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Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Apple Time Capsule

Copied from http://www.apple.com/timecapsule/ , all rights reserved.

Time Capsule802.11n

Automatic wireless backup for your Mac.

Introducing Time Capsule. Automatic wireless backup for your Mac. Available in 500GB and 1TB models.

Time Machine screens

Automatic backup

Time Capsule is a revolutionary backup device that works wirelessly with Time Machine in Mac OS X Leopard. It automatically backs up everything, so you no longer have to worry about losing your digital life.
Learn more

Wi-Fi icon

Wi-Fi base station

Time Capsule is also a full-featured 802.11n Wi-Fi base station. Every computer in your house can work off a wireless network at blazing speeds. And they can back up wirelessly to the same Time Capsule.
Learn more

Nuclear Reactors made from Carbon Fiber?

Don't laugh, a researcher at Clemson shows Promise to remove the reactor bottleneck.


Carbon fibers that are only one-10th the size of a human hair but three times stronger than steel may hold up to the intense heat and radiation of next-generation nuclear power generators, providing a safety mechanism. The “Gen IV” power-generating reactors are being designed to provide low-cost electricity, but with a built-in safety mechanism current reactors do not have.

The Department of Energy (DoE) has awarded Clemson University chemical engineering professor Amod Ogale, deputy director of the Center for Advanced Engineering Fibers and Films (CAEFF), a $450,000 grant to research carbon fibers embedded into a carbon matrix that do not melt in extreme temperatures for potential use in Gen IV power generators. About 20 percent of electricity produced in the United States is from nuclear sources.

“One proposed design of the next generation of nuclear plants will consist of a helium-cooled generator that will operate in the range of 1,200 to 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit,” Ogale said. “A critical safety requirement for this reactor is that it can shut down safely in the event of a malfunction where coolant flow is interrupted. Steel alloys currently used internally in reactors melt at the peak temperature of 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit, where carbon-fiber composites do not.”

Carbon-fiber composites already are used successfully in jetliner brake systems because of their ability to withstand high temperatures without melting. However, their performance in a nuclear environment is not adequately understood.

Ogale and his team will study the neutron-radiation damage effects on carbon fibers.

His prior research has shown that including carbon nanotubes (large molecules of carbon that are tube-shaped and 30 nanometers in size) in carbon fibers leads to the development of a more uniform texture that improves the properties of the ultra-thin carbon fibers.

In his research, Ogale expects to generate high graphitic crystallinity, a solid-ordered pattern that is evenly distributed so that any changes in fiber properties due to radiation can be minimized.

Irradiation experiments will be conducted in collaboration with researchers at Oak Ridge National Labs. South Carolina State University researchers also will participate in the study.

“This research will lead to a fundamental understanding of how the nanotubes set themselves up to provide radiation-damage tolerance to carbon fibers,” said Ogal

Power Pipe water heat recovery


Power-PipeTM
Drainwater Heat Recovery System





Power-PipeTM works on the principle of gravity film exchange, a principal that takes advantage of ultra-high heat transfer rates and the thermal-conductive properties of copper.

The Power-PipeTM is an all-copper section of drainpipe. As water falls down a vertical section of drain pipe, it clings to the inner surface in a very thin film. The heat from this film is transferred easily and efficiently to the cold water circulating in the Power-PipeTM around the outside of the drain pipe.

The incoming cold water is preheated before going into the water heater and plumbing fixtures thereby saving money and energy while increasing shower-capacity. The 60 inch unit can bring the cold water temperature up from 10 degrees C to as much as 24 degrees C in the wintertime.

Power-PipeTM raises the temperature of incoming cold water by recycling free heat from waste water going down the drain. Approximately 80% to 90% of all hot water energy goes down the drain, allowing the Power-PipeTM to recycle as much as 60% of the wasted heat. The more hot water you use, the more energy you save. This is especially beneficial in large process heating applications.

The Power-PipeTM is completely passive, having no moving parts or heating elements so there's nothing to wear out, and the self-cleaning design assures maintenance-free operation. It will fit into almost any house, replacing a section of drainpipe in the basement.

Click here to see a photo of a Power-PipeTM installed.

