zinc coating for couplings by method of thermo-diffusion
what does "thermo-diffusion" mean here?
zinc coating for couplings by method of thermo-diffusion
what does "thermo-diffusion" mean here?
For 120 KVA UPS how many nos of batteries i will require for 1 hr backup?
This is Danvers State Insane Asylum, the inspiration for H.P. Lovecraft's Arkham Sanitarium "which in turn was the inspiration for Arkham Asylum in the Batman comic book series." Today, the building is part of Avalon Danvers, a pleasant residential community.
Right now, those buildings stand surrounded by a swimming pool, fitness center, basketball court, and whatever other amenities an apartment community might have:
Still spooky looking, no? Doesn't seem surprising that there's been all sorts of supernatural activity reported by residents and visitors.
I just hope they hand out free Proton Packs with every new lease. [WIkipedia via Fast Company]
THERE ARE TWO POINTS
1 YOUR PERSONAL CHARACTER WHICH DEFINES WHO YOU ARE,WHAT YOU VALUEAND HOW YOU DO WHAT YOU DO
2 CORE COMPETENCY,OR THE KNOWLEDGE SKILLS AND ATTITUDE YOU BRING TO WORK AND CONTINUALLY STRIVE TO EXCEL IN ---- A STATEMENT BY MS VANITA BALI MD BRITANIA INDUSTR
So there's this tiny unpatched bug in VBScript that lets sneaky websites run malicious code on machines running Internet Explorer on Windows XP. It's triggered when you try to access the help menu by hitting the F1 key. Whoops.
According to a recent Microsoft security advisory:
The vulnerability exists in the way that VBScript interacts with Windows Help files when using Internet Explorer. If a malicious Web site displayed a specially crafted dialog box and a user pressed the F1 key, arbitrary code could be executed in the security context of the currently logged-on user.
This means that all someone with ill intentions needs to do is create a website which has a somewhat convincing popup prompt to coax you into hitting F1. And tada! You've allowed him or her to run some kind of code on your machine.
It'll be a while before a patch is available for this bug, but in the meantime Microsoft suggests that you protect yourself by not pressing the F1 key if a Web site tells you to. [Microsoft via Computer World via Slashdot]
Picture by Karl Alvin
where can i find earthing designe example.
hi i want to know the fabrication details of Kiln (reduction unit ) can any one help me plz
can any body help me about the differance of CNG and bio gas engine
I had posted a message " 100% yield in stamping laminations ". It was meant more as information and to spread knowledge of 100 % yield lamination stampings- as I found that compnies I ma associated with use 72% yield stampings. This results in wastage and higher costs for electromagnetic ballasts -
The Nvidia Optimus seamlessly switches between GPUs based on need. And based on this fellow being able to yank out a GPU while the rest of a system is running, it works rather well too.
Sure, it would've been funny if something had gone wrong at that 1:40 mark, but the fact that this little demonstration worked just the way it should is great news. By switching between integrated and discrete graphics, Optimus could one day double our laptop batteries' lives. And that's more exciting than any bit of sparks and smoke could've been. [nTersect Blog]
Dear All
Need some info on How to do the master slave application for current sharing. Like Master will take 50 % of load( Current) and slave will take 50 %. Using AC drives.
Which drive will run in speed mode and which in torque ? How to give speed ref. and torque ref?
What is the difference between router & switch & hub
My power went out this afternoon unexpectedly for several hours. I know other people in some countries go through this or worse all the time, but it threw off my entire day. I went to a nearby coffee shop to use my smartphone to at least read online, but then discovered my phone was quickly running out of power too. It made me realize how much we depend on our electricity and how easy it is to become completely disrupted when power is turned off for a few hours.
The coffee shop had free wi-fi and was packed with people working on laptops. It got me to thinking that we need more reliable power than we have. If this had been January, people would have been freezing in their homes. The U.S. power grid is overtaxed and meant for an earlier era, not 2010 where so much is demanded of it. It was meant for 50 or 100 million people, not 300 million, who are using it more than ever. And we need uninterrupted power. Anyone who thinks we could transition to living more simply, without electricity, without power, is dreaming. Our brains and work habits are now wired for the internet and the increased use of it will take more power, not less. That means that we will have a difficult time conserving energy in the future. There are more appliances and heating systems in use in the United States by far than 20 years ago and it increases every year. Add a few million electric cars to that and the amount of power needed will grow even more.
We don’t have to have a future of less power. Why conserve solar power or wind power if there is an abundance of it. If we start using renewable power all the time, conservation won’t be an issue. The sun and wind and geothermal power are sources that are free and infinite (at least as far into the future as we can imagine). We need to jump start renewable power and a better more reliable way of transporting power to people. If we don’t, power outages and brownouts will become common everywhere.
We need more power in the world — but not coal. There is good news about the rebellion against the coal industry, from Ted Nace, originator of Coal Swarm. He has a new book out called Climate Hope, and was recently interviewed by Alternet.
Discussing his books Gangs of America and Climate Hope, Coalswarm founder Ted Nace talks about the rise of corporations and Big Coal, the growing network of grassroots movements against coal, and why, despite the non-binding resolution coming out of Copenhagen, we should have hope.
Christine Shearer: Especially since in that 1886 case, Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad, “corporate personhood” came not from the actual judicial decision but from the court reporter’s notes on the case.
Ted Nace: Yes, and that’s just the most well known of a long string of court decisions endowing corporations [...]
Around 600 million metric tons of water ice were discovered in shadowy craters at the moon's north pole. How much is that, in terms that mean something to you? Possibly enough to sustain a mother-F-ing moon base, that's how much.
