California DoD bases sitting on 7 gigawatts of solar potential



The US Military is sitting on a potential 7GW of untapped solar power capacity in the Mojave and Colorado Deserts, according to a recent Department of Defense report that analyzed the applicability of a variety of solar technologies across seven military installations.

Initially nine military installations were analyzed, seven in California and two in Nevada, taking in sites used by the Army, Navy, and Air Force as well as the Marine Corps. By comparing competing solar energy technologies on such a large scale, the report (titled Solar Energy Development on Department of Defense Installations in the Mojave and Colorado Deserts, available in PDF on the ESTCP website) gives insight as to the commercial viability of solar power in the US today.

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California DoD bases sitting on 7 gigawatts of solar potential

The WOW Files: Billionaire Paul Allen Pouring $500M Into Quest To Find Essence Of Humanity In Brain

Whoever told you that money cannot buy happiness is bat shit crazy, because Microsoft co-founder and billionaire Paul Allen is living an extraordinary life. On Wednesday, Forbes reported Allen is donating $300 million of his $14 billion fortune in his eponymous Allen Institute for Brain Science to fund new projects to map and observe the human brain and, in Allen’s words, “to one day understand the essence of what makes us human.” That brings the total amount Allen has invested in the Institute to $500 million. The announcement was made at a press conference today in Seattle and in a commentary in Nature, one of the world’s best scientific journals, written by Christof Koch, the Institute’s Chief Scientific Officer, and R. Clay Reid of Harvard Medical School. They lay out a way of doing brain research that involves optogenetics, a kind of deep stimulation of the brain using light, connectomics, the study of connections in the brain, and brain observatories, ways of monitoring what happens in the brain in real time.

Allen said he’s not interested in collecting intellectual property. The goal is to create open science at an industrial scale. The institute says that every month 50,000 scientists access its brain map data. “We know that such an expensive project will have critics,” Koch and Reid write. “The resources required could fund hundreds of other projects, so why focus them in this way? Our response is that funding agencies are already spending billions of dollars on many smaller projects across all areas of biomedical research, and the Allen Institute wants to pioneer a new approach. We want to understand one piece of brain tissue by integrating knowledge across techniques and scales, rather than distributing the funds more widely.” Ed Boyden, an associate professor at the MIT Media Lab who is one of the pioneers in the field of optogenetics, echoed that sentiment. “The Allen Institute is assembling an extraordinary set of tools to tackle brain circuitry in a vertically integrated way, from the parts lists to how they all work together,” he wrote via Facebook chat. “It is impossible for an ordinary lab group to bring all these pieces together.”

Allen’s remarks are eloquent, inspiring, and incredibly powerful, and Forbes has included them in their feature article which you can read by visiting Forbes.com. To learn more about the extraordinary work being done by Paul Allen’s institute be sure to visit AllenInstitute.org. For more fascinating stories about the human brain you can visit The Human Brain on FEELguide.

AllenBrain The WOW Files: Billionaire Paul Allen Pouring $500M Into Quest To Find Essence Of Humanity In BrainSources: Jason Silva on Facebook and Forbes

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AT&T collected millions from taxpayers in fraudulent charges, US says



AT&T improperly received millions of dollars from a government reimbursement fund by ignoring fraudulent use of the IP Relay call system provided free of charge to hearing- and speech-impaired US residents, the US government alleged this week.

“The United States brings this action to recover millions of dollars that have been paid to Defendant AT&T for its improper handling and billing of thousands of Internet Protocol Relay calls made by Nigerian and other international users seeking to defraud merchants in the United States,” the US said in a complaint filed yesterday in US District Court in Western Pennsylvania.

The US government reimburses IP Relay providers $1.30 per minute, but calls originating outside the US and calls made by people without a hearing impairment are ineligible for reimbursement. IP Relay allows hearing-impaired users to place phone calls by typing messages into an Internet-based system. The messages are relayed to the intended recipient by assistants employed by AT&T and other providers. The FCC started requiring providers to verify the accuracy of each user’s name and mailing address in 2009, but AT&T found a way to skirt the rules, the Justice Department said.