New Apple MacBook - AIR

The World's thinnest notebook MacBook Air
It's real. The fabled MacBook Air actually exists. It's ultra-thin, can have a normal hard drive or a solid state one and, except for a couple ports, it's all about wireless connectivity. It's a stunning .16 inches thick at the bottom and .76 inches on the top. The black keyboard (reminds me of some of those black-over-aluminum Braun designs) is LED backlit, sightly recessed MacBook-style, with rounded edges all around. The latch is magnetic and has a gorgeous 13.3-inch screen with ambient-light sensor and, get this, multitouch trackpad. Check the full specs, 20-image gallery and continuous updates after the jump:

MacBook Air

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The MacBook Air is all "green": bromide and PVR free, packaging is 56% smaller and mercury and arsenic-free glass. Looks like Al Gore will be getting one to fly in his private jet.

Amazingly enough, it's only $1,799.

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Technical specs

• .16 to .75-inch thickness on top
• 12.8 x 8.94 inches
• 3 pounds
• 5 hours of battery life with everything running

• Intel Core 2 Duo Processor at 1.6 or 1.8GHz, motherboard the length of a pencil.
• 800MHz frontside bus.
• 2GB RAM 667MHz DDR2 standard.

• 13.3-inch screen, LED backlit.
• 1,280 x 800 pixels
• Micro-DVI adapter (for DVI, VGA, composite and S-Video output)
• Intel GMA X3100 Graphics processor with 144MB RAM shared

• 1.8-inch 80GB HD or 64GB Solid State Drive (no moving pieces, but for a stunning $1,300 price increase!)
• Multitouch trackpad with gestures. Pans, zooms, rotates, etc.
• 802.11n and Bluetooth 2.1.
• Optional external HD for $99, USB-bus powered.
• Full backlit keyboard.
• One USB 2.0, one audio port, one Micro-DVI

[Apple]

This Aussie kid is great


http://view.break.com/433536 - Watch more free videos

This kid owned that reporter. Good for him. I wouldn’t take off the glasses either. I mean who does this chick think she is? Dude threw a party and it got out of hand. Big deal. It’s happens to the best of us. That’ why Newport invented noise violations. To be honest, I actually didn’t think he was being a jerk at all until the reporter became infatuated with him taking off the sunglasses. She left him with no choice but to be defiant

2009 Cadillac CTS V fastest sedan in the world according to GM

So we have told you everything about the 2009 CTS-V. So what was Bob Lutz going to talk about at the official press conference?

Well, how about this bit of bravado: We believe it to be the fastest four-door sedan in the world.

Wow. We chatted after the conference with a GM guy we know and said, "You know an M5 will do the quarter in 12.7 seconds, right? And an S65 AMG will do it in 12.6, right?"

"Yup," he said. "We're faster."

Looking forward to verifying that one at the earliest opportunity. -- Daniel Pund, Senior Editor, Detroit

The Chismillionaire of Sedans- Maserati Collezione Cento




The Maserati Quattroporte "Collezione Cento" is undoubtedly decked out in the coolest outfit.

Maserati even points out that its flagship is "dressed for the occasion in a sophisticated Italian outfit." Details include a new ivory exterior paint job, underscored by 20-inch wheels with polished rims. The cabin gets ritzy leather seats with diamond-shaped stitching and matching buttons, calling to mind the ultra-coordinated outfits of such fashion mavens as Jacqueline Kennedy. In the cabin there are mother-of-pearl inlays.

But it's not all about glitz. Technology takes center stage in the Collezione Cento. Backseat passengers get what Maserati calls a "multimedia paradise." The upscale entertainment system is housed in the rear armrest and bundles such goodies as an iPod docking station, a SIM card port and a USB port. The armrest also has a built-in keypad for Internet browsing and e-mail access. Two large touchscreens are set into the back of the front seats.

Maserati says it's only building 100 of these beauties.

What this means to you: This is the epitome of cool Italian charm. — Anita Lienert, Corresponden

Chismillionaire Detroit Auto Show Report- Ferrari 430 BioFuel


You don't often use the words "Ferrari" and "tree hugger" in the same sentence. But the Italian marque seems to be headed in a decidedly green direction with the debut of its Ferrari F430 Spider Biofuel at the 2008 Detroit Auto Show.

The unveiling of the Spider Biofuel was done with very little fanfare, which led some industry observers to question just how dedicated Ferrari is to going green in a big way. Ferrari said it took the wraps off its green prototype "in recognition of growing interest in North America in alternative sources of energy." It said the "ultimate aim" is to cut fuel consumption and emissions on the car by 40 percent by 2012.

Ferrari's green machine shows that the company "can offer the technological solutions the market demands without impinging on the distinctly sporty, high-performance character and supreme driving pleasure of the unique cars it builds at Maranello," it said in a statement.

