Jennifer
MG3K Forum Member
MG3K Publisher}}OfficialWordCount{14693} FanFiction{3175} Awards{31}
The Big, Mean Publisher
Posts: 718
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Post by Jennifer on Apr 12, 2010 0:14:53 GMT -8
So you have a new idea? That's great! But you're not sure which cornerstone category your new idea fits in? No problem Post it here! As soon as Cris (Senior Editor and sourcebook harvester) sees your post, she'll transfer your idea to the proper place and post here where your idea was moved so everyone can follow along and add their thoughts.
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GamerChick
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Proudly raising little gamers.
Posts: 43
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Post by GamerChick on Apr 25, 2010 3:16:44 GMT -8
Hey there, Cris. Love the new organization you're doing. Where should I post about this coolness? I thought it would be important to show how small solar power components can be. Gille Breakthrough: World's Smallest Solar-Powered Sensor System In a pioneering development at the University of Michigan, researchers have come up with a tiny solar-powered sensor that is capable of supplying almost continuous energy. The device consists of a processor, solar cells and a battery, all enclosed in a small frame, measuring just 2.5 by 3.5 by 1 millimeters. Using an industry-standard ARM Cortex-M3 processor, the system contains the lowest-powered commercial-class microcontroller. It consumes about 2,000 times less power in sleep mode than its most energy-efficient counterpart available does today. This research, presented yesterday at the International Solid-State Circuits Conference in San Francisco has the potential to enable new biomedical implants as well as new devices to monitor buildings, bridges and homes. The new sensor has been designed to spend most of its time in sleep mode, waking briefly every few minutes to take measurements. Claims are that its total average power consumption is less than 1 nanowatt. According to the developers, their method for managing power is the key innovation. The processor only needs about half of a volt to operate, but its low-voltage, thin-film Cymbet battery puts out close to 4 volts. The voltage, which is essentially the pressure of the electric current, must be reduced for the system to function most efficiently.
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Cris
MG3K Forum Member
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Homidin: teh sc?o, teh torox, teh antha.
Posts: 506
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Post by Cris on Apr 25, 2010 20:28:26 GMT -8
Gille! Awesome find. I've created a brand new category just for you It's called: Prime Time Cornerstone: Energy. Please re-post your information there.
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