Google also jumps into the distributed-computing-over-the-Net fray with The Google Compute Project. Its a feature of the Google Toolbar which utilizes the idle processing power of your computer (and other computers participating in the project) to perform calculations for a large research project.
The first beneficiary of this effort is Folding@home, a non-profit academic research project at Stanford University that is trying to understand the structure of proteins so they can develop better treatments for a number of illnesses. In the future Google Compute may allow you to also donate your computing time to other carefully selected worthwhile endeavors, including projects to improve Google and its services.The Google Compute feature of the Google Toolbar shouldn’t affect your regular computing activities and you can easily disable it at any time for any reason.
I think its a nice gesture by Google to start out Google Compute with a project from Stanford. After all… Google started out from the same institution. Netizens who’ve been on the Net for a long time will recall the good ‘ol days when Google was still google.stanford.edu.
For more information, check out the the Google Compute FAQs.
June 4, 2003 Comments Off
Indian researcher challenges Newton’s law
An Indian research technologist in Australia has challenged Newton’s First Law of Motion and called for a revision of the classical theory in the light of modern technology.
Arindam Banerjee, an alumnus of Indian Institue of Technology (IIT), Kharagpur and now working for Telstra in Melbourne made this contention in his book, “To The Stars!”.
For those who do not know Newton’s First Law of Motion, it says, “Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it.“. This is also sometimes referred to as the “Law of Inertia”.
Using his unconventional theory, Banerjee has described in a technical paper, what he calls, a design for ‘perpetual motion machines’ which can generate energy without burning any kind of fossil fuel or any radioactive process.The Internal Force Engine, which Banerjee has designed, never runs out of power because it is ’self charging’ without the need for any external source of energy.
June 4, 2003 Comments Off
