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1986: Karachi hijack ends in bloodshed

The 16-hour siege on a Pan Am jet in Pakistan comes to a bloody end, with at least 17 people dead.

1959: UK's first trunk call from a pay phone

The first trunk dialling system from a public call-box is launched during a ceremonial phone call from Bristol to London.

1997: Mother Teresa dies

Mother Teresa, the Nobel Peace Prize winner who devoted her life to helping the sick and the poor, dies at the age of 87.

DAILY WORD

bevy: Dictionary.com Word of the Day

Friday, 5 September 2008

DAILY QUOTE

Jenny Holzer

"The most profound things are inexpressible."






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Reddit - Latest Entries

Huge Rubber Snake is No Joke, Generates Power From Waves [Power]

posted Sunday, 6 July 2008

For some reason or other, we've shown you a lot of robotic snakes here on Giz. But this new one is kind of a robot snake in reverse: it's designed to float just beneath the surface of the sea and capture wave energy, which it then turns into electrical power. A science team in the UK has been working on the design, and is now testing small versions in a test tank: ultimately the "real" machines would be 23 feet across and 650 feet long, and be able to generate 1 megawatt. Check out the video to see how "Anaconda" works.

Basically the rubber snakes are moored at the right height to bend as a wave rolls past, generating a bulge in the sea water inside. This gets pushed down the tube by the wave to a generator built into the tail end.

A full-scale device would be able to generate enough power for 1,000 homes, and the developers at the University of Southampton think it may be more resilient than other wave-generators due to its lower moving part count, and the fact that it's made mostly of materials that resist salt-water corrosion.

Plus, it looks satisfyingly sci-fi, in a scary surprise for divers kinda way. [New Scientist]


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