“The complaint alleges that, out of fears that fraudulent call volume would drop after the registration deadline, AT&T knowingly adopted a non-compliant registration system that did not verify whether the user was located within the United States,” Justice officials said in a press release. “The complaint further contends that AT&T continued to employ this system even with the knowledge that it facilitated use of IP Relay by fraudulent foreign callers, which accounted for up to 95 percent of AT&T’s call volume. The government’s complaint alleges that AT&T improperly billed the TRS (Telecommunications Relay Services) Fund for reimbursement of these calls and received millions of dollars in federal payments as a result.”

In a statement e-mailed to Ars, AT&T said it follows the FCC’s rules. “AT&T has followed the FCC’s rules for providing IP Relay services for disabled customers and for seeking reimbursement for those services,” AT&T spokesperson Marty Richter said. “As the FCC is aware, it is always possible for an individual to misuse IP Relay services, just as someone can misuse the postal system or an email account, but FCC rules require that we complete all calls by customers who identify themselves as disabled.” AT&T’s statement did not say whether it verified the location of users as required by the government.

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AT&T collected millions from taxpayers in fraudulent charges, US says

Researchers May Have Discovered How Memories Are Encoded In the Brain

Zothecula writes “While it’s generally accepted that memories are stored somewhere, somehow in our brains, the exact process has never been entirely understood. Strengthened synaptic connections between neurons definitely have something to do with it, although the synaptic membranes involved are constantly degrading and being replaced – this seems to be somewhat at odds with the fact that some memories can last for a person’s lifetime. Now, a team of scientists believe that they may have figured out what’s going on. Their findings could have huge implications for the treatment of diseases such as Alzheimer’s.”


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Researchers May Have Discovered How Memories Are Encoded In the Brain

Senate passes legislation to legalize crowdfunding



The US Senate passed amended legislation to allow legalized “crowdfunding” today. The CROWDFUND Act (Capital Raising Online While Deterring Fraud and Unethical Non-Disclosure) was approved by nearly a 3-to-1 ratio, 73-26.

With the act’s passage, companies would be required to use SEC-approved crowdfunding platforms that provide investor protection. This is an addition to the House of Representatives’ JOBS (Jumpstart Our Business Startups) Act. Both bills have bipartisan support, with the main business concern being low investment barriers could encourage fraud. Hopefully, the Senate’s amendments address that exact issue.

Under the new legislation, yearly crowdfunding is capped at $1 million per year for businesses. Investors will also have their contributions capped based on income, with some people only allowed a maximum of $2,000. The House and Senate bills have yet to be reconciled and signed, but crowdfunding outlets like Crowdfunder already claim $13.55 million is waiting to be committed to more than 900 companies.

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Senate passes legislation to legalize crowdfunding

ISP: Storing 25 petabytes of Megaupload data costs us $9,000 a day



Until January, Megaupload was a major customer of Carpathia Hosting. Now Megaupload is facing a federal indictment, and its servers have become a major burden for Carpathia.

Carpathia is the proud owners of 1,103 servers with approximately 25 petabytes of Megaupload data on them. The government seized Megaupload’s assets, so the firm can’t pay its bills and Carpathia has cancelled Megaupload’s service contract. But Carpathia hasn’t been able to reuse the servers for other customers because doing so might interfere with the Megaupload court case or invite lawsuits from Megaupload customers who lose data as a result.

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ISP: Storing 25 petabytes of Megaupload data costs us $9,000 a day

The ”dizzying” success of the doodling app Draw…

The ”dizzying” success of the doodling app Draw Something was underscored Wednesday when news broke that gaming titan Zynga was purchasing the company behind the app, New York-based OMGPOP, for over $200 million. Here, a look at the numbers behind the popular new app:

20.5 million – daily active Draw Something users

3 billion – total drawings since the game was released seven weeks ago

$250,000 – Net profit Draw Something earns per day (after Apple’s 30 percent cut)

9 – years it took for AOL to hit 1 million users

9 – days it took for Draw Something to hit 1 million users

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Kepler comes of age: NVIDIA unveils GeForce GTX 680 desktop GPU, 600M series for laptops

