Archive for May, 2011

NASA to demonstrate super-cool cooling technology – CNET

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

The new cooling device from NASA.

The new cooling device of the future from NASA.

(Credit: NASA)

Ever wondered about the source of that humming sound coming from your computer? It’s most likely the fan that tries to ventilate the internal components. That’s a typical cooling system.

NASA's Jeff Didion (holding the pump) and his EHD-cooling technology developing partners.

Jeff Didion (holding the pump) and his EHD-cooling technology developing partners.

(Credit: NASA)

I am not a rocket scientist, but generally speaking, as electronic components get tinier and more powerful, the amount of heat they generate gets proportionately higher. This is due to the simple fact that there’s just not enough surface for the heat to dissipate quickly enough. That’s why all computers’ processors and high-end video cards come with a heat sink with a fan on top. Take this heat sink away and you’d fry the component in a matter of seconds.

Now bring these little advanced devices into space, where there’s no air or moisture to help conduct the heat, and you’ll have an even bigger challenge. And that’s exactly what NASA has been facing.

According to NASA’s Jeff Didion, a thermal engineer at the Goddard Space Flight Center, in the world of electronics, thermal control is always one of the limiting factors. He has been collaborating with Jamal Seyed-Yagoobi, a professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, to partner with the U.S. Air Force and National Renewable Energy Laboratory to find ways to push the envelope of thermal-control barriers.

The result is the new electrohydrodynamic (EHD)-based thermal control technology, unveiled yesterday, that promises to make it easier and more efficient to remove heat from small spaces. This solution is meant to address a particular challenge for engineers building advanced space instruments and microprocessors that could fail if the heat they generate is not removed.

The prototype of the new thermal control technology is a tiny pump, about the size of a little finger, which, apart from the cooling function, is designed to withstand the extreme launch loads as a rocket lifts off and hurtles toward space. The pump will be demonstrated in June on a rocket mission designed to carry microsatellites into space. “Should the device survive the vibration, the technology will have achieved a major milestone in its development,” Didion said. “It will mean that it is at or near operational status, making it a viable technology for use on spaceflight instruments.”

While the device is being called a pump, the prototype has no moving parts. According to Didion, unlike current cooling technologies used today by instrument and component developers, EHD does not rely on mechanical pumps and other moving parts. Instead, it uses electric fields to pump coolant through tiny ducts inside a thermal cold plate. From there, the waste heat is dumped onto a radiator and dispersed far from heat-sensitive circuitry that must operate within certain temperature ranges.

The fact that no mechanical parts are required means the new cooling system is lighter, consumes less power, (about .5W) and most importantly, can be scaled to different sizes, from larger cold plates to micro-scale electronic components and lab-on-a-chip devices. To see how this would work out, apart from the tiny pump to be tested in the rocket mission in June, a prototype EHD cold plate is also scheduled to be used as an experiment on the International Space Station in 2013.

In the meantime, Didion said, the team is continuing its work to further advance EHD, such as developing EHD pumps in microchannels that are etched onto silicon wafers. The next step is placing the technology on circuit boards, with the ultimate goal of scaling it to the chip level where the ducts would be no larger than 100 microns, or about the width of a human hair.

There’s not yet any information available on how much the technology costs, but hopefully in the future, it will be applied to more down-to-earth applications, such as a computer’s microprocessor. Then you wouldn’t have to worry about getting a water-cooling system or a huge fan if you’re big on overclocking.

After helping to develop polarized sunglasses and proliferate the use of Velcro, this just might be the next, coolest thing–quite literally–that NASA has had to offer.

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China Information Technology Inc. Announces Resignation of CFO

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

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Press Release Source: China Information Technology, Inc. On Friday May 27, 2011, 7:00 am EDT

SHENZHEN, China, May 27, 2011 /PRNewswire-Asia-FirstCall/ — China Information Technology, Inc. (Nasdaq:CNIT – News), a leading provider of Information Technologies and Display Technologies based in China, today announced Ms. Jackie You Kazmerzak will resign from her post as Chief Financial Officer effective May 30, 2011 to pursue another career opportunity. The Company is in the process of vetting suitable candidates to serve as the Company’s CFO following Ms. Kazmerzak’s departure.

“We wish to thank Jackie for her extraordinary contributions during her tenure at China Information Technology. As CFO she implemented a number of industry best-practices and raised the professionalism of our financial practices. We wish her the very best in her new endeavors,” said Mr. Jiang Huai Lin, Chairman and CEO of the Company. “We will take the time necessary to ensure that we find the best possible candidate to build on Jackie’s accomplishments. We remain fully committed to the highest levels of transparency and corporate governance,” concluded Mr. Lin.

In the interim, Ms. Eva Liu, CPA, who is the Company’s Financial Controller, will continue to manage daily financial operations, supported by the Company’s established finance team. Ms. Liu has been with the Company since 2009. Prior to joining the Company, Ms. Liu worked with Ernst & Young’s Shenzhen office for over five years. She has extensive experience in financial controls and planning, and a deep understanding of the U.S. GAAP and accounting-related rules and regulations applicable to U.S.-listed companies. Ms. Liu holds a bachelor’s degree of Finance from Zhongnan University of Economics and Law.

Ms. Iris Yan, Director of Investor Relations and Corporate Secretary, and Ms. Margie Ma, Investor Relations Manager, will continue to manage the Company’s investor relations activities. Until a new CFO is appointed, Ms. Liu and Ms. Yan will report directly to China Information Technology’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Jiang Huai Lin.

About China Information Technology, Inc.