Ferrari says technical characteristics have remained unchanged with respect to a standard production engine on this prototype. "The use of this type of biofuel and the modifications made have resulted in a significant increase in maximum power output (plus-10 horsepower at the same rpm) and torque (plus-4 percent), yet overall weight was unchanged," the company said in a statement. The Spider Biofuel delivers a 5 percent drop in CO2 emissions, according to the automaker.

Chismillionaire Detroit Auto Show Report- Corvette ZR1



Here, finally, is the real story.

"Greater Than 620 Horsepower"
All right, so there's one thing that we can't put a final figure to and that's the important one: the ZR1's power output.

But Ron Meegan, the assistant chief engineer for the new 2009 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1's supercharged V8 (and formerly a member of the original ZR-1's engine team from 1990-'95), says he expects that once the new car's supercharged 6.2-liter V8 is certified, it will produce "greater than 620 horsepower at 6,500 rpm and 595 pound-feet of torque in the 3,600-to-4,000-rpm range, depending on some last-minute tuning items."

So even GM doesn't have a final power figure yet. Although you can be sure that if Meegan's superiors allowed him to mention any figure to us, they're not worried about making those numbers. Remember, when the current-generation Z06 was unveiled, it came with a claim of 500 hp, and when the production car arrived it had a rating of 505 hp.

Whether the ZR1 is rated at 625 hp or 633 hp or whatever, it won't just be the most powerful Corvette production vehicle ever (including ones measured by the grossly overstated "SAE gross" figures of pre-1972), it won't even be close. The power produced by the ZR1's LS9 engine will be roughly the equivalent of three 1980s-era Corvette small-block V8s bolted together. It'll produce more power than the Corvette C6.R that races at the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

The Nordschleife on Chrome Rims, Y'all
ZR1 chief engineer Tadge Juechter says, "If a buyer really wants them, he can get chrome wheels on it," although he's letting us know that he would never do such a thing and he thinks you shouldn't either. But the ZR1 isn't a racecar.

Think of the Corvette lineup in Porsche 911 terms. The base coupe and convertible Corvette are analogous to the standard Carrera and Carrera S. The Z06 is the GT3 — the loud, hard-core choice of the performance junkie. The ZR1 is the Porsche Turbo. It's devastatingly fast, but it's also intended to be civilized. It's available with a head-up instrument display, power-adjustable seats, high-end audio and Delphi's smooth-riding MagneRide suspension dampers. It's no raw-boned racer. Hell, at 3,300 to 3,400 pounds, the ZR1 is almost 300 pounds heavier than a Z06.

Juechter adds, "It's sort of like the Turbo but for less money and with performance — more like the Carrera GT."

That's big talk. But, while Chevrolet is not yet making specific performance claims, Juechter notes that the ZR1 will be faster, quicker and more responsive in every way than a Z06. "You won't see a huge difference in 0-60 mph because even the Z06 is traction-limited through most of that," he says. "But in the quarter-mile and tests from zero to 100 mph to zero, there will be big differences."

And just to up the ZR1's chest-puffing quotient, Juechter notes this car "will be able to take the production-car track record at any racetrack." Ex-squeeze me? And no, the company has not done an officially timed run at the Nürburgring yet.

As for top speed, Juechter says only that the 200-mph speedometer of the standard and Z06 Corvettes has been replaced with a 220-mph unit, because the standard one is "grossly inadequate."

Hot Wheels
By now you probably have noticed that the ZR1 looks like, well, a C6 Corvette. The silhouette is, of course, the same and the overall dimensions are essentially identical to a Z06.

But there's a goodly helping of racecar bluster applied to this vehicle. It's hard to miss the hole in the hood that measures roughly 19 by 16 inches, for example. A clear polycarbonate window lets you see the intercooler cover with its fancy script. This is the ZR1's signature styling flourish. Truth be told, it's a bit Hot Wheels for our tastes. The hood is made from carbon fiber, and while the exterior has been painted, the underside retains its carbon-fiber's undressed matte finish.

The front fenders with their ZR1-specific twin-port gills are also made from carbon fiber. The prominent aerodynamic front splitter is — you guessed it! — carbon fiber. It sticks out proud of the nose by 4 inches at the edges, making it a dandy place to rest your Hummel figurine collection. Clear-coated carbon rocker extensions make the vehicle look almost subterranean. The top and B-pillar are covered in clear-coated panels of the stuff as well. This car will look wicked in black.

According to Juechter, GM has used a special super-secret additive to the clear coat to protect the unpainted carbon from the sun's ultraviolet rays. (UV rays can break down the resin that helps give carbon fiber its stiffness.) He claims that the substance costs $60,000 per gallon. But since the clearcoat needs only 3 percent of the stuff, the resulting clearcoat costs merely an absurd $2,000 per gallon. This mystery material was originally designed to protect circuit boards from UV. Juechter acknowledges only that the substance has no chemical similarity to mayonnaise and says, "We should probably not imply that it is edible anyway."

