Glass Polymer ‘Self-Heals’ At Room Temperature

A newly created glass polymer can ‘heal itself’ without the need for extreme heat. But suggestions it could be used for phone screens might be a reach.

Several polymers already exist with self-healing properties, meaning that with the application of heat they can reform their bonds and thus repair cracks. Aside from the fact that usually only minor damage can be repaired this way, the big problem is that they often need to be exposed to temperatures of well over 100 degrees Celsius. That’s not exactly convenient for consumers, particularly with glass used in electronic gadgets that really shouldn’t be put in an oven.

A University of Tokyo graduate discovered the polymer, with the catchy name of TUEG3 (poly[thioureas] and ethylene glycol), while working to produce a glue. If pieces of the material are cut and the edges pushed together for 30 seconds, they’ll form a stable single sheet even at temperatures as low as 21 degrees Celsius.

The sheet becomes load bearing immediately (a report in Science noted a two-square-centimeter sheet can hold 300 grams) and within two hours has the same strength as if it had always been a single sheet.

While several media reports have dubbed it the latest hope for self-repairing phone screens, that’s unlikely any time soon. The edges of the two pieces being joined together need to be relatively smooth, something that’s going to be tricky to achieve in a cracked phone screen. There’s also the fairly significant limitation that in its current form the polymer is only semi-transparent.

USELESS MACHINES: How to Wrap a Gift and Decorate a Christmas Tree in Just 10 Seconds!

Inventor Joseph Herscher built two machines to help him wrap gifts and decorate his Christmas tree in just 10 seconds. I haven’t laughed this hard while watching a Youtube video in a long, long time.

I use 7 pads, a drill and a bicycle wheel to wrap a present. Then I use hairspray, a drill and a lazy-suzan to decorate a christmas tree in 10 seconds!

[Joseph’s Machines]


Apple Admits: We Do Slow Down Older iPhones

Apple has admitted it does intentionally slow down older model iPhones, but says it’s to make them work more reliably rather than to push people into upgrading.

The admission comes despite recent benchmarking that suggested the idea older iPhones suddenly get slower when a new model is released is a myth. Benchmarking company Futuremark said it couldn’t find any consistent or significant pattern of changes in the phones it studied, let alone one that mirrored Apple’s release schedule.

In contrast, a study posted this week suggested a very clear pattern of some iPhone processors having a dramatic slowdown when the handset went from iOS 10.2.0 to 10.2.1, implying a deliberate modification of behavior. Writer John Poole noted this drop could be overturned by replacing a battery and speculated Apple was trying to combat a problem of degraded batteries causing phones to shut down unexpectedly.

Apple has now confirmed that this is the case. It says the update to the iPhone 6 range was designed to “smooth out the instantaneous peaks” of processor demand that might cause the shut down in phones with aging batteries. It said a similar change was made for the iPhone 7 in iOS 11.2 and that it plans to use the technique for other products.

While the admission does appear to squash the theory Apple is trying to promote upgrades by intentionally slowing down the superceded models, keeping quiet about it until now has hardly helped its case. If nothing else, Apple’s silence has meant many people may have wrongly concluded the best fix was to buy an expensive new phone rather than simply replacing the battery.

NERF STAR WARS 2 – The Last Office Jedi

In honor of the release of The Last Jedi, I wanted to share with you this fun, action-packed Star Wars short. Entitled, “Nerf Star Wars 2 – The Last Office Jedi”, this video features an office nerf battle that escalates into a full on Jedi/Sith lightsaber battle thanks to the power of human imagination.

Thanks Michael!

[The Warp Zone]