Celebrate the Space Shuttle with a New LEGO Kit - Discovery News

http://news.discovery.com/tech/celebrate-the-space-shuttle-new-lego-kit-110805.html

LEGO Shuttle Expedition

LEGO Shuttle Expedition (No. 10231): $99.99

The world may still be shedding a collective tear over the end of the U.S. Space Shuttle program, but it's difficult to imagine a better way to drown that sorrow than with a huge pile of LEGOs. Space Shuttle LEGOs, that is, in the form of LEGO's new 1,230-piece Shuttle Expedition kit.

NEWS: LEGO Figures Hitch a Ride with NASA's Juno Mission

There was an older kit -- dubbed Space Shuttle Adventure -- that was launched last year, but a sturdier new update released this summer targets a slightly younger audience and -- enticingly -- includes more pieces. Standing 17.5 inches tall, the new model features a detachable fuel tank and booster rockets along with a satellite with unfolding antenna and solar cell panels. Realistic engines, retractable landing gear, an opening cockpit with seats for two astronauts and an opening cargo compartment with a crane that can hold the satellite are all included, as is a ground maintenance vehicle. Three minifigures are included: one male and one female astronaut as well as a service crew member. Who will you be?

[Via The Brick Life]

Credit: The LEGO Group

Walmart selling 16 GB iPhone 4 for $147 until June 30

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Walmart selling 16 GB iPhone 4 for $147 until June 30




Beginning today and running until June 30th, select U.S. Walmart stores are offering the 16 GB iPhone 4 for only US$147 -- a $52 discount over the regular price. The sale applies to both white and black 16 GB iPhone 4s with 2-year contract through Verzion or AT&T. While Apple didn't introduce new iPhone hardware at WWDC today, they are expected to introduce the new iPhone by the fall. Still, for those of you who want an iPhone, it's hard to pass up a 25% discount on the latest model.



For now, both the white and black 16 GB iPhone 4s are still listed at their usual price of $197 in Walmart's online store. However, they are also listed as "Out of Stock Online." If you want one of the discounted iPhone 4s it looks like you'll have to go to your local Walmart and see if they are offing the sale. Walmart didn't announce how many stores would be selling the $147 iPhone 4, nor did they say how much stock each store would have.

Walmart selling 16 GB iPhone 4 for $147 until June 30 originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Mon, 06 Jun 2011 15:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sent from Tyler's iPhone 4

Tune in to Nanotube Television

http://news.discovery.com/tech/tune-in-to-nanotube-television-110428.html

Thin screens for televisions, computers and other big display devices may soon have brilliant, sharp pictures while consuming much less power, thanks to transistors that use carbon nanotubes to deliver current in a new way.

It will be at least a few years until the technology, described in the April 29 Science, graces your flat screen. But eventually such displays may be cheaper, last longer and use less energy than today’s finest liquid crystal displays.

The new technology employs organic light emitting diodes, or OLEDs, tiny thin films that create light in response to electrical current. Such displays have several advantages over traditional liquid crystal displays — they aren’t backlit, for example, so darkness isn’t created by blocking light, but by individual diodes emitting less light. That saves energy.

But making OLED displays that are much bigger than a smart phone’s has been problematic. While they consume less power overall, a serious burst of current is needed to fire up each pixel. Transistors that provide this much current are bulky and take up valuable screen space; they also require elaborate, expensive construction and yield pixels that aren’t uniform, a problem that grows with display size, says study coauthor Andrew Rinzler of the University of Florida.

To skirt these issues, Rinzler and his colleagues used a network of carbon nanotubes to drive current. The nanotube layer is porous, letting light through, so the transistor and light-emitting layers can be stacked vertically instead of sitting side-by-side, saving real estate. Without having to squeeze in transistors right next door to the OLEDs, more area is devoted to emitting light. In fact, 98 percent of the device emits light. That’s no small feat, says nanotechnologist Chongwu Zhou of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.