The front aero splitter is matched in the rear by a spoiler of a relatively modest height that is taller at the edges than in the center, a measure to combine an optimum balance between a decrease in aerodynamic lift and an increase in aerodynamic drag.

The wheels are a new design produced by Speedline, measuring 20-by-12 inches in the rear and 19-by-10 inches up front. They are covered (barely) by Michelin Pilot Sport PS2 tires, specifically formulated for this vehicle. At 335/R2520, the rear tires resemble something you might find in a steamroller; the fronts are a not-much-more-modest 285/R3019.

The interior is essentially identical to the regular Corvette. ZR1 badging and a boost gauge in place of the voltmeter are the only changes to the cabin.

Chismillionaire Detroit Auto Show Report- Land Rover LRX Concept



What's special about it?
Part eco-SUV, part upscale compact crossover coupe. Yes, this neatly describes the Land Rover LRX concept.

It's Gerry McGovern's first new concept since becoming Land Rover's latest design director. He calls the LRX different, relevant, engaging and exciting, among other things. "LRX has a highly desirable identity and the design alludes strongly to its capability, while clearly underlining our forward-looking philosophy — it's a Land Rover that would be comfortable on Bond Street or Fifth Avenue, but wouldn't flinch at getting its wheels dirty," explains McGovern.

So with that marketingspeak out of the way, we'll try to explain the idea of a compact crossover coupe. The LRX concept is physically smaller than the current LR2 (Land Rover has not provided any specifications), and like the LR2, the LRX is not designed for serious off-road excursions. It has full-time all-wheel drive and hill-descent control, but its 20-inch wheels and low-profile tires suggest that anything more than a flat dirt road might be a problem.

Its two-door configuration also limits the LRX's appeal as a practical SUV, but Land Rover doesn't see this as a problem. It says the LRX has been conceived as a premium vehicle that will appeal to the luxury and executive sector, where presence is more important that practicality. In other words, the LRX is for customers who want a smaller Land Rover that has all the style of the full-size Range Rover.

Chismillionaire Detroit Auto Show Report- Ford F150



What's special about it?
It's not too much of a stretch to say that the introduction of the 2009 Ford F-150 pickup is the only introduction at the 2008 Detroit Auto Show that really matters.

For exactly 1 billion years, the F-150 has been the biggest-selling vehicle in these here United States. This remains the case despite improvements to the Ford's most potent competitors from Dodge and GM, not to mention the concerted efforts of Nissan and Toyota.

If it's any indication of how competitive the truck market has become, consider that it's been only five years since the F-150 was last completely redesigned. It used to be that a pickup — the symbol of utilitarian consistency — could go a decade without a complete overhaul. Now the pickup product cycle is essentially identical to that of the midsize sedan.

For the new F-150, Ford has decided that pickups should be ever more brutish-looking. The result is a nearly flat monolithic face that towers above all who dare approach it. Specifically, Ford stole a page from its own design book for pickup trucks and plastered a version of the company's cartoonishly humongous Super Duty grille across the F-150. The grille is flanked by headlights that recall the Ford Edge. Consider the tall, nearly flat body sides, outside mirrors that are supposed to look like they're mounted on two fat struts and a tall cargo-box side; no one is likely to call the new truck wimpy.

Chismillionaire Detroit Auto Show Report- Audi R8 V12 TDI



What's special about it?
Yes, that's TDI, as in "diesel." This R8 is powered by a diesel. Not just any diesel, but a twin-turbocharged 6.0-liter V12 diesel generating 500 horsepower. It's the same engine featured in the Audi Q7 V12 TDI, a 60-degree V12 that is somewhat related to the one that has powered Audi's R10 endurance racecar to two outright victories at the 24 Hours of Le Mans. We're pretty sure that the R8 V12 TDI represents the first time a diesel V12 has been placed in a midengine all-wheel-drive two-seater. Feel free to correct us if we're wrong.

Raiding the corporate parts bin in order to create a showcar is not an unusual practice, but we believe that the R8 V12 TDI has more than bits of double-sided tape holding it together. The clues lie in the bodywork and the transmission.

