From Engadget: Boeing 787 set for first biofuel-powered flight tonight

Boeing 787 set for first biofuel-powered flight tonight

Biofuel in planes is hardly a new idea, but when Boeing’s latest and greatest aircraft gets in on the green game, we take notice. That’s right, a ANA 787 Dreamliner is currently preparing to take off from Everett, Washington this evening and will make its way across the Pacific to Tokyo powered by biofuel. Well played, Boeing, we’re all for celebrating Earth Day a little early, and it’s always good to see someone giving Sir Richard Branson a run for his money.

[Photo credit: Boeing, Flickr]

 

from Engadget

From Ars Technica: Twitter’s no-lawsuit pledge: “We will not join the patent wars”


Twitter today unveiled a bold new commitment that will be made in writing to its employees—the company will not use any patents derived from employee inventions in offensive lawsuits without the inventor’s permission.

The move is highly unusual in the technology industry, which is awash in patent lawsuits filed by and against seemingly all of the biggest companies. Twitter has written up a draft of what it calls the “Innovator’s Patent Agreement,” or IPA, which encourages its developers to invent without the fear that their inventions will be used for nefarious purposes.

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from Ars Technica

From Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now: The Thousand-Year-Old Viking Sunstone

Viking Sunstone CojoArt.com

A thousand years ago, Vikings navigated with a sunstone, which they used to locate the sun on cloudy days. The stone-a calcite crystal called Iceland spar-funnels light into two beams. When the beams appear equally bright, the rock is facing the light, even if it’s obscured. Researchers now use calcite to funnel light around tiny objects for “invisibility” cloaks.

from Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now

From Ars Technica: Valve looking to hire hardware engineers for unknown project


Those of you who reload the Valve job postings page every morning hoping to find a way out of your meaningless, dead-end career may have noticed that the esteemed game developer is now looking for a couple of hardware engineers to “conceive, design, evaluate, and produce new types of input, output, and platform hardware.”

The job postings don’t go into any specifics on what kind of hardware Valve is looking for help with exactly, but the company says it wants to “invent whole new gaming experiences” that can “enhance” the kinds of software it’s already making. Some might immediately try to connect the job postings to recent rumors of a PC-based “Steam Box” game console designed to run Valve’s digital distribution service. But it’s just as likely that the company is looking for people to further develop the kind of biofeedback devices it talked about at last year’s Game Developers Conference, or even work on its patent for a “pivotally translatable handle” controller that came to light last year. Or maybe it’s something the company hasn’t spoken about publicly at all.

In any case, it seems clearer than ever that Valve has its sights set on expanding out of the software business, even as it says it’s “a long way from… shipping any sort of hardware.”

 

from Ars Technica