to use, and hence you can use the reverse phone number lookup to the best of your benefit.

However, if you want to get full details of the person, you can do so by paying a nominal sum of money to the website you are using for the reverse phone number lookup facility. What's more, the fact that you have made an enquiry about a number will also be kept confidential!

So just sit back and relax! It's easy to find out people using the reverse phone number lookup technology. It is indeed a blessing in disguise. Stalkers be warned. There is a technology which can get back to you.

To Find Out More About Reverse Phone Number Look Up Click Here.


View the original article here

Sunday, March 18, 2012

5 Mobile Marketing Productivity Tips You Need To Know

Making more money does not necessarily mean working more hours. You can increase your output and so your income by being more efficient. You can raise your productivity and income by being focused. In addition, you can form good habits that automatically enhance your productivity. Apart from those factors, here are five specific tips you can use to boost your productivity.

1. Have daily goals.

Every day have a set of goals that bring you closer to your grand goals. May be as a mobile marketer you want to dominate your chosen niche of text message marketing. You will need to do something daily that moves you closer.

A goal that is written down is better than one that is in your mind. The mind thinks in pictures and when you write a goal down it brings conviction as more senses are involved when writing.

Keep your goals simple, realistic and attainable. This will require honest self-analysis that will help you estimate the time it takes to complete a task and the resources you require to do it.

2. Start with the toughest task first.

When you start with the toughest tasks you defeat procrastination and your day becomes a success. Small wins motivate you to conquer others.

Tough is relative and what's tough to someone may be easy to another. In addition, what is tough today may be easy 6 months from today after you are used to doing it. However, I think you know what is tough to you. To some people its writing articles, for others it calling customers, yet for others it is doing workout.

3. Maximize your peak times.

You need to identify your peak productivity cycles and schedule your most important tasks during this period. Minor tasks can be performed during off-peak times.

You may find that writing a newsletter to your clients is the most important task and that your peak time is morning 6:00 am to 9:00 am. What you need to do is write the newsletter during this period when your mind is fresh and alert. From my past experience, I have noticed that, most people's peak times are in the mornings. Therefore it would be unwise to reply emails or update your Facebook pages during your peak time if these are minor activities. It would also be wrong for you to watch an in-depth CNN coverage of an earthquake in Iran. This certainly can be done during off-peak seasons.

4. Learn to work in solitude.

Productivity is highest during long uninterrupted blocks of time working solo. Sometimes it is difficult to work in solitude especially for mobile marketers who work from home surrounded with their family members. However, success is about solving problems. And you can solve this by either working late in the night or early in the morning when everyone is asleep or locking yourself in a room for minimum 60 minutes.

This is especially important when you are doing key tasks that require concentration. Your clients will not understand that when you were writing them your 2-year old son was pulling your trousers and you failed change their names on the emails. Now John is receiving an email meant for Elizabeth.

5. Identify milestones.

You need to have small and big milestones on your work. A small milestone may be to write 1000 words. A big milestone may be to write a 150,000-word eBook. To boost productivity have a milestone that you work towards and you don't stop till you hit it. Once you pass the milestone you can reward yourself with a cup of coffee or a pat on your back.

Major milestones are a reason to celebrate. And your body will be anticipating clocking a milestone so as to be pampered. For instance, if you are able to write and finish a 150,000-word eBook and put it for sale, you can treat yourself for lunch when the money starts trickling in.

Mary Wilhite is a Mobile Marketing Specialist, also known as the Mobile Marketing Queen. Teaching small businesses, entrepreneurs, and internet marketers how to attract better customers with mobile marketing devices. Get more of her mobile marketing tips, tricks, and strategies today. Just click here http://marywilhiteblog.com/


View the original article here

Best routes found to self-assembling 3-D shapes

Researchers at Brown and Johns Hopkins universities have found optimal configurations for creating 3-D geometric shapes -- like tiny, highly simplified geodesic domes that assemble by themselves. The Brown team developed the algorithmic tools, and the Johns Hopkins team tested selected configurations. The research may lead to advances from drug-delivery containers to 3-D sensors and electronic circuits.


Results published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


Material chemists and engineers would love to figure out how to create self-assembling shells, containers or structures that could be used as tiny drug-carrying containers or to build 3-D sensors and electronic devices.


