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Daily Archives: June 5, 2017
World War II planes to come to Peninsula with Wings of Freedom Tour – Peninsula Daily News
Posted: June 5, 2017 at 7:17 am
PORT ANGELES Classic World War II planes will return to the North Olympic Peninsula this month as the Wings of Freedom Tour lands in Port Angeles on June 21.
The vintage warbirds will be featured at William R. Fairchild Memorial Airport from June 21-23.
Members of the public can walk-through or fly in the B-17 Flying Fortress, B-24 Liberator, B-25 Mitchell or P-51 Mustang as part of the Collings Foundations 110-city nationwide living history display.
This years tour stop the eighth in Port Angeles since 2004 will feature more activities on the tarmac with a vintage car show, live music, no-host barbecue, hot air balloon, dragster and possibly a Coast Guard helicopter.
The Port [of Port Angeles] wanted to help support the Wings of Freedom with a little more involvement than in past years, said Dan Gase, real estate and business manager for the port, which operates the airport.
The events will take place the afternoon and evening of June 21, a Wednesday.
Longtime Wings of Freedom Area Coordinator Alan Barnard said the theme for this years stop in Port Angeles is Salute to Veterans.
I want to have a 100 percent focus on veterans, Barnard told Clallam County commissioners Tuesday.
Barnard, who received a proclamation recognizing Wings of Freedom Days, said the idea is to tell the story of the cost of freedom through these airplanes.
The airplanes are cool, but the airplanes are part of the story, Barnard said.
Barnard is making arrangements for local World War II veterans to ride on the airplanes for free.
Every visit I look for opportunities to communicate between World War II veterans and our younger people, to put them together, to create dialogue where our younger people realize, I hope, a little better why we have what we have today, Barnard told commissioners.
And had it not been for the brave men and women of our armed forces in the past, in all wars, we would be looking at a totally different country than we have today.
The cost of entry to Wings of Freedom is $15 for adults and $5 for children 12 and younger.
Half-hour flights on the B-25 are $400 per person. Half-hour flights on the B-17 or B-24 are $450 per person.
Flight training with stick time on the P-51 fighter is $2,200 for 30 minutes or $3,200 for an hour.
Since the Massachusetts-based Collings Foundation is a nonprofit, the majority of the flights are tax deductible, officials said.
The Wings of Freedom Tour previously stopped in Port Angeles in 2004, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2013 and 2015.
With help from the port, Barnard said this years tour stop has been ratcheted up with more events after the planes arrive.
We wanted to help raise it a bit and just have a party for Port Angeles, said Gase, a Port Angeles City Council member and recent aerospace business development specialist for the port.
A big part of it is to help raise awareness of the airport.
The bomber and fighter aircraft are scheduled to arrive at William R. Fairchild from Bremerton at about noon June 21.
The barbecue, hosted by the Port Angles Red Lion, will be in the west block hanger from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. June 21.
The band Fat Chance will perform in an adjacent hanger from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Gase said.
The car show will be in front of the terminal throughout the day June 21. Classic, vintage or show car owners are welcome to participate.
For information on the Wings of Freedom tour, click on the Collings Foundation website at http://www.cfdn.org.
________
Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 56450, or at rollikainen@peninsuladailynews.com.
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World War II planes to come to Peninsula with Wings of Freedom Tour - Peninsula Daily News
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Irish have the right to national freedom – Belfast Telegraph
Posted: at 7:17 am
Irish have the right to national freedom
BelfastTelegraph.co.uk
I wish to Jim Allister's comment published on June 1 about the EU.
http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/incoming/article34634950.ece/50203/AUTOCROP/h342/letters.jpeg
I wish to Jim Allister's comment published on June 1 about the EU.
He said: "We joined the EU as one nation, we must leave as one nation." He also stated, "Putting IRA/Sinn Fein in government has weakened the Union" and "Sinn Fein does not want Northern Ireland to work."
In his own words, he admits that Northern Ireland has two main national groups. People of the Irish nation were roped into the unionist state when it was established under Britain's Partition of Ireland Act.
Unionists need to accept that Irish people in Northern Ireland have a right to national freedom on equal terms with the unionist right to be British. The Union will be stronger for unionists when Irish people are free.
