7 Clever Technologies Inspired by Nature

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Spider Silk

Spider silk is one of nature’s strongest materials. Scientists have created a medical product that can be peeled off a wound without damaging the tissue underneath, but it is still strong enough to protect when attached.

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Gecko’s Grip

There is an adhesive in development that will be made of millions of plastic fibers and can support almost a pound of weight. The amazing thing is that the material gets stronger with use.

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Thirsty Beetles

The Namib Desert beetle collects water by condensing fog into droplets on the ridges of its back. Researchers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology have developed a bumpy material made of glass and plastic that recreates that process.

The Ease of Creating Strong Black Female Characters for Comics

Creating well-rounded female characters in comics isn’t hard. Just look around you for inspiration, and if you can’t find real-life representations, you need to expand your own circle.

Diversity in comics is usually one of the main topics of the conversations I have when discussing creating the “Legend of the Mantamaji” with the press. And interestingly, the discussion of race tends to be shorter than the discussion of the portrayal of female characters in the series.

The reality is, creating strong, well-rounded, fully fleshed females isn’t any more difficult than creating any other type of character – and inspiration isn’t hard to find.

In my life and in my career, all the people who have been behind my advancement have been strong women.

When I first came to Los Angeles and started working on comedies, the creators and people in charge were women:

  • The executive producer who got me in the Directors Guild of America as an assistant director.
  • The line producer who was behind me getting my opportunity to direct.

 

They were all the same in that they were smart, strong and extremely talented. They were also mothers. I am lucky that, in my life, I have always been surrounded by women who were strong and who were hustlers. I have always seen women who were doing everything you traditionally saw men do and doing it well.

My mom is a lifelong educator who still consults at John Carroll University in Cleveland in multi-cultural affairs. My wife owns her own thriving business. So when I created Sydney, Cornerstone and the other female characters in “Legend of the Mantamaji,” I was drawing on people I have seen, known, worked with or worked for.

Sanctuants from the “Legend of the Mantamaji” series are explicitly mentioned as equal to the male Mantamaji warriors. It’s an unusual call out among the comic industry, but I didn’t want any of the female leads to be any less than the main hero, just different. It makes the story’s history so much richer.

If I had to boil down three things I wanted to accomplish with the female characters in “Legend of the Mantamaji,” I have to say I wanted to create a new batch of heroes who are full, real characters; I wanted to make sure people were interested in their journey, and I wanted to give women readers what they have been asking for and deserve from comic book creators – real representation.

Read more from Eric Dean Seaton at legendofthemantamaji.com

11 Perfect Gift Ideas to Spark Your Child’s Engineering Curiosity

STEM toys are hot, no doubt about it. Lego announced revenues earlier this fall that made it the largest toy maker in the world for the first time ever. As Lego’s success shows, the “E” in STEM, engineering, is a natural fit for younger kids who can design, build, tweak and tinker for hours on end. Indeed, formal engineering instruction is entering more and more elementary schools, through innovative programs like Engineering is Elementary and others. And resources for informal engineering education are finding receptive audiences, as we’ve seen with the success of our own elementary-school book, “Dream, Invent, Create.”

Engineering the Holidays

But there’s lots more technical toy fun to be had than just with Legos. We found 11 great engineering-flavored toys, suitable for ages from 2 to, well, as far “up” as you like.

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Magna-Tiles or Magformers. 2 and up. Coming in sets of colorful squares and triangles, these plastic tiles have magnets at the edges. They attach in any fashion imaginable, enabling the construction of houses, castles, rockets, ships, small towns and whatever else kids can imagine. One of the favorite activities in my kids’ preschool classroom, these tiles always attract a crowd after the first kid pulls them out. Some people report that Magformers have stronger magnets and are easier for small hands to maneuver.

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Wedgits. 2 – 6 years. These are brightly colored building blocks of different shapes and sizes that stack, nest, balance, pile – and fall down if not arranged by sound structural principles. Full instructions are provided, but not really necessary. Kids will learn about angles, balance, weight and force, building objects of their own design or following the guidance of design cards that lead them through increasingly challenging projects. The starter kit is easy to expand upon, as kids grow and fine motor and building skills increase.

Famed Astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson Continues Push to Increase Public’s Science Literacy

Despite living in a world run by advances in technology and groundbreaking discoveries in science, famed astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson still finds himself battling to increase the public’s science literacy level.

Today, scientific discoveries are often perfectly integrated into our lives through new advancements in medicine, technology, transportation and more.

Because science manages to blend itself so well into a person’s daily life, it becomes easier not to actually acknowledge those things as scientific and that, Tyson explains, could be a problem.

“We’re not constantly reminded of it,” Tyson said, according to NorthJersey.com. “If we were, we would say, ‘Oh, you’re a scientist – tell me more about how my future will be improved by what you do.’ “

Instead people barely notice anything that today’s scientists do because they simply recognize their discoveries or advancements as “just life.”

