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Free Infographic Tools. Strategies for Global Connectedness. Not that long ago, the world was supposed to be flat.

Strategies for Global Connectedness

Hardly a day passed without references to globalization and “borderless markets.” Many policymakers and business leaders jumped on the bandwagon, treating all interconnection among countries as equally beneficial. But this perception that “the world is flat” was so exaggerated that it is fair to call it “globaloney.” The last few years—of financial crises, weak growth, and mounting protectionist pressures—have demonstrated that the world is far less connected than it appeared to be.

The real world is roughly only 10 to 25 percent globalized. In plotting a course toward smarter integration, the differences among countries matter a great deal. The other important dimension of global connectedness is breadth, which is the extent to which a country’s international trade flows are spread out globally versus confined to a particular set of partner nations. The Higgs Boson Explained. Second Wind: Air-Breathing Lithium Batteries Promise Recharge-Free Long-Range Driving. Researchers predict a new type of lithium battery under development could give an electric car enough juice to travel a whopping 800 kilometers before it needs to be plugged in again—about 10 times the energy that today's lithium ion batteries supply.

Second Wind: Air-Breathing Lithium Batteries Promise Recharge-Free Long-Range Driving

It is a tantalizing prospect—a lighter, longer-lasting, air-breathing power source for the next generation of vehicles—if only someone could build a working model. Several roadblocks stand between these lithium–air batteries and the open road, however, primarily in finding electrodes and electrolytes that are stable enough for rechargeable battery chemistry. IBM plans to take lithium–air batteries out of neutral by building a working prototype by the end of next year. Most fully charged lithium ion car batteries today will take an electric vehicle only 160 kilometers before petering out. "Time Crystals" Could Be a Legitimate Form of Perpetual Motion. The phrases "perpetual-motion machine"—a concept derided by scientists since the mid-19th century—and "physics Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek" wouldn't seem to belong in the same sentence.

"Time Crystals" Could Be a Legitimate Form of Perpetual Motion

But if Wilczek's latest ideas on symmetry and the nature of time are correct, they would suggest the existence of a bona fide perpetual-motion machine— albeit one from which energy could never be extracted. He proposes that matter could form a "time crystal," whose structure would repeat periodically, as with an ordinary crystal, but in time rather than in space. Such a crystal would represent a previously unknown state of matter and might have arisen as the very early universe cooled, losing its primordial symmetries.

Wilczek describes his work in this article and in this one coauthored by Alfred Shapere of the University of Kentucky, that he posted on the physics preprint server, arXiv.org, on February 12. North Korea. A Universe from Nothing: Einstein, the Belgian Priest and the Puzzle of the Big Bang. Solve For X. Sheila Patek clocks the fastest animals. Video channel on TED.com. Robert Full on animal movement. The Best Filmmaker’s TED Talks. Robert Full on engineering and evolution. Jack Horner: Building a dinosaur from a chicken. Krulwich Wonders... Welcome - library.nu. Experiments - Test Your Morality. Berkeley Explains Exactly Why It Chose Google Over Microsoft. Wikimedia Commons and Google The University of California at Berkeley just decided to move off its old email system.

Berkeley Explains Exactly Why It Chose Google Over Microsoft

It chose Gmail over Microsoft's Office 365. Usually, the decision-making process that goes into such a choice is shrouded in secrecy. But Berkeley decided to be transparent, and published a matrix explaining the pros and cons of both solutions. In basic terms, Cal decided it could get Google Apps up and running faster and for less money. Particularly interesting: to move to Office 365, the university would have had to do a double migration -- first to an on-premise version of Exchange, then to the online version in Office 365. Here's where Google had the biggest advantages. Cheaper support during the migration. The solutions were pretty close in other areas, like delegated administration (neither was great, but Google was slightly better), user familiarity (it depends on what product people are using today), and mobile support. The 48 Laws of Power. Background[edit] Greene initially formulated some of the ideas in The 48 Laws of Power while working as a writer in Hollywood and concluding that today's power elite shared similar traits with powerful figures throughout history.[5] In 1995, Greene worked as a writer at Fabrica, an art and media school, and met a book packager named Joost Elffers.[4][8] Greene pitched a book about power to Elffers and six months later, Elffers requested that Greene write a treatment.[4] Although Greene was unhappy in his current job, he was comfortable and saw the time needed to write a proper book proposal as too risky.[10] However, at the time Greene was rereading his favorite biography about Julius Caesar and took inspiration from Caesar's decision to cross the Rubicon River and fight Pompey, thus inciting the Great Roman Civil War.[10] Greene would follow Caesar's example and write the treatment, which later became The 48 Laws of Power.[10] He would note this as the turning point of his life.[10]

The 48 Laws of Power

Neurociencia

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