There have been some successes with simple 3-D shapes such as cubes, but the list of possible starting points that could yield the ideal self-assembly for more complex geometric configurations gets long fast. For example, while there are 11 2-D arrangements for a cube, there are 43,380 for a dodecahedron (12 equal pentagonal faces). Creating a truncated octahedron (14 total faces -- six squares and eight hexagons) has 2.3 million possibilities.


"The issue is that one runs into a combinatorial explosion," said Govind Menon, associate professor of applied mathematics at Brown University. "How do we search efficiently for the best solution within such a large dataset? This is where math can contribute to the problem."


In a paper published in the Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences, researchers from Brown and Johns Hopkins University determined the best 2-D arrangements, called planar nets, to create self-folding polyhedra with dimensions of a few hundred microns, the size of a small dust particle. The strength of the analysis lies in the combination of theory and experiment. The team at Brown devised algorithms to cut through the myriad possibilities and identify the best planar nets to yield the self-folding 3-D structures. Researchers at Johns Hopkins then confirmed the nets' design principles with experiments.


"Using a combination of theory and experiments, we uncovered design principles for optimum nets which self-assemble with high yields," said David Gracias, associate professor in of chemical and biomolecular engineering at Johns Hopkins and a co-corresponding author on the paper. "In doing so, we uncovered striking geometric analogies between natural assembly of proteins and viruses and these polyhedra, which could provide insight into naturally occurring self-assembling processes and is a step toward the development of self-assembly as a viable manufacturing paradigm."


"This is about creating basic tools in nanotechnology," said Menon, co-corresponding author on the paper. "It's important to explore what shapes you can build. The bigger your toolbox, the better off you are."


While the approach has been used elsewhere to create smaller particles at the nanoscale, the researchers at Brown and Johns Hopkins used larger sizes to better understand the principles that govern self-folding polyhedra.


The researchers sought to figure out how to self-assemble structures that resemble the protein shells viruses use to protect their genetic material. As it turns out, the shells used by many viruses are shaped like dodecahedra (a simplified version of a geodesic dome like the Epcot Center at Disney World). But even a dodecahedron can be cut into 43,380 planar nets. The trick is to find the nets that yield the best self-assembly. Menon, with the help of Brown undergraduate students Margaret Ewing and Andrew "Drew" Kunas, sought to winnow the possibilities. The group built models and developed a computer code to seek out the optimal nets, finding just six that seemed to fit the algorithmic bill.


The students got acquainted with their assignment by playing with a set of children's toys in various geometric shapes. They progressed quickly into more serious analysis. "We started randomly generating nets, trying to get all of them. It was like going fishing in a lake and trying to count all the species of fish," said Kunas, whose concentration is in applied mathematics. After tabulating the nets and establishing metrics for the most successful folding maneuvers, "we got lists of nets with the best radius of gyration and vertex connections, discovering which nets would be the best for production for the icosahedron, dodecahedron, and truncated octahedron for the first time."


Gracias and colleagues at Johns Hopkins, who have been working with self-assembling structures for years, tested the configurations from the Brown researchers. The nets are nickel plates with hinges that have been soldered together in various 2-D arrangements. Using the options presented by the Brown researchers, the Johns Hopkins's group heated the nets to around 360 degrees Fahrenheit, the point at which surface tension between the solder and the nickel plate causes the hinges to fold upward, rotate and eventually form a polyhedron. "Quite remarkably, just on heating, these planar nets fold up and seal themselves into these complex 3-D geometries with specific fold angles," Gracias said.


"What's amazing is we have no control over the sequence of folds, but it still works," Menon added.


Contributing authors include Shivendra Pandey from Johns Hopkins and Nghi Nguyen from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. The National Science Foundation funded the research.


Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:


Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:



The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Brown University.


Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

S. Pandey, M. Ewing, A. Kunas, N. Nguyen, D. H. Gracias, G. Menon. Algorithmic design of self-folding polyhedra. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1110857108

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.


Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.


View the original article here

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Get Cash for Smartphones Online in Time for the Holidays

The holidays are fast approaching, which means that millions of Americans are starting to worry about money more than usual. People are beginning to buy their holiday presents, which can become very expensive very quickly. Managing to afford those presents can be a challenge, especially during tough economic times like these. That's why it's a good idea to look around your house to see if you have any old belongings that you no longer need. You can take those old items and sell them for some extra money that will help you through the holiday season. For example, you can get a lot of cash for smartphones that you may have lying around in your storage space.