“But if [science] slides into your life, on a level where it’s fully blended with your waking hours and sleeping hours, then you’re not thinking science,” Tyson continued. “You’re thinking that’s just life. Science is something else. Science is what you take in a class.”

This lack of scientific literacy has caused Tyson to dedicate much of his time trying to educate the public and significantly boost their level of science literacy.

His latest step to doing so brought him to Prudential Hall at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center on Tuesday for an old-fashioned Chautauqua lecture.

The old-fashioned lecture style is named after an early town in New York that kicked off the idea of an adult education movement that would provide traveling lectures across the nation to keep the country informed throughout the early 20th century.

“I’m glad [this idea] is coming back, and I don’t take it lightly,” Tyson said.

While it may be an older lecture style, Tyson had no intentions of pushing modern topics to the side.

“I’ll surely be talking about the comet landing in whatever I talk about,” he continued. “What I talk about is folded into whatever is the current event at the time.”

The “comet landing” Tyson mentioned was a reference to the recent landing of Europe’s Philae probe.

By focusing on scientific current events, Tyson hopes to boost the audience’s curiosity in science while also informing them in a way that will have them feeling empowered against those who would typically take advantage of scientific ignorance.

“My goal is, by the end of the evening, a scaffold has been erected, in the hearts and minds of people, and that’s the science literacy scaffold,” he told NorthJersey.com. “That enables you to receive science information going forward, in deeper ways than might have been possible otherwise. Because when you’re scientifically literate, you’re empowered to think in ways that protect you from charlatans who might exploit what might otherwise be your ignorance of science for their own financial gain.”

The Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey host explained that it is important for people to take science into consideration even when dealing with politics.

Tyson has testified before Congress several times in the past but says he is much more concerned about educating the public, not the politicians.

“People say, ‘Why don’t you teach these lawmakers about science?’ “ Tyson said. “I have no interest because they have to be re-elected every two years. And in terms of my investment of energy, I don’t think that’s the wisest way to allocate it. Instead, I communicate with the public.”

 

 

AT&T Steps Forward As Leader in Embracing Diversity with ‘Seeing Stars’ Campaign, Highlighting Black Tech Entrepreneurs

In today’s digital age, entrepreneurs in the technology space are key to creating a future of promise and revolutionizing the everyday lives of consumers. For that very reason, AT&T is celebrating tech-driven innovators and proclaiming them to be the new celebrities of the digital world.

In its latest push to celebrate tech entrepreneurs of color, AT&T pointed a spotlight at three trailblazing tech entrepreneurs—a music lover who has found a distinct connection between hip hop, entrepreneurship and technology; the head of a global IT service company who has yet to graduate high school; and an enchanting poet who used her past experiences with journalism to become a unique talent in the world of social media.

Anthony Fraiser

Anthony Frasier (pictured above), a New Jersey native who discovered a natural gift for developing mobile applications and designing web sites, is now the founder of several tech businesses and spends much of his time helping other emerging entrepreneurs make their way into the swiftly growing industry.

“I found myself always getting approached by entrepreneurs from all backgrounds—not just African Americans—and youth who wanted to figure out how they could get into the tech industry,” Frasier told Atlanta Blackstar.

Frasier explained that he already had his own plate full of startups like Playd and was busy developing the now award-winning gaming site TheKoalition.com.

As he continued to grow his own businesses, he still never forgot about the many tech savvy hopefuls who wanted to follow in his footsteps.

In the midst of putting in serious groundwork and increasing networking efforts, he came across James Lopez who would later become the his business partner and co-founder of The Phat Startup, a company dedicated to giving emerging entrepreneurs the resources and insider knowledge they need to take their own startups to the next level with a particular focus on individuals with urban backgrounds who didn’t always feel welcome in the the tech industry.

Phat Startup has already garnered serious attention from media outlets and other successful entrepreneurs in the tech space, but Frasier said it was a especially exciting to have AT&T reach out to him, considering the type of work they were already doing throughout the community.

“AT&T—I’ve always been a great admirer of how much they were doing throughout the community,” Frasier said. “I remember seeing a lot of AT&T hackathons and things like that and it always was interesting to see.”

For Frasier, anything that fostered creativity in the tech space was a cause worth getting behind, especially in an industry that has a habit of being money hungry.

“It’s all about money,” Frasier said as he explained why he thought creativity needed to be pushed to the forefront of conversations in Silicon Valley. “A lot of people aren’t really trying to solve the bigger, big, big problem and that’s what Phat Startup does. We have a big problem we’re trying to solve.”

That problem is how to make entrepreneurship more appealing and “inviting” to people who didn’t feel welcome in the space before by building a bridge between entrepreneurship and hip hop.

