Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Invest in this...

See if we can get an investment path to stuff like this...

Researchers accidentally discover a way to make batteries last basically forever


VIEW SLIDESHOW
Inventors joke about building “a better mousetrap,” but these days, it’s a better battery that everyone actually wants. Researchers at the University of California, Irvine have made a breakthrough that could lead to just that. Using gold and some new-fangled materials, the team built a nanowire batterythat maintains its performance after hundreds of thousands of charging cycles. Compared to existing lithium-ion battery technology, this could shift the future of energy storage forever – and the whole thing was discovered on accident.

...tune in for updates as available.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Mark @ Google+

Found this to be both astute and compelling: (Source Unknown) "A psychologist walked around a room while teaching stress management to an audience. As she raised a glass of water, everyone expected they'd be asked the "half empty or half full" question. Instead, with a smile on her face, she inquired: "How heavy is this glass of water?" Answers called out ranged from 8 oz. to 20 oz. She replied, "The ... Expand this post »

Not sure if this is going to post well or post -erous, but we'll give it a shot!

Posted via email from OmniNetMark™

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Are you ready for this...

...via Tim O'Reilly @ Google+ "Wow. Facebook adds organ donor status to profiles. This is the kind of social engineering that once only governments could do. It will be a fascinating test of Cass Sunstein and Richard Thaler's "choice architectures" hypothesis, as outlined in their book Nudge. It will be very interesting to see how many people take FB up on this notion, and what their choices are." via nytimes.com

Posted via email from Mark LaPete's OmniNetMark™

Sunday, December 11, 2011

SOPA SUCKS

What a great con... 

...make up shit that needs enforcement and government oversight (i.e., $$$) then take the same $$$ as legal afterwards: brilliant.

Wished I'd of thought of it except I LOVE MY COUNTRY AND IT'S PEOPLE ENOUGH NOT TO CHEAT IT OUT OF $$$.

PARASITES = Halataei and Pasternack .

FIRE THEM NOW AND FOR GOOD.

YOU DO NOT DESERVE A DIME OF MINE.

JOE Q. CITIZEN


SEE HERE:

Congressional staffers behind SOPA get shiny new jobs as entertainment industry lobbyists

By Cory Doctorow at 5:55 am Sunday, Dec 11

Allison Halataei (former deputy chief of staff for House Judiciary Chairman Lamar Smith (R-Texas)) and Lauren Pastarnack (former senior aide on the Senate Judiciary Committee) have cool new jobs. Having written the Internet-destroying Stop Online Piracy Act for their bosses while drawing a salary at public expense, they've now accepted massive raises to go work for the entertainment companies who stand to benefit from the law they wrote. Their new job? Helping to run the campaign to push their law through.

Halataei recently joined the National Music Publishers’ Association, and Pastarnack is jumping to the Motion Pictures Association of America, two lobbying groups pressing Congress to pass the proposals...

“This is one of those mega-fights where there is a lot of money at stake and whenever it gets to that, it’s kind of ‘Katy bar the door’ as far as what they’ll pay for talent,” said McCormick Group headhunter Ivan Adler. “This fits into the perfect scenario of why senior-level people from well-placed committees get hired, and it’s because they really know the three p’s: people, policy and process. And that makes them very valuable in the Washington marketplace.”

The former aides will face one-year lobbying bans, which means they cannot lobby the respective committees where they previously worked. But those bans don’t render the former aides useless to their new employers.

“They can provide invaluable insight to people on the outside — even in the consultation mode,” one tech industry lobbyist said, noting that Halataei had been Smith’s secondhand person and knows how the Texas Republican thinks and what would be an effective lobbying strategy.

Additionally, the Senate and House panels work closely together, and both Halataei and Pastarnack have ties to staffers in the chambers they didn’t serve in and aren’t banned from lobbying.

GOP aides head to K St. for tech war (via /.)

Posted via email from Mark LaPete's OmniNetMark™