Millions of Americans have extra phones sitting around their homes that they just don't use. It's incredibly common to replace cellphones every two years or so because that's how long most cellphone contracts last, and there are always special deals that offer free phones or amazing discounts for people who sign on for two years. So you probably have some old phones somewhere in your house, and you can get cash for smartphones by simply selling those to someone who can use them. Many times, people don't know what the best way to sell their old phones is because there aren't a lot of physical retail stores that buy used phones. The easiest and fastest way to get cash for smartphones is to sell them online.

People who try to earn cash for smartphones online generally try to do it on their own. Many people start out by trying to list their phones on websites like Craigslist or eBay, but there are big disadvantages to using either of those websites. With Craigslist, you may wind up dealing with an untrustworthy buyer that could try to steal your phone or rip you off with fake money. On eBay, you will wind up having to pay some listing and closing fees that will eat into your profit, and you may end up dealing with buyers who have a lot of questions or who don't want to pay when they win the auction. You can easily avoid those problems by simply selling your phone to a company that wants to buy it from you directly. To do so, you only have to fill out an online form that describes what model of phone you have, what condition it is in and what kind of extra accessories come with it. You will get more cash for smartphones if your phones are in excellent condition and if you have all of the original packaging, but you will still get a good amount of money back even if your phone no longer works. The company that gives you cash for smartphones likely has a team of technicians that can either repair the phone or take it apart to sell it for parts, so they will happily buy your old phone no matter what condition it is in. Sell your old phone online this holiday season so you can have a little more money in your pocket to help you and your loved ones better enjoy the holidays.

Sell phones

We'll Buy Your iPhone in ANY Condition. Used or broken, sell your iPhone even if it's missing a battery and charger... we don't care. We'll give you cash for it anyway


View the original article here

Friday, March 16, 2012

S-t-r-e-t-c-h-i-n-g electrical conductance to the limit

Individual molecules have been used to create electrical components like resistors, transistors and diodes that mimic the properties of familiar semiconductors. But according to Nongjian (NJ) Tao, a researcher at the Biodesign Institute at ASU, unique properties inherent in single molecules also may allow clever designers to produce novel devices whose behavior falls outside the performance observed in conventional electronics.


In research appearing in a recent issue of Nature Nanotechnology, Tao describes a method for mechanically controlling the geometry of a single molecule, situated in a junction between a pair of gold electrodes that form a simple circuit. The manipulations produced over tenfold increase in conductivity.


The unusual, often non-intuitive characteristics of single molecules may eventually be introduced into a broad range of microelectronics, suitable for applications including biological and chemical sensing electronic and mechanical devices.


Delicate molecular manipulations requiring patience and finesse are routine for Tao, whose research at Biodesign's Center for Bioelectronics and Biosensors has included work on molecular diodes, graphene behavior and molecular imaging techniques. Nevertheless, he was surprised at the outcome described in the current paper: "If you have a molecule attached to electrodes, it can stretch like a rubber band," he says. "If it gets longer, most people tend to think that the conductivity will decrease. A longer wire is less conductive than a shorter wire."


Indeed, diminishing conductivity through a molecule is commonly observed when the distance between the electrodes attached to its surface is increased and the molecule becomes elongated. But according to Tao, if you stretch the molecule enough, something unexpected happens: the conductance goes up -- by a huge amount. "We see at least 10 times greater conductivity, simply by pulling the molecule."


As Tao explains, the intriguing result is a byproduct of the laws of quantum mechanics, which dictate the behavior of matter at the tiniest scales: "The conductivity of a single molecule is not simply inversely proportional to length. It depends on the energy level alignment."


In the metal leads of the electrodes, electrons can move about freely but when they come to an interface -- in this case, a molecule that sits in the junction between electrodes -- they have to overcome an energy barrier. The height of this energy barrier is critical to how readily electrons can pass through the molecule. By applying a mechanical force to the molecule, the barrier is lowered, improving conductance.