Malachy Scott
Belfast
Belfast Telegraph
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Irish have the right to national freedom - Belfast Telegraph
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Self Improvement Through Neuroscience And Technology – Forbes
Posted: at 7:17 am
Forbes | Self Improvement Through Neuroscience And Technology Forbes The subconscious offers an untapped potential into the human mind, simply waiting to be leveraged, exploited even, to accelerate our self improvement. However, accessing the far-reaches of our minds has proven elusive at best. Only recently have we ... |
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Oculus founder Palmer Luckey is developing border surveillance technology – TechCrunch
Posted: at 7:17 am
Last time we heard from Palmer Luckey, the one-time poster boy for VR, he was quietly ousted from Facebookafter a $100,000 donation to a pro-Trump shitposting group came to light.
Now Luckey, who sold his VR company Oculus to Facebook for $2 billion in 2014, is back, and his new company is concerned with national security.
The New York Times reports that his newest business venture uses lidar technology commonly used in self-driving cars for surveillance on country borders or high-level sites such as military bases. The reported added that the technology, when completed, could be used to detect threats such as drones, but ignore more common objects such as birds or other wildlife. It is proposed as an alternative to full-scale border walls, such as the one President Trump has pledged to build between the U.S. and Mexico, due to potentially vast cost savings.
Luckey confirmed the outline of his new venture in a statement to the Times:
We are spending more than ever on defense technology, yet the pace of innovation has been slowing for decades. We need a new kind of defense company, one that will save taxpayer dollars while creating superior technology to keep our troops and citizens safer.
Peter Thiel, a tech advisor to President Trump, is planning to support Luckeys new company with investment from his fund, the Times report noted. Theres no information on other potential financial backers at this point.
Already, the company which is located in Southern California has hired a handful of staff, including former Oculus employeeChristopher Dycus.
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Oculus founder Palmer Luckey is developing border surveillance technology - TechCrunch
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Making A Career Transition To Technology (It’s Not Rocket Science) – Forbes
Posted: at 7:17 am
Forbes | Making A Career Transition To Technology (It's Not Rocket Science) Forbes This is the third column in an ongoing series from David K. Williams called Ask Dave. This one addresses an important question from marketing manager Heather Nemelka, who is hoping to pivot her career into technology: Hi Dave! When I was in college, ... |
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Here’s the lowdown on the next new thing that will upend the world economy – Miami Herald
Posted: at 7:17 am
Here's the lowdown on the next new thing that will upend the world economy Miami Herald So it goes for the core technology underpinning bitcoin, the digital currency that operates on a decentralized swarm of computers. Turns out that the blockchain technology has a bunch of other applications. Masses of them. And a real revolution may yet ... |
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Steven Petrow: How To Use Technology To Advance Your Career – Forbes
Posted: at 7:17 am
Forbes | Steven Petrow: How To Use Technology To Advance Your Career Forbes I spoke to Steven Petrow, who writes the Digital Life column for USA Today and is the author of five advice books, about what got him interested in modern manners, how technology has impacted our relationships, the biggest mistakes people make on ... |
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New millimeter-wave technology could make future vehicles much safer – Phys.Org
Posted: at 7:17 am
June 5, 2017 Millimeter-wave radars covering several tens of meters could be on cars, bikes, and smartphones. This might create a lot of new applications including games. Credit: Hiroshima University
Hiroshima University and Mie Fujitsu Semiconductor Limited (MIFS) today announced the development of a low-power millimeter-wave amplifier that feeds on 0.5 V power supply and covers the frequency range from 80 GHz to 106 GHz. It was fabricated using MIFS's Deeply Depleted Channel (DDC) technology. This is the first W-band (75110 GHz) amplifier that can operate even with such a low power-supply voltage. Details of the technology will be presented at the IEEE Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits Symposium (RFIC) 2017, running from June 4th to 6th in Honolulu, Hawaii.
The W-band covers the frequencies used by automotive radars. Sophisticated driver-assistance and self-driving will require radars with millimeter-wave beam scanning capability that can "see" in day and night conditions and even in adverse weather conditions. Such a phased array will consist of up to hundreds of transmitters and receivers. As battery-powered cars become more common, it is imperative that these circuits be low power. Lowering the power-supply voltage is the most effective means of accomplishing that. However, transistor performance drops with voltage and no W-band amplifier has so far operated at as low as 0.5 V . The team of researchers successfully demonstrated a W-band amplifier at 0.5 V by bringing together MIFS's DDC technology and design techniques developed by Hiroshima University. The DDC technology offers high-performance silicon MOS transistors even at low voltages and is currently available from MIFS as a 55-nm CMOS process. The design techniques further improve transistor and circuit performance at millimeter-wave frequencies.
