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Curious Cat Science
Education, Research and Innovation in Science and Engineering.

Reminder: New Address

Moved to: Curious Cat Science and Engineering Blog.

Recent posts include:
Saturday, May 19, 2007 6:54 AM :: 0 comments ::

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Science and Engineering Blog Move

We have moved the Curious Cat Science and Engineering Blog:

About the blog:

The title of the blog gives you an idea of the topics we explore. Here we will provide some additional insight into what we aim to do:

Sunday, November 13, 2005 3:10 PM :: 0 comments ::

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The Effects of Patenting on Science

A Descriptive Analysis of a Pilot Survey on the Effects of Patenting on Science AAAS:

Of the 40% of respondents who reported their work had been affected, 58% said their work was delayed, 50% reported they had to change the research, and 28% reported abandoning their research project. The most common reason respondents reported
having to change or abandon their research project was that the acquisition of the
necessary technologies involved overly complex licensing negotiations.
Wednesday, November 09, 2005 7:55 PM :: 0 comments ::

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What's A Gene For?

What's A Gene For? by Carl Zimmer

This dilemma has helped give rise to a new kind of science called bioinformatics. It's an exciting field, despite its woefully dull name. Its mission is to use computers to help make sense of molecular biology--in this case, by traveling through vast oceans of online information in search of clues to how genes work


Robot Surgens

Three-inch Life Savers

Each camera-carrying robot -- the width of a lipstick case -- would illuminate the patient’s abdomen, beam back video images and carry different tools to help surgeons stop internal bleeding by clamping, clotting or cauterising wounds.


Rube Goldberg Machine Contest



Rube Goldberg Machine Contest

Cut or Shred Into Strips 5 Sheets of 8 1/2" x 11" 20lb Paper Individually With a Shredder in 20 or More Steps!
...
Rube Goldberg drew his "Inventions" as contraptions that satirized the new technology and gadgets of the day. His drawings, using simple machines and household items already in use, were incredibly complex and wacky, but somehow (perhaps it was because Rube was a graduate engineer) the "Inventions" always had an ingenious, logical progression as they worked to finish their task.

The annual National Rube Goldberg Machine Contest held at Purdue University in Indiana is organized by the Phi Chapter of Theta Tau, the National Student Engineering Organization. It hosts college and university teams from across the US. Winners of the high school statewide and regional contests are also invited to run their invention machines at the National.


Another site with additional information on the contest. This seems like a great way to make engineering fun.
Wednesday, November 02, 2005 7:32 PM :: 0 comments ::

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Mars Rover

Mars Rover Begins Climb Down From Summit

After two months at the summit of Husband Hill, the six-wheeled rover is making its descent toward a basin to the south where it will explore an outcrop dubbed "home plate" that looks like a baseball diamond from orbit.

The solar-powered Spirit's yearlong climb to the peak marked a major feat for the rover, which along with its twin, Opportunity, landed on opposite ends of the Red Planet in 2004 in search of evidence of the past history of water on the cold, dusty planet.

Image credit: NASA/JPL
Artist's concept of the Mars Exploration Rover on Mars.High Resolution Image

NASA Mars Exploration Rover site
Tuesday, November 01, 2005 3:59 PM :: 0 comments ::

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Engineering the Future

Engineering the Future

If you want to succeed in today’s hypercompetitive global economy, there are two things Jen-Hsun Huang wants you to know:

The name of the game is innovation, and innovation is a team sport.

“This is the innovation imperative,” he said.

That’s the message Huang plans to deliver this morning, when he will be the keynote speaker for the grand opening of the Kelley Engineering Center at Oregon State University.


In 1993 Huang cofounded Nvidia.
Saturday, October 29, 2005 6:55 AM :: 0 comments ::

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Using Light to Transmit Data

Stanford innovation helps 'enlighten' silicon chips, Stanford.

Light can carry data at much higher rates than electricity, but it has always been too expensive and difficult to use light to transmit data among silicon chips in electronic devices. Now, electrical engineers at Stanford have solved a major part of the problem. They have invented a key component that can easily be built into chips to break up a laser beam into billions of bits of data (zeroes and ones) per second. This could help chips output data at a much higher rate than they can now.
Wednesday, October 26, 2005 11:10 AM :: 0 comments ::

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