"Theoretically, people have thought of this as a possibility, but this is a demonstration that it really happens," Tao says. "If you stretch the molecule and geometrically increase the length, it energetically lowers the barrier so electrons can easily go through. If you think in optical terms, it becomes more transparent to electrons."


The reason for this has to do with a property known as force-induced resonant tunneling. This occurs when the molecular energy moves closer to the Fermi level of the electrodes -- that is, toward the region of optimal conductance. Thus, as the molecule is stretched, it causes a decrease in the tunneling energy barrier.


For the experiments, Tao's group used 1,4'-Benzenedithiol, the most widely studied entity for molecular electronics. Further experiments demonstrated that the transport of electrons through the molecule underwent a corresponding decrease as the distance between the electrodes was reduced, causing the molecule's geometry to shift from a stretched condition to a relaxed or squeezed state. "We have to do this thousands of times to be sure the effect is robust and reproducible."


In addition to the discovery's practical importance, the new data show close agreement with theoretical models of molecular conductance, which had often been at variance with experimental values, by orders of magnitude.


Tao stresses that single molecules are compelling candidates for a new types of electronic devices, precisely because they can exhibit very different properties from those observed in conventional semiconductors.


Microelectromechanical systems or MEMS are just one domain where the versatile properties of single molecules are likely to make their mark. These diminutive creations represent a $40 billion a year industry and include such innovations as optical switches, gyroscopes for cars, lab-on-chip biomedical applications and microelectronics for mobile devices.


"In the future, when people design devices using molecules, they will have a new toolbox they can use."


Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:


Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:



The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Arizona State University.


Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

Christopher Bruot, Joshua Hihath, Nongjian Tao. Mechanically controlled molecular orbital alignment in single molecule junctions. Nature Nanotechnology, 2011; DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2011.212

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.


Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.


View the original article here

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Imperfections may improve graphene sensors

Although they found that graphene makes very good chemical sensors, researchers at Illinois have discovered an unexpected "twist" -- that the sensors are better when the graphene is "worse" -- more imperfections improved performance.


"This is quite the opposite of what you would want for transistors, for example," explained Eric Pop, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and a member of the interdisciplinary research team. "Finding that the less perfect they were, the better they worked, was counter intuitive at first."


The research group, which includes researchers from both chemical engineering and electrical engineering, and from a startup company, Dioxide Materials, reported their results in the November 23, 2011 issue of Advanced Materials.


"The objective of this work was to understand what limits the sensitivity of simple, two-terminal graphene chemiresistors, and to study this in the context of inexpensive devices easily manufactured by chemical vapor deposition (CVD)," stated lead authors Amin Salehi-Khojin and David Estrada.


The researchers found that the response of graphene chemiresistors depends on the types and geometry of their defects.


"Nearly-pristine graphene chemiresistors are less sensitive to analyte molecules because adsorbates bind to point defects, which have low resistance pathways around them," noted Salehi-Khojin, a research scientist at Dioxide Materials and post-doctoral research associate in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering (ChemE) at Illinois. "As a result, adsorption at point defects only has a small effect on the overall resistance of the device. On the other hand, micrometer-sized line defects or continuous lines of point defects are different because no easy conduction paths exist around such defects, so the resistance change after adsorption is significant."


"This can lead to better and cheaper gas sensors for a variety of applications such as energy, homeland security and medical diagnostics" said Estrada who is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.


According to the authors, the two-dimensional nature of defective, CVD-grown graphene chemiresistors causes them to behave differently than carbon nanotube chemiresistors. This sensitivity is further improved by cutting the graphene into ribbons of width comparable to the line defect dimensions, or micrometers in this study.


"What we determined is that the gases we were sensing tend to bind to the defects," Pop said. "Surface defects in graphene are either point-, wrinkle-, or line-like. We found that the points do not matter very much and the lines are most likely where the sensing happens."


"The graphene ribbons with line defects appear to offer superior performance as graphene sensors," said ChemE professor emeritus and Dioxide Materials CEO Richard Masel. "Going forward, we think we may be able engineer the line defects to maximize the material's sensitivity. This novel approach should allow us to produce inexpensive and sensitive chemical sensors with the performance better than that of carbon nanotube sensors."