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NVIDIA’s next-gen GPUs sure took their sweet time arriving, but the first of the Kepler crew is finally available in stores and its 28nm silicon is just itching to show off what it can do. You may be wondering what the 2GB GeForce GTX 680 brings to the gaming table, and whether it’ll put an end to AMD’s free run at the top of the food chain. Well, NVIDIA now claims it has “the fastest GPU in the world”, with both lower power consumption and a 10-40 percent performance advantage over AMD’s single-GPU rival, the Radeon HD 7970, at 1920 x 1080. How can it back up such a boast? Ultimately, everything hinges on independent benchmarks (coming soon in our review round-up), but in the meantime we need to look at NVIDIA’s new architecture for clues. Intrigued? Then head on past the break.

Continue reading Kepler comes of age: NVIDIA unveils GeForce GTX 680 desktop GPU, 600M series for laptops

Kepler comes of age: NVIDIA unveils GeForce GTX 680 desktop GPU, 600M series for laptops originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Mar 2012 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kepler comes of age: NVIDIA unveils GeForce GTX 680 desktop GPU, 600M series for laptops

Millions In China Live In Energy Efficient Caves


Hugh Pickens writes “Barbara Demick reports in the LA Times that more than 30 million Chinese people live in caves, many of them in Shaanxi province, where the Loess plateau, with its distinctive cliffs of yellow, porous soil, makes digging easy and cave dwelling a reasonable option. The better caves protrude from mountains and are reinforced with brick masonry. Some are connected laterally so a family can have several chambers. Electricity and even running water can be brought in. ‘Most aren’t so fancy, but I’ve seen some really beautiful caves: high ceilings and spacious with a nice yard out front where you can exercise and sit in the sun,’ says Ren, who works as a driver in the Shaanxi provincial capital, Xian. ‘It’s cool in the summer and warm in the winter. It’s quiet and safe.’ In recent years, architects have been reappraising the cave in environmental terms, and they like what they see. ‘It is energy efficient. The farmers can save their arable land for planting if they build their houses in the slope. It doesn’t take much money or skill to build,’ says Liu Jiaping, director of the Green Architecture Research Center in Xian and perhaps the leading expert on cave living. Liu helped design and develop a modernized version of traditional cave dwellings that in 2006 was a finalist for a World Habitat Award, sponsored by a British foundation dedicated to sustainable housing. Meanwhile, a thriving market around Yanan means a cave with three rooms and a bathroom (a total of 750 square feet) can be advertised for sale at $46,000. ‘Life is easy and comfortable here. I don’t need to climb stairs. I have everything I need,’ says 76-year-old Ma Liangshui. ‘I’ve lived all my life in caves, and I can’t imagine anything different.'”


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Adobe unveils Photoshop CS6 beta with redesigned UI and 65 new features, download it for free today

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It’s been two years since Adobe unveiled a new version of Photoshop, so it shouldn’t come as a surprise that the company’s engineers have been toiling away behind the scenes on a major update. The outfit’s clearly ready to start showing off the fruits of its labor, though, as it just unveiled the beta version of CS6. All told, the outfit’s added 65 user-feedback-inspired features, including a new crop tool, expanded video editing options, auto recovery and the ability to search for specific layers. Fans of the dotted lines in Illustrator now get the same vector tools in Photoshop. Additionally, every slider for the Camera Raw 7.0 plug-in (exposure, contrast, etc.) has a freshly tweaked algorithm. And for anyone who’s ever looked on helplessly as Photoshop locked itself up during a long file save, projects can now save in the background while you work on other things. Looking for more info? A brief rundown of the beta and a full list of new features awaits just past the break.

Continue reading Adobe unveils Photoshop CS6 beta with redesigned UI and 65 new features, download it for free today

Adobe unveils Photoshop CS6 beta with redesigned UI and 65 new features, download it for free today originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Mar 2012 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Adobe unveils Photoshop CS6 beta with redesigned UI and 65 new features, download it for free today