Graphene Uses Keep on Coming

Last year’s Nobel Prize in Physics went to two British scientists for their work experimenting with graphene. This month has seen two separate announcements about how the material could be in electronic devices.

Graphene is simply a single layer of carbon atoms: as the Nobel citation explained, it’s literally a two-dimensional material. Manchester University professors Kostya Novoselov and Andre Geim discovered the material by using sticky tape to gradually peel away carbon layers from a piece of pencil lead.

What makes graphene so interesting is that it is arranged with the carbon atoms in a hexagon chain, a little like honeycomb or chicken wire. That arrangement makes the material particularly strong, despite being so thin that a pile of three million layers would only be a millimeter thick.

Novoselev has now made further comments about the pair’s research into the conductivity of graphene. He says tests show electrons can travel much faster through graphene than through silicon. That could mean the material makes for faster-running computer chips, suitable for devices such as computers and mobile phones.

Meanwhile researchers in the Rensselear Polytechnic Institute in New York have found that passing water over a graphene surface generates a tiny amount of electricity. While it’s not enough power to drive consumer devices, it is enough to power sensors used for discovering oil or gas, with the sensors placed into water that was flowed through cracks in the ground. As an added benefit, graphene is inherently flexible as well as strong, making it simpler to wrap around sensors.

The research showed it was possible to generate 85nW of power from a 0.03mm x 0.015mm sheet of graphene. From my rough calculations, and bearing in mind there’s a ridiculous margin for error when scaling up to this degree, this is roughly equivalent to getting 19 watts from a square meter of surface.

The Rensselear team believe that it’s possible the technology could eventually be used to get some power from the underside of a boat. Perhaps more practically, the figures may work out to allow a self-powered microsubmarine.

(Picture credit: AlexanderAlUS under Creative Commons license)



Knights of Badassdom Made of Win [Video]

If you’re casting a movie about geeks, make sure you cast some geeks. It’s a good rule to follow, and clearly one IndieVest Pictures took to heart when assembling players for their LARPcentric new feature film, Knights of Badassdom. If a movie about live-action role playing, magic and plenty of that substandard female armor–starring actors from Game of Thrones, Firefly and True Blood–isn’t geeky enough for you, then it’s probable that nothing is. (Also, for the three others of you who saw it, Zahn’s Star Trek-fanatic Marvin in Daddy Day Care was hilarious.)

From the movie’s YouTube channel:

In this comedic fantasy adventure, Joe (Ryan Kwanten) is a heavy metal rocker who’s just gone through a painful breakup with his girlfriend, Beth (Margarita Levieva). His concerned roommates (Steve Zahn, Peter Dinklage) kidnap him to their LARP (Live Action Role Playing) gathering, where he enters a realm of fantasy escapism in which pretend knights, elves, and barbarians clash with foam weaponry on a mock battlefield. When Joe’s “sorcerer” roommate (Zahn) inadvertently summons a deadly succubus that takes Beth’s seductive form, bloody reality crashes down upon their fantasy world. Once LARPers start to turn up dead, the make-believe wizards and warriors must join forces with other adventurers (Summer Glau, Danny Pudi) to become the real life heroes they have been pretending to be and conquer the unleashed evil.

IndieVest Pictures’ feature film KNIGHTS OF BADASSDOM will be in theaters Spring 2012. Follow the film on Facebook and Twitter.

New Rise of The Planet of the Apes Trailer: Apes Going Amok!

Check out the awesome teaser for Rise of The Planet of the Apes that was shown at SDCC a few days ago. The only problem I have with this movie is that the probability of a bunch of apes, as intelligent as they can be, overpowering people armed with machine guns, tanks, helicopters, and various other weapons, is highly improbable. Oh well, a movie is a movie, so let’s enjoy it for what it is.

[Via Topless Robot]



Google+ vs Facebook [Comic]

I haven’t said this in years, but you should really be paying attention to MySpace.

[Beatriz Torres aka Zirta via @GuyKawasaki]

The Analog Blogger of Liberia

In a country where most of the population is unable to afford a thirty-cent newspaper and Internet service is something akin to having a pet unicorn, it’s easy to imagine that the news available to the masses is more than a little bit skewed by government control. That’s why Alfred Sirleaf, of the capitol city Monrovia, has been curating Daily Talk since 2000. Daily Talk is a centrally-located chalkboard covered in news, free of charge, for the masses.

Each morning, at 10:45 AM, Alfred Sirleaf heads down to his bulletin board to post the day’s news, culling together a slate of stories his countrymen might otherwise never see. Grateful readers line up in droves, on foot and in cars, to read these updates, in what has been described as the country’s—and most likely the world’s—only analog blog.

[VBS via mentalfloss] [image: herwigphoto]

The World is About to End: Wil Wheaton, Felicia Day, and Nathan Fillion in the Same Photo

Thumbs up to that photobomber in the back who got immortalized in one of the geekiest photo of all time.

[Source: @NathanFillion]

San Diego Comic-Con 2011 Cosplay: Day 4 [Gallery]

Yep, yesterday was the last day at SDCC 2011. Who among you guys had the chance to attend? How was the event compared to last year? Let us know in the comments section below!

We’ve already posted galleries for day 1, day 2, and day 3, so all that’s missing now are picture from day 4, which we conveniently compiled in the CC-Friendly gallery below. Please note that the pictures may not all be from day 4, but they’ve been uploaded to flickr after the end of the event. Enjoy!

[Sources: 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23]