Pop is also affiliated with the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory at Illinois. Additional authors of the paper, Polycrystalline Graphene Ribbons as Chemiresistors," include Kevin Y. Lin, Myung-Ho Bae, and Feng Xiong. This work was supported by Dioxide Materials, by ONR grants N00014-09-1-0180 and N00014-10-1-0061, and the NDSEG Graduate Fellowship (D.E.).


Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:


Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:



The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Illinois College of Engineering.


Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

Amin Salehi-Khojin, David Estrada, Kevin Y. Lin, Myung-Ho Bae, Feng Xiong, Eric Pop, Richard I. Masel. Polycrystalline Graphene Ribbons as Chemiresistors. Advanced Materials, 2011; DOI: 10.1002/adma.201102663

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.


Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.


View the original article here

iPhone Repair: 3 Tips For Newbies (Tip 3 Could Save You A Ton Of Time)

You have about four options to get your iPhone repaired. You can take it back to its maker (which is expensive). You can find someone who's learning how to repair iPhones in their bedroom or back seat (your phone could end just being a practice session gone wrong - it happens all the time). You may find a shop that repairs iPhones and toasters. It's Like going to Vegas except, what happens to your iPhone stays with your iPhone and you, (good or bad). You could use a mail-in service. You'll be without your iPhone for some time, and it you'll pay plenty for the trouble. If you get it back and something is not right, you'll be back at the post office or FEDEX and you'll be fed up.

Here are 3 tips to make it happen fast, right, and at a reasonable price.

TIP # 1:

Find an established business with a brick and mortar location, which will be there when you need it. Check the shop out on Google Places, Yahoo, and yelp.

TIP # 2:

Ask the shop for at least one customer you can call. Call them.

Tip # 3:

Like any industry, there are high-end providers. Using a high-end provider may actually cost the same of less. At the minimum, don't use a shop that won't give you an estimate over the phone, based on what you are telling them is wrong with your phone.

The ultimate in service is a shop which will give you a firm quote over the phone, and provide valet service. Valet service means they'll come to you, transfer your data to a loaner iPhone in front of you, (so you have zero down time) and they'll return to you with your repaired iPhone no more than 24 hours later. However, don't be fooled by a repair person who is simply operating from their vehicle or home, it is likely you won't be able to find them for warranty work.

Few shops do valet-like service, but they do exist. The cost for such a service should be minimal, at most. If you can't find a shop which provides a valet-like service, the next best thing is to find one with a fast mail-in service which offers REAL time-line guarantees. Most mail-in services are only fast if you pay a substantial amount of money for the speed. You can find one which will get it back to you fast (guaranteed) without charging much for the speed.

Apple products are well made, well loved, and it is only natural that very capable and reasonable repair shops would rise up through the weeds. By following the above tips, you're bound to find an honest, experienced shop - one of the flowers, among the weeds.

What should you do next?

Please, ask questions. We'll answer any question you have about any Apple device. It is our pleasure to answer it for you, for free and without any obligation of any kind. We have done thousands of repairs. We are a family run business with two locations in Southern California. You can contact Kort, Julie or Scott Linden at: http://www.itechrepairplus.com/ Thanks for reading this - Scott R. Linden


View the original article here

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Making a light-harvesting antenna from scratch: Biomimetic antenna for gathering sunlight may one day transform solar-powered devices

Sometimes when people talk about solar energy, they tacitly assume that we're stuck with some version of the silicon solar cell and its technical and cost limitations. Not so.


The invention of the solar cell, in 1941, was inspired by a newfound understanding of semiconductors, materials that can use light energy to create mobile electrons -- and ultimately an electrical current.


Silicon solar cells have almost nothing to do with the biological photosystems in tree leaves and pond scum that use light energy to push electrons across a membrane -- and ultimately create sugars and other organic molecules.


At the time, nobody understood these complex assemblages of proteins and pigments well enough to exploit their secrets for the design of solar cells.


But things have changed.


At Washington University in St. Louis's Photosynthetic Antenna Research Center (PARC) scientists are exploring native biological photosystems, building hybrids that combine natural and synthetic parts, and building fully synthetic analogs of natural systems.


One team has just succeeded in making a crucial photosystem component -- a light-harvesting antenna -- from scratch. The new antenna is modeled on the chlorosome found in green bacteria.


Chlorosomes are giant assemblies of pigment molecules. Perhaps Nature's most spectacular light-harvesting antennae, they allow green bacteria to photosynthesize even in the dim light in ocean deeps.


