Sunday, June 30, 2013

Galaxy S4 takes the crown for fastest phone with best battery life

Samsung Galaxy S4 Speed Battery Life

Complain all you want about the Galaxy S4?s cheap-feeling plastic casing, but the device does have plenty of redeeming features that have nothing to do with its build. Popular United Kingdom-based consumer product testing website Which??over the past week has given the Galaxy S4 awards for being both the fastest smartphone and having the best battery life.

[More from BGR: Apple iOS 7 beta 3 scheduled for release on July 8th]

In terms of speed, Which? says it put all major smartphone vendors? flagship devices through its Geekbench 2 test that measures ?processor and memory performance across smartphone platforms to provide a standard speed rating.? The Galaxy S4 came out well ahead of the competition in this test, as its Geekbench score of 3188 easily bested the second-place HTC One and its score of 2798.

[More from BGR: Android 4.3 leaks for Galaxy S4, rumored to launch in July]

In terms of battery life, the Galaxy S4 scored the highest in both average call time with 1,051 minutes and average Internet use with 405 minutes.?The Galaxy S4?s strong battery life is particularly impressive given how many features Samsung has preloaded onto the device.

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/galaxy-s4-takes-crown-fastest-phone-best-battery-162011230.html

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Singer Jessie J. stops fight during her concert

Celebs

13 hours ago

IMAGE: Jessie J.

Darrin Zammit Lupi / Reuters

Jessie J. performing at the Malta concert where she stopped a fight.

They say music soothes the savage breast, but at British singer Jessie J.'s "Isle of MTV" performance in Malta on Wednesday, music didn't keep two concertgoers from breaking out into a fight.

The singer was in the middle of her song, "Rainbow," which ironically is about how people are all similar and should get along, when she noticed the altercation between two fans near the stage. "Stop the music, stop the music," she shouted to her band in a video captured by a fan and posted to You Tube. (The fighting fans can't clearly be seen in the video.)

"OK, so, you guys in the front, guys ... see I don't perform when people are fighting," the singer announced, as the audience applauded her words.

"OH MY GOD!" another fan could be heard saying.

"OK, so here's the deal right?" Jessie J. continued. "Music is about bringing people together. You don't need that angriness in your lives, OK? So kiss and make up and let's party."

"Jes-sie! Jes-sie!" fans chanted in appreciation.

"Let's go, let's go again," the singer told her band, before delivering one more word to the fighters. "Look at me, come on, look at me. Are we good? Sort it out, bro."

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/singer-jessie-j-stops-fight-during-her-concert-6C10485346

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Sound waves precisely position nanowires

June 19, 2013 ? The smaller components become, the more difficult it is to create patterns in an economical and reproducible way, according to an interdisciplinary team of Penn State researchers who, using sound waves, can place nanowires in repeatable patterns for potential use in a variety of sensors, optoelectronics and nanoscale circuits.

"There are ways to create these devices with lithography, but it is very hard to create patterns below 50 nanometers using lithography," said Tony Jun Huang, associate professor of engineering science and mechanics, Penn State. "It is rather simple now to make metal nanomaterials using synthetic chemistry. Our process allows pattern transfer of arrays of these nanomaterials onto substrates that might not be compatible with conventional lithography. For example, we could make networks of wires and then pattern them to arrays of living cells."

The researchers looked at the placement of metallic nanowires in solution on a piezoelectric substrate. Piezoelectric materials move when an electric voltage is applied to them and create an electric voltage when compressed.

In this case, the researchers applied an alternating current to the substrate so that the material's movement creates a standing surface acoustic wave in the solution. A standing wave has node locations that do not move, so the nanowires arrive at these nodes and remain there.

If the researchers apply only one current, then the nanowires form a one-dimensional array with the nanowires lined up head to tail in parallel rows. If perpendicular currents are used, a two-dimensional grid of standing waves forms and the nanowires move to those grid-point nodes and form a three-dimensional spark-like pattern.

"Because the pitch of both the one-dimensional and two-dimensional structures is sensitive to the frequency of the standing surface acoustic wave field, this technique allows for the patterning of nanowires with tunable spacing and density," the researchers report in a recent issue of ACS Nano.

The nanowires in solution will settle inplace onto the substrate when the solution evaporates, preserving the pattern. The researchers note that the patterned nanowires could then be transferred to organic polymer substrates with good accuracy by placing the polymer onto the top of the nanowires and with slight pressure, transferring the nanowires. They suggest that the nanowires could then be transferred to rigid or flexible substrates from the organic polymer using microcontact-printing techniques that are well developed.

"We really think our technique can be extremely powerful," said Huang. "We can tune the pattern to the configuration we want and then transfer the nanowires using a polymer stamp."

The spacing of the nodes where nanowires deposit can be adjusted on the fly by changing the frequency and the interaction between the two electric fields.

"This would save a lot of time compared to lithography or other static fabrication methods," said Huang.

The researchers are currently investigating more complex designs.

The National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation and the Penn State Center for Nanoscale Science supported this research.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/technology/~3/oAgtAblgyy8/130619102802.htm

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