Electronic Component News

News

Subscribe to ECN Magazine News
View Sample

FREE Email Newsletter

ECN Daily

Fueling fitness on the final frontier

May 21, 2013 12:43 pm | by EurekAlert! | Comments

Think keeping in shape is an uphill battle? Try staying fit in space, where living quarters are cramped and prolonged weightlessness withers muscle and bone. That's the challenge a group of Michigan State University researchers will address with a new three-year, $1.2 million grant from NASA.

TOPICS:

High court upholds FCC power in cell tower disputes

May 21, 2013 12:40 pm | Comments

The Supreme Court has affirmed the authority of federal regulators to try to speed local government decisions on proposals to build or expand cell phone towers. The court voted 6-3 Monday to uphold an appeals court ruling in favor the Federal Communications Commission.

Should we let wunderkinds drop out of high school?

May 21, 2013 12:37 pm | by BETH J. HARPAZ, Associated Press | Comments

Thomas Sohmers, 17, of Hudson, Mass., has been working at a research lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology since he was 13, developing projects ranging from augmented reality eyewear to laser communications systems. This spring, his mom, Penny Mills, let him drop out of 11th grade.

Advertisement

Apple's Cook to face Senate questions on taxes

May 21, 2013 12:32 pm | by MARCY GORDON, AP Business Writer | Comments

Apple's CEO is disputing assertions by a Senate panel that the company avoids billions of dollars in U.S. taxes by shifting profits to foreign affiliates. Tim Cook testified at a hearing Tuesday by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which released a damning report Monday on Apple's tax practices.

TOPICS:

Penn engineers’ nanoantennas improve infrared sensing

May 21, 2013 11:10 am | by The University of Pennsylvania | Comments

A team of University of Pennsylvania engineers has used a pattern of nanoantennas to develop a new way of turning infrared light into mechanical action, opening the door to more sensitive infrared cameras and more compact chemical-analysis techniques.

Researchers perform fastest measurements ever made of ion channel proteins

May 21, 2013 11:00 am | by Columbia University | Comments

The miniaturization of electronics continues to create unprecedented capabilities in computer and communications applications, enabling handheld wireless devices with tremendous computing performance operating on battery power. This same miniaturization of electronic systems is also creating new opportunities in biotechnology and biophysics.

Opening doors to foldable electronics with inkjet-printed graphene

May 21, 2013 10:45 am | by Northwestern University | Comments

Northwestern University researchers have recently developed a graphene-based ink that is highly conductive and tolerant to bending, and they have used it to inkjet-print graphene patterns that could be used for extremely detailed, conductive electrodes.

Iron-platinum alloys could be new-generation hard drives

May 21, 2013 10:26 am | by EurekAlert! | Comments

Meeting the demand for more data storage in smaller volumes means using materials made up of ever-smaller magnets, or nanomagnets. One promising material for a potential new generation of recording media is an alloy of iron and platinum with an ordered crystal structure.

Advertisement

NASA builds unusual testbed for analyzing X-ray navigation technologies

May 21, 2013 10:20 am | by NASA | Comments

Pulsars have a number of unusual qualities. Like zombies, they shine even though they’re technically dead, and they rotate rapidly, emitting powerful and regular beams of radiation that are seen as flashes of light, blinking on and off at intervals from seconds to milliseconds.

Softbank to revise or cancel Hokkaido megasolar power plant

May 21, 2013 10:04 am | by The Associated Press | Comments

Softbank Corp. may revise or cancel its plan to build three megasolar power plants in Hokkaido as Hokkaido Electric Power Co. has rejected its electricity sales application, industry sources said Tuesday. The local utility in April vowed to limit its electricity purchases from solar power plants to 400,000 kilowatts...

TOPICS:

iCampus Student Competition yields online tools for improved on campus experiences

May 21, 2013 9:57 am | by Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Comments

The MIT Council on Educational Technology (MITCET) and the Office of Educational Innovation and Technology (OEIT) announced the winner and runners-up for the 2013 iCampus Student Prize competition at the Office of Digital Learning retreat held on May 17. The annual competition is offered each year to all current MIT undergraduates and graduate students (both individuals and groups) to encourage development of technology to improve aspects of MIT’...

NSE grad student wins Heller Entrepreneurship Grant

May 21, 2013 9:37 am | by Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Comments

Nuclear Science and Engineering (NSE) graduate student Sam Shaner was one of four students recently awarded the Ronald I. Heller Entrepreneurship Grant by MIT through the Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship. The grant is presented annually to an MIT student or group of students for their significant impact on the quality and overall spirit of entrepreneurship at the Institute.Shaner is an NSE PhD student and a DOE NEUP Fellow...

S&P downgrades Dell debt rating to 'BBB'

May 20, 2013 6:53 pm | by The Associated Press | Comments

Standard & Poor's Ratings Service lowered its credit rating on Dell Inc. by two notches, reflecting the computer marker's worsening operating performance. Last week, the Round Rock, Texas, company issued a dismal first-quarter report, as it slashed its personal computer prices in response to...

Advertisement

Panel: Apple uses firms outside US to avoid taxes

May 20, 2013 5:00 pm | by The Associated Press | Comments

Apple Inc. employs a group of affiliate companies located outside the United States to avoid paying billions of dollars in U.S. income taxes, a Senate investigation has found. The world's most valuable company is holding overseas some $102 billion of its $145 billion in cash, and an Irish...

Idaho couple and Sun Valley land in Twitter tussle

May 20, 2013 4:29 pm | by JOHN MILLER - Associated Press - Associated Press | Comments

An Internet entrepreneur and former Wall Street derivatives analyst contends central Idaho's Sun Valley resort and the Twitter Inc. social media site heisted his handle. Leonard Barshack, who in the 1990s founded the Internet email listing service Bigfoot, is suing Twitter and the Sun Valley Co.,...

Pages

X
You may login with either your assigned username or your e-mail address.
The password field is case sensitive.
Loading