Bespoke visual cues include larger front and side intakes, a deeper front spoiler and a new rear valance that artfully integrates four reshaped tailpipe tips and twin diffusers. Rocker-sill extensions are also new, as are the blistered fenders and movable rear wing. The NACA duct on the glass roof feeds intake air to two variable-geometry turbos, which generate a peak boost pressure of 38 psi. Inside the cockpit, aluminum and carbon fiber have been applied liberally.

It all smacks of window dressing for an off-the-rack R8 just for the sake of differentiation, but then you realize that the body add-ons are functional elements that generate real downforce. Concept cars don't go into the wind tunnel to determine how effective their aero bits are.

Considering that the R8 V12 TDI thumps out 738 pound-feet of torque from 1,750 to 3,000 rpm, the need to shift gears is probably an academic exercise. Nevertheless, Audi has fitted a six-speed manual gearbox to the R8 V12 TDI, which is one gear more than the R10 racecar has. You don't design new gearboxes for showcars, but we're surprised that Audi's dual-clutch automated manual hasn't been used here.

Larger brakes of the carbon-ceramic variety help keep a total of 44 pounds of unsprung mass out of the wheelwells and are said to last the life of the car. We're certain there's still not enough braking power to offset the weight increase incurred by dropping the iron-block V12 diesel engine in place of the R8's featherweight, all-aluminum V8, though Audi is mum on the actual weight difference. At just less than 27 inches long, the V12 is reasonably compact, however.

The R8 V12 TDI, like all modern diesels, produces few pollutants. It complies with Euro 6 emissions standards that take effect in 2014 thanks to the use of a 2,000-bar common-rail fuel system, piezo injectors, particulate filters in the exhaust and a urea injection system that keeps NOx emissions in check.

Chismillionaire Detroit Auto Show Report- Volkswagen Passat CC




What's special about it?
Volkswagen insists on referring to the 2008 Passat CC as a "four-door coupe." This contradiction in terms is akin to calling a pickup truck a "four-wheeled motorcycle." It's a nasty habit that originated with the introduction of the Mercedes-Benz CLS, a car with which the Passat CC bears more than a passing resemblance.

All whining about vehicle classifications notwithstanding, the Passat CC is one elegant sedan. Its graceful roof line is accompanied by a 0.29 drag coefficient and significant dimensional changes compared to the workaday Passat. The CC grows 1.2 inches longer and 1.4 inches wider, sits nearly 2 inches lower and introduces front and rear track measurements that have increased fractionally.

The CC is intended to move the Passat nameplate upmarket among midsize sedans and will be introduced in Europe this summer and then the U.S. market in late 2008.

Two direct-injection gasoline engines will be offered Stateside. The 200-horsepower turbo 1.8-liter inline-4 currently found in the GTI takes residence in the base CC and is mated to a six-speed manual or six-speed automatic gearbox. A 280-horsepower 3.6-liter V6 power plant paired with a six-speed automatic will also be offered. Volkswagen's twin-clutch DSG gearbox won't be available on U.S.-spec models, which is a shame. All-wheel drive will be standard on V6 models.

Chismillionaire Detroit Auto Show Report- Cadillac CTS Coupe



What's special about it?
It's so special that Clay Dean, Cadillac's global design director, calls the CTS coupe concept the breakthrough design of the decade. "The CTS coupe concept is the next great design, carrying the baton from the Evoq concept that ushered in the Art and Science era in 1999," he says.

Well, the Evoq turned into the XLR, a sales disaster, but this CTS coupe should fare much better when it eventually goes into production. For one, its CTS roots are solid and it doesn't stray too far from them. The CTS coupe rides on the same wheelbase as the sedan, yet it's 2 inches shorter in both height and overall length. The windshield has been laid back a few degrees, while the B-pillar has been eliminated to further clean up the profile as well. Unfortunately, the C-pillars seem to have grown abnormally large in response, giving the CTS coupe an almost hatchback-style profile.

Surprisingly, most of the sheet metal is new, as the grille, headlights and front fenders are the only direct sedan carryovers. According to John Manoogian, director of exterior design for Cadillac, typical exterior bodywork enhancements like extended moldings and a spoiler were kept out of the mix to maintain the purity of the overall design. Instead, only smaller details have been changed, like slimmer side mirrors, revised quarter-panel vents and hidden door handles.

Chismillionaire's post Storm deal of the week

$699.99

HP DV9627CL Laptop Computer - 1.9 GHz Turion 64 x 2 Dual Core TL-58, 2048MB, 200GB, 802.11b/g wireless LAN, DVD+/-RW w/LightScribe, 17" True Bright Wide Screen, Web Cam, NVIDIA GeForce Go 7150M Graphics Card, Microsoft Vista Home Premium