"Now that seriously low-power W-band circuits really seem possible, we should think about what we can do with them. Applications aren't limited to automotive radars and high-speed communications between base stations. What if you have a radar on your smartphone? Today's smartphones can already sense things like acceleration, audible sound, visible light, and Earth's magnetic field. But the only active probing device is that tiny LED (light-emitting diode) that can illuminate at most a few meters. Add a millimeter-wave radar on a smartphone, and it doesn't have to be a so-called primary radar, which only detects waves reflected back. Your smartphone could respond to waves from your friend's radar and send some signal back. A whole lot of new applications could be created, including games," said Professor Minoru Fujishima, Graduate School of Advanced Sciences of Matter, Hiroshima University.
"Another significance of our 0.5-V W-band amplifier is reliability. We researchers know that some millimeter-wave circuits presented at major conferences, biased at 1 V or higher, won't last long. They degrade as you measure them, within days or even hours, not years, because of the so-called hot-carrier effects. You wouldn't want to get into a car that loses its sight so quickly. The 0.5-V supply voltage will significantly reduce hot-carrier generation," Prof. Fujishima added.
"Compared to conventional CMOS, our DDC transistors offer excellent performance in low-power operations. We have proven that we can extend those outstanding qualities to the millimeter band. I am delighted that our collaboration with Hiroshima University has produced a millimeter-band amplifier. We plan to move forward by building a design environment for maximizing the capabilities of DDC technology," said Mutsuaki Kai, Vice President of Technology Development, Mie Fujitsu Semiconductor. The research group plans to continue exploring the possibility of low-voltage millimeter-wave CMOS circuits.
Explore further: GaN power amplifier with world's highest output performance for W-band wireless transmissions
More information: K. Katayama, S. Amakawa, K. Takano, T. Yoshida, M. Fujishima, K. Hisamitsu, and H. Takatsuka, "An 80106 GHz CMOS amplifier with 0.5 V supply voltage," IEEE Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits Symposium (RFIC), June 2017.
Fujitsu today announced the development of a gallium-nitride (GaN) high-electron mobility transistor (HEMT) power amplifier for use in W-band (75-110 GHz) transmissions.
Fujitsu Laboratories today announced that it has produced a transceiver chip for millimeter-wave radar in a complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) implementation, which is a semiconductor process that enables costs ...
Two teams of DARPA performers have achieved world record power output levels using silicon-based technologies for millimeter-wave power amplifiers. RF power amplifiers are used in communications and sensor systems to boost ...
Fujitsu Laboratories today announced the development of a new packaging technology that enables the development of millimeter-wave power amplifiers that can be employed in applications such as automotive radar and wireless ...
Hiroshima University, the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, and Panasonic Corporation announced the development of a terahertz (THz) transmitter capable of signal transmission at a per-channel ...
A new highly efficient power amplifier for electronics could help make possible next-generation cell phones, low-cost collision-avoidance radar for cars and lightweight microsatellites for communications.
Functional magnetic resonance imaging reveals changes in blood-oxygen levels in different parts of the brain, but the data show nothing about what is actually happening in and between brain cells, information needed to better ...
Apple appears poised to unveil a voice-activated, internet-connected speaker that would create a new digital pipeline into people's homes.
Toyota Motor Corp. is working on a "flying car."
Google is working to block "annoying" ads in its Chrome browser, part of a broader effort by industry players to filter out certain types of marketing messages that draw complaints.
When Congress voted in March to reverse rules intended to protect Internet users' privacy, many people began looking for ways to keep their online activity private. One of the most popular and effective is Tor, a software ...
By swapping solar photovoltaics for coal, the US could prevent 51,999 premature deaths a year, potentially making as much as $2.5 million for each life saved.
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This Technology Helps Quickly Fix Your Golf Swing Flaws – Forbes
Posted: at 7:17 am
Forbes | This Technology Helps Quickly Fix Your Golf Swing Flaws Forbes My golf game has begun spiraling into a state of disarray. And it's only June. So last week, I decided to do something about it, before my index inches any higher. To make the fix, I braved four hours of traffic from Detroit up to the Boyne Fitting ... |
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London terror attack: ‘Significant progress’ made in identifying assailants – ABC News
Posted: at 7:17 am
Authorities have made "significant progress" in identifying the three suspects allegedly responsible for a terror attack in London Saturday night that killed seven people and injured dozens more, police said.
