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Posts Tagged ‘Engineering’

Aug. 3, 1803: Crystal Palace Architect Born

1803: Joseph Paxton is born in Milton Bryan, England. His career will take him from garden boy to gardener to landscape designer to architect-engineer of the largest glass buildings of his day — including London’s famous Crystal Palace of 1851.
Paxton built a huge glass greenhouse at Chatsworth between 1836 and 1840 for his employer, the [...]

Rotary Engineering climbs 5.8% as CIMB maintains ‘outperform’

Rotary Engineering (RTRY SP), an engineering company, climbed 5.8% to 91.5 cents, its highest since June 6, 2008. CIMB Investment Bank Bhd. raised its share-price estimate for the stock to $1.39 from 90 cents and maintained its “outperform” rating, saying its new US$745 million ($1.1 billion) project in Saudi Arabia will boost earnings through 2011. The project was awarded on July 9.

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ST Electronics wins Guangzhou MRT contract worth $11.7m

ST Electronics, the electronics unit of ST Engineering, today announced it has won its sixth Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) project in Guangzhou, China.

The Guangzhou-Foshan Line (GFL) contract worth RMB53.6 million ($11.7 million) requires the provision of Platform Screen Doors (PSD) for the GFL which will run 32.3km from Kuiqi Station in Foshan, to Lijiao station in Guangzhou, in Guangdong province.

Manipulating ripples could pave way for strain-based graphene electronics

Scientists from the University of California Riverside (UCR) have manipulated ripples in graphene, which would enable the development of strain-based graphene electronics.
Graphene is nature’’s thinnest elastic material and displays exceptional mechanical and electronic properties.
Its one-atom thickness, planar geometry, high current-carrying capacity and thermal conductivity make it ideally suited for further miniaturizing electronics through ultra-small [...]

Apollo 11: Landing the Eagle

Neil Armstrong skilfully pilots Apollo 11′s Eagle lunar module to the moon’s surface


July 21, 1904: All Aboard for Siberia, Tovarich

1904: Decreed by a czar, built by thousands of workers over a period of more than a decade, the Trans-Siberian Railway is officially completed. As you’d expect with a project of this size, complexity and scope, “officially completed” is a relative term. Trains have already been operating on parts of the line for some time, [...]

The docking of Apollo 11

Three hours after launch, the Columbia docks nose-to-nose with the lunar module



Apollo 11: We have liftoff

A Saturn V rocket launches Apollo 11 on the first leg of its journey to the moon on 16 July 1969. Apollo expert Christopher Riley commentates


Space shuttle Endeavour thunders into orbit

After more than a month’s delay Endeavour began its flight to the international space station on the eve of the 40th anniversary of the liftoff of man’s first moon landing

After more than a month’s delay, space shuttle Endeavour and seven astronauts have thundered into orbit in a flight to the international space station, hauling up a veranda for Japan’s enormous lab and looking to set a crowd record.

Success came on launch try number 6, on the eve of the 40th anniversary of the liftoff of man’s first moon landing.

But the mood was dampened somewhat when Nasa managers watched the launch video.

Eight or nine pieces of foam insulation came off the external fuel tank during liftoff, and the shuttle was hit at least two or three times, said Bill Gerstenmaier, Nasa’s space operations chief. Some scuff marks were spotted, but that probably is coating loss and considered minor, he said.

In fact, Mission Control told the astronauts that the damage which occurred not quite two minutes into the flight looked to be less extensive than what occurred on the last flight. The impacts were around the edge of the shuttle where the right wing joins the fuselage.

Engineers immediately began reviewing all the launch pictures, standard procedure ever since flights resumed following the Columbia disaster. Gerstenmaier said zoom-in photos will be taken of the entire shuttle right before it docks with the space station on Friday, to ascertain whether it suffered any serious damage. It will take days to go through all the data.

At a news conference, Gerstenmaier noted that the Endeavour crew has shuttle repair kits on board. In case of irreparable damage, the astronauts could move into the space station for two to three months and await rescue by another shuttle.

Columbia was destroyed during re-entry in 2003 because of a hole in its wing, left there by flyaway foam at liftoff.

Endeavour blasted off a little after 6pm from its seaside pad the same one used to launch Apollo 11 on 16 July 1969 a welcome sight for shuttle workers who had to overcome hydrogen gas leaks last month and, since the weekend, thunderstorms.

The skies finally cleared, allowing commander Mark Polansky and his crew to embark on their 16-day adventure. One more holdup and they would have tied a record for the most shuttle launch delays.

Later, from orbit, Polansky radioed, “For all of us, it was a pretty decent wait, but we are thrilled to be here.”

The astronauts will catch up on Friday afternoon with the space station, which was soaring more than 220 miles above the Pacific at launch time. When they do, it will be the first time 13 people are together in space. Ten is the previous record.

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July 16, 1867: Concrete Gets Some Positive Reinforcement

1867: F. Joseph Monier patents a new construction material: reinforced concrete. It combines the compressive strength of ordinary concrete with the tensile strength of iron.
The ancient Egyptians discovered that adding lime and gypsum mortar made for stronger pyramids than just making bricks out of mud and straw. And the Chinese used “cementitious materials” not [...]

Google Engineering Director Leaves for VMware

According to published reports, Mark Lucovsky, an engineering director at Google, has left the search giant for a new position at VMware. The man who allegedly made Microsoft’s CEO so upset that he threw a chair is now going to work for VMware with former Microsoft cronies.
– According
to published reports, Mark Lucovsky, an engineering director at Google, has
left the search giant for a new position at VMware.
Despite having been hard at work over the last several years helping Google
develop and deliver on its Google APIs strategy, Lucovsky is perhaps best known
a…


Allison Rockefeller: Riverbank Park A New York Oasis

The Park’s view is so staggering you’re apt to drop your tuna fish sandwich in your cold Frappuccino as the George Washington Bridge straddles the river and the famed Hudson River Palisades hang majestically above the glistening water.

Apollo 11: training for the moon

Armstrong and Aldrin walk the Earth in their cumbersome spacesuits


June 18, 1981: Vaccine Puts Best Foot-and-Mouth Forward

1981: The U.S. government announces a new vaccine for foot-and-mouth disease. It’s welcomed by farmers, but would likely have become a historical footnote were it not for a technological caveat: The vaccine is genetically engineered.
Previous vaccines contained weakened or inactive strains of disease-causing viruses or bacteria. These provoked recipients’ immune systems into producing the antibodies [...]