Tech News 2/22/10

The Bloom Box: a power plant for the home

bloom-box

Those two blocks can power the average high-consumption American home -- one block can power the average European home. At least that's the claim being made by K.R. Sridhar, founder of Bloom Energy, on 60 Minutes last night. The original technology comes from an oxygen generator meant for a scrapped NASA Mars program that's been converted, with the help of an estimated $400 million in private funding, into a fuel cell. Bloom's design feeds oxygen into one side of a cell while fuel (natural gas, bio gas from landfill waste, solar, etc) is supplied to the other side to provide the chemical reaction required for power. The cells themselves are inexpensive ceramic disks painted with a secret green "ink" on one side and a black "ink" on the other. The disks are separated by a cheap metal alloy, instead of more precious metals like platinum, and stacked into a cube of varying capabilities -- a stack of 64 can power a small business like Starbucks.

Engadget


English Spiderman climbs walls with vacuum cleaner

Spiderman-vacuum-cleaner

The 39 year-old scientist, an aeronautics graduate, amazed onlookers when he climbed up the side of Hove Park School, East Sussex this week.

The 12-stone scientist, who presents the BBC science show "Bang Goes the Theory", climbed 30ft up to the top of the wall and later retrieved a lost shuttlecock on his way back down.

Telegraph

Last Updated (Monday, 22 February 2010 08:56)