Thursday, May 7, 2015

David Guerra
Mr. Porfido
Web & Design
5/7/15
Period-7

At US$ 3.4 million, the Lykan HyperSport is the third most expensive car to ever be made, behind the very limited ( seven created, three sold) Lamborghini Veneno (US$4.6 million)[4] and the one-off Maybach Exelero (US$8 million).[5] As reference, the Lykan Hypersport is US$1 million more expensive than the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport, which was officially the fastest road car in the world.
The cause of the car's high price tag is its very expensive included options. It is the first car to have headlights with embedded jewels; they contain titanium LED blades with 420 diamonds (15cts).;[6] although the buyer has a selection of rubies, diamonds, yellow diamonds, and sapphires to be integrated into the vehicle's headlights at purchase. This car has been featured in the new blockbuster film, Furious 7.

Monday, April 27, 2015

David Guerra
Mr. Porfido
Web & Design
5/1/15
Period 6

Is there anything laser can't do? From cutting diamonds to preserving endangered sites, all the way to building terrifying weapons and turning your eyes from brown to blue, there is apparently no end to the list of applications for laser. Swiss physicist Jean-Pierre Wolf is working on yet another impressive addition to that list: using focused laser beams to affect the weather. It sounds like black magic, but it's actually a cleaner version of cloud seeding, a form of weather modification that has been used for several years -- most famously by China in preparation for the 2008 Olympics, when they launched rockets to seed the clouds and prevent rainfall during the opening ceremony. But it's hard to tell how effective cloud seeding actually is, and it involves the spraying of chemicals into the atmosphere, something which it surely doesn't need. Laser is therefore a completely clean alternative to traditional cloud seeding: it's light, and nothing but light.

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

David Guerra
Mr. Porfido
Web & Design
4/24/15
Period-6

In 2001, the Taliban wiped out 1700 years of history in a matter of seconds, by blowing up ancient Buddha statues in central Afghanistan with dynamite. They proceeded to do so after an attempt at bringing down the 175-foot tall sculptures with anti-aircraft artillery had failed. Sadly, the event was just the first in a series of atrocitiesthat have robbed the world of some of its most prized cultural heritageBut historical architecture is also under threat from calamities which might well escape our control, such as earthquakes and climate change. The thought of losing a piece of our collective history is a bleak one. But if loss can't be avoided, technology can lend a hand. Now CyArk, a non-profit company founded by an Iraqi-born engineer, is using groundbreaking laser scanning to ensure that at the very least incredibly accurate digital versions of the world's treasures will stay with us forever. 

Monday, April 20, 2015

David Guerra
Mr. Porfido
WD
4/20/15
Period-6

In medicine, finding a substance that attacks cancerous tumors without destroying the healthy tissue around it has long been the Holy Grail.
From targeted remedies such as monoclonal antibodies to surgery, cancer has still managed to elude a treatment that discretely and separately attacks it alone.
Nanotechnologies, however the manipulation of matter at a molecular and even atomic scale to penetrate living cells are holding out the promise of opening a new front against deadly conditions from cancer to Ebola.

Thursday, March 26, 2015

David Guerra
Mr. Porfido
Web & Design
3/26/15
Period-6

NASA
It certainly won't be troubling any earth-based runners' personal bests, but NASA's long-serving Mars rover Opportunity set a significant benchmark Tuesday as it clocked in 26.219 miles (42 kilometers) -- the first-ever Martian marathon.
It might have taken the robot 11 years and two months but it represents a significant landmark for NASA.
"This is the first time any human enterprise has exceeded the distance of a marathon on the surface of another world," said John Callas, Opportunity project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

David Guerra
Web and Design
Mr. Porfido
3/20/15

Lights, mirrors, action! Scientists are developing smart contact lenses embedded with minuscule mirrors that can magnify your vision by almost three times.

The 1.55mm-thick lenses incorporate a thin reflective telescope made of mirrors and filters; when light enters the eye it bounces off the series of mirrors and increases the perceived view of an object or person. It is hoped that the lens will improve the sight of people with age-related macular degeneration (AMD) which is the third leading cause of blindness globally.


Monday, March 2, 2015

David Guerra
Mr. Porfido
Web & Design
3/6/15
Period-7

200 GB
SanDisk has unveiled the world's most spacious storage card for smartphones. The catchy-named "SanDisk Ultra microSDXC UHS-I card, Premium Edition," comes with 200 gigabytes of storage. That's 72 GB more storage than the next-largest option on the market. But before you get too excited, cramming all that capacity on a tiny microSD card the size of your fingernail isn't for everyone. High-capacity storage is extremely expensive stuff. SanDisk said it will go on sale sometime in the spring and cost $400.00. Also, many newer phones also don't come with expandable storage. The Apple iPhone has never allowed customers to insert SD cards to grow its storage capacity, and Samsung just eliminated that option from its new Galaxy S6 smartphone.