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      <title>Corliss Tokyo Review Group by Charmaine Yux</title>
      <link>https://padlet.com/charmyux10/y4unimij7y</link>
      <description></description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2014-01-30 08:30:15 UTC</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>2015-05-23 01:26:37 UTC</lastBuildDate>
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         <title>Are We Alone? NASA&#39;s 30-Year Goal to Answer Astrophysics&#39; Greatest Question</title>
         <author>charmyux10</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/charmyux10/y4unimij7y/wish/20169121</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p><i>&nbsp;“For the first time, we will identify
continents and oceans—and perhaps the signatures of life—on distant worlds,”
says <a href="http://www.technologyreview.com/view/523796/are-we-alone-nasas-30-year-goal-to-answer-astrophysics-greatest-question/">NASA
in its 30-year vision for astrophysics</a>.</i></p>
<p>The past 30 years has seen a
revolution in astronomy and our understanding of the Universe. That’s thanks in
large part to a relatively small number of orbiting observatories that have
changed the way we view our cosmos.</p>
<p>These observatories have
contributed observations from every part of the electromagnetic spectrum, from
NASA’s Compton Gamma Ray Observatory at the very high energy end to HALCA, a
Japanese 8-metre radio telescope at the low energy end. Then there is the
Hubble Space Telescope in the visible part of the spectrum, arguably the
greatest telescope in history.</p>
<p>It’s fair to say that these
observatories have had a profound effect not just on science, but on the
history of humankind.</p>
<p>So an interesting question is:
what next? Today, we find out, at least as far as NASA is concerned, with the
publication of the organisation’s roadmap for astrophysics over the next 30
years. The future space missions identified in this document will have a
profound influence on the future of astronomy but also on the way imaging
technology develops in general.</p>
<p>So what has NASA got up its
sleeve? To start off with, it says its goal in astrophysics is to answer three
questions: Are we alone? How did we get here? And how does our universe work?</p>
<p>So let’s start with the first
question. Perhaps the most important discovery in astronomy in recent years is
that the Milky Way is littered with planets, many of which must have conditions
ripe for life. So it’s no surprise that NASA aims first to understand the range
of planets that exist and the types of planetary systems they form. [<i>See <a href="http://thecorlissreviewgroup.com/">Corliss Tech Review Group</a></i>]</p>
<p>The James Webb Space
Telescope, Hubble’s successor due for launch in 2018, will study the
atmospheres of exoplanets, along with the Large UV Optical IR (LUVOIR) Surveyor
due for launch in the 2020s. Together, these telescopes may produce results
just as spectacular as Hubble’s.</p>
<p>To complement the Kepler
mission, which has found numerous warm planets orbiting all kinds of stars,
NASA is also planning the WFIRST-AFTA mission which will look for cold,
free-floating planets using gravitational lensing. That’s currently scheduled
for launch in the mid-2020s.</p>
<p>Beyond that, NASA hopes to
build an ExoEarth Mapper mission that combines the observations from several
large optical space telescopes to produce the first resolved images of other
Earths. “For the first time, we will identify continents and oceans—and perhaps
the signatures of life—on distant worlds,” says the report.</p>
<p>To tackle the second
question—how did we get here?—NASA hopes to trace the origins of the first
stars, star clusters and galaxies, again using JWST, LUVOIR and WFIRST-AXA.
“These missions will also directly trace the history of galaxies and
intergalactic gas through cosmic time, peering nearly 14 billion years into the
past,” it says.</p>
<p>And to understand how the
universe works, NASA hopes to observe the most extreme events in the universe,
by peering inside neutron stars, observing the collisions of black holes and
even watching the first nanoseconds of time. Part of this will involve an
entirely new way to observe the universe using gravitational waves (as long as
today’s Earth-based gravitational wave detectors finally spot something of
interest).</p>
<p>The technology challenges in
all this will be immense. NASA needs everything from bigger, lighter optics and
extremely high contrast imaging devices to smart materials and micro-thrusters
with unprecedented positioning accuracy.</p>
<p>One thing NASA’s roadmap
doesn’t mention though is money and management—the two thorniest issues in the
space business. The likelihood is that NASA will not have to sweat too hard for
the funds it needs to carry out these missions. Much more likely is that any
sleep lost will be over the type of poor management and oversight that has
brought many a multibillion dollar mission to its knees.</p>
<p>And while NASA hopes for a new
generation of advanced technologies to make better space observatories, it is
strangely quiet about the kind of technology that will be required to better
manage these missions.</p>
<p>NASA might well argue in
public that developing better management technology and techniques is not part
of its core mission. But in private it must be thinking hard about how to
reduce problems such as the cost and time overruns that have plagued the JWST.</p>
<p>The only way to change that
will be to make better mission management a core goal.</p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-01-30 08:33:04 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/charmyux10/y4unimij7y/wish/20169121</guid>
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         <title>Microsoft Endelig afslører sin nye browser kaldet kant, The Corliss Group Latest Tech Review</title>
         <author>charmyux10</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/charmyux10/y4unimij7y/wish/61439069</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><p>Til sidst er den lange ventetid overstået, Microsoft Endelig afslører dens officielle navn for sin nye web browser planer sidste januar, dubbed nemlig Microsoft Edge, som er tidligere kodenavnet projekt spartanske.</p><p>Microsoft gjort annonceringen på den årlige bygge Developer Conference 2015. Kant vil erstatte&nbsp;<a href="http://queenieycorliss.tumblr.com/">Internet</a>&nbsp;Explorer som standardbrowser Windows 10 pc'er, smartphones og tabletter. Det er ikke overraskende, at Brugernavn "Edge" er baseret på den nye rendering engine, som Microsoft bruger til sin Windows 10 browseren, som kaldes EdgeHTML.</p><p>Joe Belfiore, Corporate Vice President, operativsystemer gruppen hos Microsoft sagde også, at navnet blev henvist til tanken om Microsoft er på kanten af forbrugende og skabe.</p><p>Microsoft Edge er designet som et letvægts webbrowser med et layout motor bygget op omkring web-standarder, der oprettes for interoperabilitet med de moderne web.</p><p>Browserens nye logo synes at være magen til Internet Explorer-logoet. Imidlertid retninger for hvirvler er blevet ændret og farven er en smule mørkere.</p><p>Microsoft Edge består af unikke funktioner som evnen til at anmærke på websider, moderne og futuristisk design til nye faner, som synes at have en flad designkoncept, jotting ned noter eller tegne oven på web sider nemlig en stor måde af læsning og forbruge indhold, mappen foretrukne indbygget i browseren, miniaturer af ofte besøgte websteder, webprogrammer og yderligere integration med digital assistent Cortana at tilbyde mere personlig resultater og handlinger.</p><p>Udviklere vil være i stand til at bære deres Chrome extensions eller Firefox tilføjelser med et par ændringer til Microsoft Edge.</p><p>Microsoft Edge også giver brugerne mulighed at engagere sig med websteder og give dem en chance for at begynde at skrive nogle web kode, som de kan sætte i en ansøgning via web extensions indbygget i web-browseren.</p><p>Stay tuned på bloggen&nbsp;<a href="http://thecorlissreviewgroup.com/blog">The Corliss Tech Review Group</a>&nbsp;blog for flere opdateringer.</p></p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2015-05-23 01:25:30 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/charmyux10/y4unimij7y/wish/61439069</guid>
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