A piece of NASA radar equipment hitching a ride on an Indian probe made the discovery, which was reported earlier today. It was only last September that water ice was confirmed to exist on the moon's south pole, but these significant deposits bring us that much closer to the ultimate space nerd dream of a base on the moon.
"The new discoveries show the moon is an even more interesting and attractive scientific, exploration and operational destination than people had previously thought," said Paul Spudis, a NASA engineer who works with the Mini-SAR radar equipment.
Scientists say the water, which may be more readily available than that found at the south pole, could be mined for fuel and oxygen or distilled into drinking water for lunar dwellers.
Sure, there's that whole issue with the budget and how its steering our space program away from the moon. But 600 million tons is a lot of water, especially for a nation thirsty for some new space adventures. [Space.com via PopSci]
An astonishing admittance from liberal Newsweek magazine in the feature story in the new issue to hit stands March 8.
The headline: "The Rebirth of a Nation." And the Nation they are referring to is Iraq. Newsweek writers Babak Dehghanpisheh, John Barry and Christopher Dickey even went so far as to call Bush's Iraq War success, "a watershed event," that represents a "whole new era of history."
Excerpt:
"Iraqi democracy will succeed," President George W. Bush declared in November 2003, "and that success will send forth the news from Damascus to Tehran that freedom can be the future of every nation." The audience at the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington answered with hearty applause. Bush went on: "The establishment of a free Iraq at the heart of the Middle East will be a watershed event in the global democratic revolution."
Bush's rhetoric about democracy came to sound as bitterly ironic as his pumped-up appearance on an aircraft carrier a few months earlier, in front of an enormous banner that declared MISSION ACCOMPLISHED. And yet it has to be said and it should be understood—now, almost seven hellish years later—that something that looks mighty like democracy is emerging in Iraq. And while it may not be a beacon of inspiration to the region, it most certainly is a watershed event that could come to represent a whole new era in the history of the massively undemocratic Middle East.
You've been skimming credit cards and the cops know—they've already executed a search warrant and found a flash drive full of evidence against you. If you're Florin Necula, this means that it's time to swallow.
After being arrested, Necula decided that it was a good idea to snatch up one of the pieces of evidence against him, shove it into his mouth, and swallow. Hard. Youch.
Not only will the poor guy probably wind up in jail with a tummy ache, but he's being charged with obstruction of justice because of his attempt to destroy evidence. [Smoking Gun via The Loop via Jim Dalrymple]
The X-Ray pictured obviously isn't this guy's. It's of some dog who swallowed a fork instead of a flash drive and was found at Mental Floss
I work for a medium size sheet metal prototype company that I believe shines in todays market. I am looking for some companies that are seeking the need for a great and quality sheet metal prototype shop.
So you want some cycling practice but you're worried about all of the reckless drivers out there. You don't want to resort to one of those lame stationary bikes, either. The solution? Free motion bicycle rollers. Updated: More danger!
I would love to bike more often, but the thought of cycling here in New York City is utterly daunting. This alternative, however, seems even more terrifying.
If you want to brave your unfinished basement on two wheels, a free motion set up only costs about $35 in parts and can be assembled by following this Instructable. Just don't say I didn't warn you. [Make and Instructables]
Update: Giz reader Daniel and his buddies laugh at free motion bicycle roller danger. Why's that? Because they get down with free motion moped roller danger.
Thank you Daniel, I'm glad you are still alive to share that with us.
Bill Wilson, Americans for Limited Government
The simple reality is that the money to pay for extending unemployment benefits by $10 billion indefinitely does not exist on budget. Senator Bunning deserves credit for offering a proposal that does pay for it without steeping the nation further into debt...
Tim Daniel, Left Coast Rebel
In the most basic sense, he is holding Obama and the socialist-left in Congress to their own credo - PAYGO, passed just last month. The Democrat/Media/Industrial complex have all gotten together in a massive orgy to paint Bunning as an extremist and someone that 'wants to take the food out from the mouths of the unemployed'. This issue simply proves to me that we need smart, tough, intellectually based conservatives/libertarians in power coming up to bring this government back to fiscal sanity.
Jim Rose, Libertarian Popinjay
It's rare that you see a politician willing to take political and media abuse like what Senator Jim Bunning is taking right now...but he's doing it...and G-d bless him for it. Granted, Bunning has a reputation of being a bit of a hot-head, but damn it, that's what we need right now. He's asking the government to not spend money it doesn't have. What the hell is wrong with that?
Jack Liberty blog
government shouldn’t be involved in stealing money from some and giving it to others. If workers want benefits when they are unemployed, they should pay for some kind of market-based unemployment insurance.
Wes Messamore, Humble Libertarian
Jim Bunning's reason for blocking the extension of unemployment benefits is absolutely well-founded. He is asking the question we should ask of every appropriation: where is the money coming from to pay for it?
He doesn't oppose the unemployment extension, he is simply insisting that we pay for it with unspent money from 2008's appalling financial bailout package- money that would go to financial corporations if we don't give it to struggling Americans like Bunning suggests.
I'm tired of hearing welfare statists and warfare statists pretend to be fiscally responsible by complaining about the other's spending. I for one would like to see some fiscal sanity across the board.
Apple's suing HTC for infringing on 20 iPhone patents, but what will this mean to the cellphone market?
According to Eric Von Hippel, a professor of technological innovation at MIT, it'll be bad news for consumers in the end:
It's a bad scene right now. The social value of patents was supposed to be to encourage innovation - that's what society gets out of it. The net effect is that they decrease innovation, and in the end, the public loses out.
It's doubtful that we'll find out how right Von Hippel is anytime soon though, because cases like this one "can last many years, sometimes five or 10," assuming they're not settled out of court. But I don't exactly see Apple or HTC being in a rush to settle here. [NY Times]