Main Menu

  • Log In
  • Activity
  • Toolography
  • FAQ
  • Bitcoin SaToshi
  • Concepts
  • Weekly Stone Mason Mining Contest
    • Halloween Event Contest
    • Christmas event contest
  • Top Miners
    • Top Lumberjacks
    • Top TreeSap
    • Top Farmers
    • Top Aquatics
    • Top Cooks
    • Top Crafters
  • Forums
    • Buying/Selling Market Hub
    • Pick-Mining
      • LumberJacking
      • Smelting
      • Farming
      • Cooking
    • Aquatics
    • Astronomy
    • Researching
    • Deep Sea Diving Marine Biology
    • Alien EBE Interactions
    • Exercise
      • Sleeping
      • Dancing
    • Praying
    • Ideas/Suggestion Box
  • Mining Areas
  • Register
  • Help
    • Entering the VR World
    • Visit Cindy
    • How do I get paid?
    • Our Goals
    • Privacy Policy

Work with Access (Open Beta)

The Virtual Reality Free Market Economy RCE VRMMORPG

Extras

  • WebTour
  • Talk with Cindy
  • Talk with Susan
  • Chat/Access A.I.

f2ib

Posted on April 27, 2015 by Access
Join Free

© 2019 Keith T Buchanan

« f2hr
f2if »

  • Log In
  • Register
  • FAQ
  • Bitcoin SaToshi
  • Mining Locations
  • Mining Toolography
  • Weekly Stone Mason Mining Contest
    • Christmas Event
    • Halloween Event
  • Mining Forums
  • Top Miners
  • Top Lumberjacks
  • Top Farmers
  • Top Crafters
  • Top Cooks
  • Top Aquatics
  • Top TreeSap
  • Enter WebTour
  • IRL Coupons
  • Our Goals
  • Privacy Policy

RSS Top Technology News — ScienceDaily

  • Ultracompact metalens microscopy breaks FOV constraints November 13, 2020
    The pursuit of ever-higher imaging resolution in microscopy is coupled with growing demands for compact portability and high throughput. While imaging performance has improved, conventional microscopes still suffer from the bulky, heavy elements and architectures associated with refractive optics. Metalenses offer a solution: they're ultrathin, ultralight, and flat, and benefit from lots of recent research […]
  • Light shed on the atomic resolution structure of phage DNA tube November 13, 2020
    Given that phages are able to destroy bacteria, they are of particular interest to science. Basic researchers are especially interested in the tube used by phages to implant their DNA into bacteria. They have now revealed the 3D structure of this crucial phage component in atomic resolution.
  • The unique hydraulics in the Barbegal water mills, the world's first industrial plant November 13, 2020
    The Barbegal watermills in southern France are a unique complex dating back to the 2nd century AD. The construction with 16 waterwheels is, as far as is known, the first attempt in Europe to build a machine complex on an industrial scale. A team of scientists has now gained new knowledge about the construction and […]
  • New green materials could power smart devices using ambient light November 13, 2020
    Researchers have developed environmentally friendly materials that could harvest enough energy from indoor light to power wireless smart devices.
  • Computer vision app allows easier monitoring of diabetes November 13, 2020
    A computer vision technology developed by engineers has now been developed into a free mobile phone app for regular monitoring of glucose levels in people with diabetes.
  • Zinc-ion hybrid capacitors with ideal anions in the electrolyte show extra-long performance November 13, 2020
    Metal-ion hybrid capacitors combine the properties of capacitors and batteries. One electrode uses the capacitive mechanism, the other the battery-type redox processes. Scientists have now scrutinized the role of anions in the electrolyte. The results reveal the importance of sulfate anions. Sulfate-based electrolytes gave zinc-ion hybrid capacitors outstanding performance and extra-long operability.
  • Chemistry: How nitrogen is transferred by a catalyst November 13, 2020
    Catalysts with a metal-nitrogen bond can transfer nitrogen to organic molecules. In this process short-lived molecular species are formed, whose properties critically determine the course of the reaction and product formation. The key compound in a catalytic nitrogen-atom transfer reaction has now been analysed in detail by chemists. The detailed understanding of this reaction will […]
  • Success in controlling perovskite ions' composition paves the way for device applications November 13, 2020
    Hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites have received much attention as potential next generation solar cells and as materials for light-emitting devices.
  • Ultra-fast polymer modulators that can take the heat November 13, 2020
    Researchers have demonstrated a silicon-polymer hybrid modulator that can efficiently and reliably transmit data at 200 Gbit/s over an extremely wide range of temperatures from 25 °C to 110 °C. Use of such robust modulators in high-speed data applications could reduce cooling demands of the systems and expand applications in harsh environments.
  • History of temperature changes in the Universe revealed November 13, 2020
    How hot is the Universe today? How hot was it before? A new study by an international team of researchers suggests that the mean temperature of gas in large structures of the Universe has increased about 3 times in the last 8 billion years, to reach about two million Kelvin today.
  • WebTour
  • Talk with Cindy
  • Talk with Susan
  • Chat/Access A.I.

Powered by WordPress and HeatMap AdAptive Theme