Dewey Holten, PhD, professor of chemistry in Arts & Sciences, ard collaborator Christine Kirmaier, PhD, research professor of chemistry are part of a team that is trying to make synthetic chlorosomes. Holten and Kirmaier use ultra-fast laser spectroscopy and other analytic techniques to follow the rapid-fire energy transfers in photosynthesis.


His team's latest results were described in a recent issue of New Journal of Chemistry.


Chlorosomes


Biological systems that capture the energy in sunlight and convert it to the energy of chemical bonds come in many varieties, but they all have two basic parts: the light harvesting complexes, or antennae, and the reaction center complexes. The antennae consist of many pigment molecules that absorb photons and pass the excitation energy to the reaction centers.


In the reaction centers, the excitation energy sets off a chain of reactions that create ATP, a molecule often called the energy currency of the cell because the energy stored ATP powers most cellular work. Cellular organelles selectively break those bonds in ATP molecules when they need an energy hit for cellular work.


Green bacteria, which live in the lower layers of ponds, lakes and marine environments, and in the surface layers of sediments, have evolved large and efficient light-harvesting antennae very different from those found in plants bathing in sunlight on Earth's surface.


The antennae consist of highly organized three-dimensional systems of as many as 250,000 pigment molecules that absorb light and funnel the light energy through a pigment/protein complex called a baseplate to a reaction center, where it triggers chemical reactions that ultimately produce ATP.


In plants and algae (and in the baseplate in the green bacteria) photo pigments are bound to protein scaffolds, which space and orient the pigment molecules in such a way that energy is efficiently transferred between them.


But chlorosomes don't have a protein scaffold. Instead the pigment molecules self -assemble into a structure that supports the rapid migration of excitation energy.


This is intriguing because it suggests chlorosome mimics might be easier to incorporate in the design of solar devices than biomimetics that are made of proteins as well as pigments.


Synthetic pigments


The goal of the work described in the latest journal article was to see whether synthesized pigment molecules could be induced to self-assemble. The process by which the pigments align and bond is not well understood.


"The structure of the pigment assemblies in chlorosomes is the subject of intense debate," Holten says, "and there are several competing models for it."


Given this uncertainty, the scientists wanted to study many variations of a pigment molecule to see what favored and what blocked assembly.


A chemist wishing to design pigments that mimic those found in photosynthetic organisms first builds one of three molecular frameworks. All three are macrocycles, or giant rings: porphyrin, chlorin and bacteriochlorin.


"One of the members of our team, Jon Lindsey can synthesize analogs of all three pigment types from scratch," says Holten. (Lindsey, PhD, is Glaxo Professor of Chemistry at North Carolina State University.)


In the past, chemists making photo pigments have usually started with porphyrins, which are the easiest of the three types of macrocycles to synthesize. But Lindsey also has developed the means to synthesize chlorins, the basis for the pigments found in the chlorosomes of green bacteria. The chlorins push the absorption to the red end of the visible spectrum, an area of the spectrum scientists would like to be able to harvest for energy.


Key to pigment self-assembly are the metal atoms and hydroxyl (OH) and carbonyl (C=O) groups in the pigment molecules (the groups shown in color in the above illustration).


Doctoral student Olga Mass and coworkers in Lindsey's lab synthesized 30 different chlorins, systematically adding or removing chemical groups thought to be important for self-assembly but also attaching peripheral chemical groups that take up space and might make it harder for the molecules to stack or that shift around the distributions of electrons so that the molecules might stack more easily.


Testing for aggregation


The powdered pigments were carefully packaged and shipped by Fed Ex (because the Post Office won't ship chemicals) to Holten's lab at WUSTL and to David Bocian's lab at the University of California at Riverside.


Scientists in both labs made up green-tinctured solutions of each of the 30 molecules in small test tubes and then poked and prodded the solutions by means of analytical techniques to see whether the pigment had aggregated and, if so, how much had formed the assemblies. Holten's lab studied their absorption of light and their fluorescence (which indicated the presence of monomers, since assemblies don't normally fluoresce) and Bocian's lab studied their vibrational properties, which are determined by the network of bonds in the molecule or pigment aggregate as a whole.