Several agencies are "working relentlessly" to "piece together exactly what occurred" and learn more about the attackers, Metropolitan Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley said Sunday.
"Work is ongoing to understand more about them, their connections and whether they were assisted or supported by anyone else," Rowley said.
A series of arrests have been made in the attacks, police said. As of Sunday morning, 12 people in Barking, east London, were arrested in connection with the attacks, and police continued to search a number of addresses in the Barking area.
And early Monday, the Met Police Counter Terrorism Command said it entered two more addresses near Barking, where officers conducted searches and detained several people for questioning.
Just before 10 p.m. Saturday, white Renault van, which was recently hired by one of the attackers, plowed into a crowd of people on London Bridge.
American tourist Dan Nguyen told the BBC he was on London Bridge with his girlfriend when he "saw blinding white headlights weaving through cars and coming at us."
"It hit directly to the right of me. I saw a woman's body curled up in an unimaginable position," he told the BBC. "I looked ahead and saw there was a distance to go before the end of the bridge, so I braced myself to jump off the bridge into the river. Then I saw my girlfriend limping and sobbing so I ran back towards the scene to drag her away."
The van then continued on to Borough Market. There, three men -- who officials said were wearing fake suicide belts -- exited the vehicle and stabbed a number of people, police said.
The attackers were shot and killed by authorities just eight minutes after police were notified to the incident, said London Metropolitan Police's Cressida Dick. Eight police officers discharged their weapons, firing a total of 50 rounds, Rowley said. One bystander was hit by the gunfire, he said, but the injuries were not believed to be critical.
Seven victims were killed in the attack, including a French national and a Canadian woman named Christine Archibald, officials said.
The Archibald family said in a statement, "We grieve the loss of our beautiful, loving daughter and sister. She had room in her heart for everyone and believed strongly that every person was to be valued and respected."
She had worked in a homeless shelter before moving to Europe to be with her fianc, the family said.
Another 48 victims were taken to hospitals, officials said. On Sunday, 36 victims remained hospitalized, 21 of them in critical condition, Rowley said.
Among the injured were a British Transport Police officer and an off-duty Metropolitan Police officer, authorities said. The British Transport Officer who was injured was among the first on the scene and was "able to recount how he faced the attackers with only his baton" despite being "seriously unwell," said Chief Constable Paul Crowther.
British Prime Minister Theresa May referred to the events as a "brutal terrorist attack" and said "there is far too much tolerance for extremism in our country."
Britain has been plagued with three terror attacks since March. May said that while the attacks are not connected, "they are bound together by the single evil ideology that is Islamic extremism."
"Defeating this ideology is one of the great challenges of our times," she said, adding that the internet is a breeding ground for extremism.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan condemned the attacks in a statement.
"This was a deliberate and cowardly attack on innocent Londoners and visitors to our city enjoying their Saturday night," Khan said. "I condemn it in the strongest possible terms. There is no justification whatsoever for such barbaric acts."
President Trump, speaking at a gala at Ford's Theatre Sunday evening, described the London attack as a "horrific terrorist attack" and said he spoke with May to "express our unwavering support." The president said the U.S. will do everything in its power to "bring those that are guilty to justice."
"We renew our resolve, stronger than ever before, to protect the United States and its allies from a vile enemy that has waged war on innocent life. And it has gone on too long," he said. "This bloodshed must end. This bloodshed will end. As president I will do what is necessary is to prevent this threat from spreading to our shores."
A moment of silence will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. local time "in remembrance of those who lost their lives and all others affected by the attacks in London Saturday night," according to an announcement from Downing Street. Flags will remain at half-mast on Whitehall government buildings until Tuesday evening.
Britain's general election will take place Thursday as planned, May said.
"Violence can never be allowed to disrupt the democratic process," May said. "So those campaigns will resume in full tomorrow, and the general election will go ahead as planned, on Thursday."
ABC News' David Caplan, Matt Foster, Tara Fowler, Joshua Hoyos, Kirit Radia, Brendan Rand, Emily Shapiro, Dean Schabner and Devin Villacis contributed to this report.
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