China Information Technology, Inc., through its subsidiaries and other consolidated entities, specializes in information technologies and display technologies. Headquartered in Shenzhen, China, the Company’s integrated solutions include specialized software, hardware, systems integration, and related services. To learn more about the Company, please visit its corporate website at http://www.chinacnit.com.

Safe Harbor Statement

This press release may contain certain “forward-looking statements” relating to the business of China Information Technology, Inc., and its subsidiary companies. All statements, other than statements of historical fact included herein are “forward-looking statements” including statements regarding: the general ability of the Company to achieve its commercial objectives, including the Company’s plan to sustain the growth while creating shareholder value; the business strategy, plans and objectives of the Company and its subsidiaries; and any other statements of non-historical information. These forward-looking statements are often identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “believes,” “expects” or similar expressions, involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties. Although the Company believes that the expectations reflected in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, they do involve assumptions, risks and uncertainties, and these expectations may prove to be incorrect. Investors should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this press release. The Company’s actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements as a result of a variety of factors, including those discussed in the Company’s periodic reports that are filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and available on its website (http://www.sec.gov). All forward-looking statements attributable to the Company or persons acting on its behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by these factors. Other than as required under the securities laws, the Company does not assume a duty to update these forward-looking statements.

For further information, please contact:

China Information Technology, Inc.

Margie Ma

Tel: +86-755-8370-4734

Email: IR@chinacnit.com

Iris Yan

Tel: +86-755-8370-4767

Christensen

Kathy Li

Tel: +1-480-614-3036

Email: kli@christensenir.com

Teal Willingham

Tel: +86-10-5826-4939

Email: twillingham@christensenir.com

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Gil Scott-Heron dies aged 62 – NME.com

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

May 28, 2011 10:10

Public Enemy’s Chuck D leads tributes to ‘Godfather Of Hip-Hop’

Photo: PA Photos

Gil Scott-Heron has died at the age of 62 . The cause of his death is still unclear.

The influential musician and poet – often given a ‘Godfather Of Hip-Hop’ nickname he rejected – passed away in New York’s St Luke’s Hospital yesterday (May 27), reports BBC News.

It is believed that Scott-Heron fell ill after returning from a trip to Europe.

After starting his recording career in 1970, his output spanned soul, jazz, blues and the spoken word.

His work had a strong political element. ‘The Revolution Will Not Be Televised’, perhaps his best-known work, critiqued the mass media of the 1970s.

He was one of the first artists to use his music to speak out about the apartheid in South Africa, some time before the issue became the focus of a popular global campaign.

Scott-Heron went on to influence generations of musicians, both inside and outside hip-hop.

Kanye West heavily sampled Scott-Heron’s spoken word pieces on last year’s ‘My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy’ album.

Scott-Heron’s final album was last year’s ‘I’m New Here’, his first studio LP in 16 years.

The album was reworked with The xx’s Jamie xx into a remix album, ‘We’re New Here’, which was released last February.

Public Enemy’s Chuck D has been among those paying tribute to Scott-Heron, taking to his Twitter account Twitter.com/mrchuckd to say: “RIP GSH..and we do what we do and how we do because of you. And to those that don’t know tip your hat with a hand over your heart & recognize.”

He added that he had planned to collaborate with Scott-Heron on his next album, tweeting: “Quite stunned at the fact I just wrote and recorded guest vocals on one of his next albums.This makes one realize that time is precious, damn.”

New York rapper Talib Kweli also had his say, tweeting from Twitter.com/realtalibkweli: “Wow. The rest of my night I’m gonna listen to Gil Scott-Heron. We love you brother. We will miss you. RIP.”

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Gil Scott-Heron dies; influential poet/musician helped inspire rap

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

Getprev Gil Scott-Heron, whose late 1960s and early ’70s poetry set to rhythmic jazz music, especially “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised,” was one of the most important and obvious inspirations for rap music, has died, according to his British publisher.

The poet and musician, who had long struggled with drug addiction, had in the past two years returned into the public eye with an acclaimed solo recording, “I’m New Here,” and a follow-up remix album done by Jamie xx of the British group the XX. Scott-Heron was 62.

Last year the New Yorker published a reverent but heartbreaking profile of Scott-Heron by Alec Wilkinson.  Written after Scott-Heron had recorded “I’m New Here” but after he had relapsed and was smoking crack openly in front of the reporter, the story traced his rise, his fall and his influence.

In an interview for the feature, bassist Ron Carter, who played on “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised,” described Scott-Heron’s allure: “He wasn’t a great singer, but with that voice, if he had whispered it would have been dynamic. It was a voice like you would have for Shakespeare.”

In the same story, which is behind a paywall here, rapper Chuck D. discusses the role Scott-Heron played in the birth of rap: “You can go into the beat poets and [Allen] Ginsberg and [Bob] Dylan, but Gil Scott-Heron is the manifestation of the modern world. He and the Last Poets set the stage for everyone else. In what way necessary? Well, if you try and make pancakes and you ain’t got the water, the milk or the eggs, you’re trying to do something you can’t. In combining music with the word, from the voice on down, you follow the template he laid out. His rapping is rhythmic. Some of it’s songs. It’s punchy, and all those qualities are still used today.”

Pop & Hiss will have more on Gil Scott-Heron’s legacy, and The Times will have a full obituary in Sunday’s paper.

RELATED:

Live review: Gil Scott-Heron at the El Rey

A first listen to Gil Scott-Heron’s “I’m New Here”

Album review: Gil Scott-Heron and Jamie xx’s “We’re New Here”

– Randall Roberts

 

 

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