BenQ BL2411PT 24-Inch LCD Monitor

BenQ-BL2411PT-24-Inch-LCD-Monitor

Here’s a look at another upcoming LCD monitor from BenQ, the BL2411PT. Adopting BenQ’s ‘Senseye 3′ image correction technology, this new 24-inch IPS LED-backlight monitor provides 1920 x 1200 WUXGA native resolution, 1000:1 contrast ratio, 300 cd/m2 brightness, 14ms response time and 178/178 degree viewing angles. Not to mention, it also comes with two built-in 1W stereo speakers, an adjustable stand and has D-Sub, DVI-D and DisplayPort connectors. The BL2411PT will begin shipping from May 31st for 40,800 Yen (about $400). [BenQ]

Sanwa 400-MC003 WEB Conference Microphone Speakerphone

Sanwa-400-MC003-WEB-Conference-Microphone-Speakerphone

Sanwa hits back with a new WEB conference microphone speakerphone, the 400-MC003. This USB bus-powered device is equipped with three omni-directional microphones with a sound collection performance of radius 3m (each microphone can also be extended to 80cm by pulling it out from the main body), an echo noise cancellation function and a speaker unit in the center that can output audio to 360-degree evenly. The 400-MC003 retails for 15,800 Yen (about $155). [Product Page]

Scientists alter mosquito genes with “people” blindness

Summer is upon many of us, and with it comes mosquitoes. Such tiny creatures are more than a nuisance, serving as disease transmitters of things like malaria. In light of this, researchers undertook a project that could, in part, mitigate such an issue using gene manipulation. Via altering a gene related to the mosquito’s ability to smell, the scientists effectively made the insects “blind” to the scent of humans, leaving them to seek out other warm-blooded prey instead.

DNA

Although mosquitoes seek out all sorts of warm-blooded prey, they prefer humans, something that is unfortunate for us. The researchers’ work demonstrated that the insect’s ability to seek out humans is largely based on its sense of smell, although it does use carbon dioxide and body heat as means of detection as well. Its ability to tell when such two factors come from humans rather than animals, however, is based on its ability to smell.

A senior researcher from New York City’s Rockefeller University Leslie Vosshall said that as such, smell is the most important factor for mosquitoes. This led to the discovery of an important gene that facilitates a mosquito’s ability to smell. Eliminating the gene made it so the insects used in the experiment could no longer seek out humans over other warm-bodied creatures.

Vosshall said the team doing the science does not plan to release “mutant mosquitoes” into the public space, but rather is performing the research in part to help create repellents that work better than what is already available. Such work inspires bigger questions, however, primarily whether altering the mosquito populations in areas with, for example, high instances of malaria could reduce the number of disease transmissions.

The biggest question is whether impairing a mosquito’s ability to smell will make it harder for it to survive in the wild – genetically modifying the insects to their detriment would be a negative effect, after all. Another question is whether such a plan would even be effective in reducing disease transmission, because although the mosquitoes wouldn’t be able to sniff out humans, they would still be able to identify them as a food source based on carbon dioxide and body heat. Therefore, mosquitoes in a highly populated area will still have significant access to humans, and the inability to smell may not have any notable effect.

SOURCE: Philly
Image via Svilen Milev


Scientists alter mosquito genes with “people” blindness is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Green House GH-AC-U1APW AC Outlet USB Charger

Green-House-GH-AC-U1APW-AC-Outlet-USB-Charger

Green House is bringing you their latest AC outlet USB charger, the GH-AC-U1APW. Designed specially for your iPhone/iPod, this travel-friendly device is equipped with one USB 5V output port (1000mA maximum output) and comes with a retractable plug that plugs directly into a household AC outlet. The GH-AC-U1APW will become available from mid-June for 980 Yen (about $10). [Product Page]

Dospara GALLERIA Erusodo JF2 Gaming PC

Dospara-GALLERIA-Erusodo-JF2-Gaming-PC

Here we have another newly launched gaming PC from Dospara, the GALLERIA Erusodo JF2. Powered by a 3.20GHz Intel Core i5-3470 processor, the system packs an Intel B75 Express Chipset, a GeForce GT640 1GB graphics card, an 8GB DDR3 RAM, a 500GB hard drive, a DVD Super Multi Drive and runs on Windows 8 64-bit OS. The GALLERIA Erusodo JF2 sells for 76,980 Yen (about $762). [Product Page]

Mammoth With Blood In Carcass May Aid Efforts To Clone Prehistoric Mammal (PHOTOS)

It was a discovery of mammoth proportions.

On Wednesday, Russian scientists reported that they had extracted blood from a 10,000-year-old woolly mammoth carcass discovered frozen in the Arctic. The researchers estimated that the prehistoric mammal was about 60 when it died, according to a statement issued by North-Eastern Federal University in Yakutsk.

The mammoth was found in a remote location in the New Siberian Islands in the Arctic Ocean, where temperatures can dip to minus 10 degrees Celsius (about 14 degrees Fahrenheit).

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Physicists construct the most accurate clock the world has ever seen

DNP clocks clocks all the time clocks

Calling a clock the most accurate ever may sound like hyperbole, but physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Boulder, Colorado have built a pair of devices that can claim that title. The team used an optical lattice to address an issue that plagues atomic clockmakers: constantly shifting frequencies that negatively impact the accuracy of their measurements. For example, a single second can be defined by the frequency of light emitted by an atom when electrons jump from one state to the next, but those frequencies change as the atom moves. The optical lattice essentially suspends atoms to minimize the Doppler effect produced by that movement. By combining the lattice with the element ytterbium, the group was able to create a device that measures time with a precision of one part in 1018. To put that into perspective, Andrew Ludlow, one of the paper’s authors, said, “A measurement at the 1018 fractional level is equivalent to specifying the age of the known universe to a precision of less than one second.” To read more about the team’s work, you can find the full PDF at the source.

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Via: MIT Technology Review, Gizmodo

Source: Cornell University Library (PDF)

Silicon Power Jewel J10 USB 3.0 Flash Drives

Silicon-Power-Jewel-J10-USB-3.0-Flash-Drive

Here comes a new line of USB 3.0 flash drives from Silicon Power, the Jewel J10. Available in 8GB, 16GB, 32GB and 64GB capacities, these capless flash drives feature a shiny stainless steel housing, a USB 3.0 connection interface and make use of COB (Chip On Board) technology. The 8GB, 16GB, 32GB and 64GB models will go on sale from early June for around $12, $17, $30 and $55, respectively. [Silicon Power]

Women In STEM: It’s Time To Take Ownership Of Being Female

During the backlash surrounding Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer’s decision to end home working at the company in February, this headline appeared on CNBC: “Telecommuting Uproar? It’s Because Mayer’s Female”.

Whether you were for or against her decision, the plethora of responses which focus on Mayer’s gender in this debate (the argument being that criticism she received rested on the decision being “out of character” for a woman) is the latest in a recent spate of high-profile examples of women’s gender working against them.

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Obama’s Chicago Fundraiser Explains Why Congress Is ‘Stuck’

Speaking at a Democratic fundraiser in Chicago Wednesday night, President Barack Obama found a word to describe the current climate in Congress: “stuck.”

Obama bewailed the logjam, explaining how the campaigning calendar is getting in the way of the future.

“We’ve got a politics that’s stuck right now,” he said, according to a pool report. “The reason it’s stuck is because people spend more time thinking about the next election than they do the next generation.”

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