In one crucial test Joseph Springer, a PhD student in Holten's lab, compared the absorption spectrum of a pigment in a polar solvent that would prevent it from self-assembling to the spectrum of the pigment in a nonpolar solvent that would allow the molecules to interact with one another and form assemblies.


"You can see them aggregate," Springer says. "A pigment that is totally in solution is clear, but colored a brilliant green. When it aggregates, the solution becomes a duller green and you can see tiny flecks in the liquid."


The absorption spectra indicated that some pigments formed extensive assemblies and that the steric and electronic properties of the molecules predicted the degree to which they would assemble.


Up next


Although this project focused on self-assembly, the PARC scientists have already taken the next step toward a practical solar device. "With Pratim Biswas, PhD, the Lucy and Stanley Lopata Professor and chair of the Department of Energy, Environmental & Chemical Engineering, we've since demonstrated that we can get the pigments to self-assemble on surfaces, which is the next step in using them to design solar devices," says Holten.


"We're not trying to make a more efficient solar cell in the next six months," Holten cautions. "Our goal instead is to develop fundamental understanding so that we can enable the next generation of more efficient solar powered devices."


Biomimicry hasn't always worked. Engineers often point out early flying machines that attempted to mimic birds didn't work and that flying machines stayed aloft only when nventors abandoned biological models and came up with their own designs.


But there is nothing predestined or inevitable about this. As biological knowledge has exploded in the past 50 years, mimicking nature has become a smarter strategy. Biomimetic or biohybrid designs already have solved significant engineering problems in other areas and promise to greatly improve the design of solar powered devices as well.


After all, Nature has had billions of years to experiment with ways to harness the energy in sunlight for useful work.


Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
and Google +1:


Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:



The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Washington University in St. Louis. The original article was written by Diana Lutz.


Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

Olga Mass, Dinesh R. Pandithavidana, Marcin Ptaszek, Koraliz Santiago, Joseph W. Springer, Jieying Jiao, Qun Tang, Christine Kirmaier, David F. Bocian, Dewey Holten, Jonathan S. Lindsey. De novo synthesis and properties of analogues of the self-assembling chlorosomal bacteriochlorophylls. New Journal of Chemistry, 2011; 35 (11): 2671 DOI: 10.1039/C1NJ20611G

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.


Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.


View the original article here

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

iPhone - Ready for Anything

When you break your iPhone it can be a highly gut wrenching and upsetting experience that feels almost like you lost a child or a pet - or like you lost your credit card. iPhones are very expensive and they cost a lot to replace. Thankfully iPhone repair means that you don't necessarily need to replace your expensive phone and rather you can simply repair it and get it to work as good as if it were new again.

However at the same time even if your iPhone repair does a good job, that still means you are going to be left without your iPhone for a certain amount of time and during this period you are likely to find yourself feeling rather at lose ends without that ubiquitous device that lets you do so much and access so much. You are also likely to be concerned though about all of the data on your iPhone and that might mean losing photographs that you were very proud of, or having to hand your iPhone in with rather incriminating or personal images on it, or with your bank details.

When this happens then it makes sense to as quickly as possible try and back up any data that you have on there, and to meanwhile delete or hide anything that you don't want the iPhone repair company to see. This is a strategy you can use in order to remove things that you are worried about being seen and to make sure that you don't lose anything important and it's a great way to look after your phone.

However at the same time there are always going to be limitations on what you can do. If you have a cracked iPhone screen for instance then you may struggle to navigate in order to delete anything or install anything. Likewise if you are syncing with your PC some damage will render this ineffective too.

There is a solution of course, and that is to make sure that you prepare your iPhone for this possible eventuality at all times. Think about what would happen if your iPhone were damaged and make sure that it's ready should this happen. To do that you should just make sure to back up and then delete any very private files you have on your iPhone. There is no real reason to keep private photos or e-mails stored on there, and you are better off having them on your computer in a compressed and passworded folder.

Likewise you should make regular backups of all your files and make sure that you can retrieve anything you should need to. You can do this by syncing the iPhone with your PC, or by installing certain apps on the device that you can use to protect your files designed for making back ups. Think about it right now - if you broke your phone today what would you be concerned about losing? And then make sure that you combat all of these problems.

Of course prevention is better than cure, but if your iPhone is broken then follow the links for iPhone repair.


View the original article here