“We can learn how to hustle from Jay-Z and there are things you can kind of pull out of an interview with Diddy that’s like, ‘Man, there’s something here,’ ” Frasier explained. “So I eventually saw a way that I can get into entrepreneurship education and teaching people how they could do what I was doing by simply using hip hop culture as a catalyst.”

It’s the type of solution that could foster creativity and spark an interest in technology at a young age and possibly help the country see more young Black tech CEOs like Jaylen Bledsoe (pictured below).

Jaylen Bledsoe

Bledsoe has yet to even graduate high school but that didn’t stop the tech savvy teen from launching his own business.

Bledsoe was only 13 when he became a tech entrepreneur. Roughly three years later his IT services company, Jaylen D. Bledsoe Global Group, formerly known as Bledsoe Technologies, has started working with major companies in a variety of different countries.

The teen’s ability to successfully launch and expand a major tech company hasn’t gone unnoticed. Bledsoe earned a spot as an honoree for Ebony’s Power 100 list along with comedian and TV personality Steve Harvey, today’s most influential international powerhouse songstress Beyonce and the media mogul herself Oprah Winfrey.

The self-taught coding expert and web designer started out designing websites and working on digital projects for friends and family before he realized he had the skills to run an entire business.

“Seventh grade year I was working mostly websites for friends and family and kind of from there I realized that I had a really unique skill that people really didn’t have,” Bledsoe explained. “So I learned it even more and eventually started my own business eighth grade year.”

Now, Bledsoe spends much of his time fulfilling duties as the CEO of a global company, a public speaker who often garners crowds of thousands of eager listeners, a young entrepreneur serving as a role model for other emerging entrepreneurs and, of course, as a student in school holding multiple student leadership positions and maintaining an impressive grade point average.

In addition to the obvious display of work ethics, Bledsoe also expressed his desire to use his company to have a positive impact on the world, which makes him the ideal candidate for AT&T’s campaign.

“My goal for the company has never been about financial gain. It’s always been to impact the world in a better way,” Bledsoe said.

Lynne D Johnson

AT&T’s campaign also featured an entrepreneur whose unlikely background helped her pave a successful path through Silicon Valley.

Lynne D. Johnson (pictured above, center) is currently a pop culture journalist who used her gift of communication to become an incredible success in the social media and digital content space.

In the past Johnson has served as a director of digital and social media strategy in the brand strategy and marketing practice at Waggener Edstrom.

With an extensive background in the media industry, Johnson was able to provide a fresh push for creative content for some of today’s most popular media brands, including Vibe, Spin and Fast Company.

Doubling as a pop culture journalist and one of today’s more requested keynote speakers in the technology space was no easy feat for Johnson, especially considering the diversity problem that is plaguing Silicon Valley.

A Black employee in a leadership position in Silicon Valley is unheard of, while a Black woman in a leadership position in Silicon Valley almost seems mythical to some.

Despite incredibly high barriers to entry, Johnson defied all odds and is now one of the most in-demand content and community consultants in the technology space.

 

5 Ways Tesla Motors Is Bringing The Auto Industry Into The 21st Century

Tesla Motors is an American company that designs, manufactures and sells electric cars, creating an all new demand in the marketplace and leaving competitors scrambling to catch up. Tesla first gained widespread attention with the release of the Tesla Roadster, the first fully electric sports car. That was only the beginning for the company. Here are five ways Tesla Motors is pushing technology in the auto industry, according to the Los Angeles Times.

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Embedded telematics: Inclusion in the Model S of an embedded connection link — as opposed to connectivity via smartphone tethering — demonstrates that embedded connectivity is the way drivers will communicate with the digital world outside their car.

In the long term, they can expect embedded connectivity to become more of a standard.

Astrology or Science? Calculate your Geek Zodiac

Navigating this complex world has never been more difficult. And as we yearn for our destiny, our purpose and, perhaps most importantly, our sense of self, the Geek Zodiac is here to help. The Geek Zodiac transforms astrology with a novel spin on an old science. Based on the ancient Chinese system, the GZ replaces the 12 animals with the most iconic archetypes in popular culture and creates a gorgeous and meaningful array of superheroes that we can all relate and aspire to. Each week, the GZ delivers a fortune cookie to your email box with humor, advice and some geeky insight. Having difficulty relating to others? Perhaps you are an Alien. Do you frequently find yourself saving the world? It’s rough being a Superhero. Are you one of those people who believes in a code of honor? Perhaps the code of the Samurai may be what you were looking for.

The Geek Zodiac was created by James Wright and Josh Eckert, a writer and artist respectively, who brainstormed their desire to see the famous Bill and Ted return from their most excellent adventure through time and form the Avengers with heroes from the past. With that initial concept, the two formed the Geek Zodiac astrological wheel and filled it with their greatest heroes, thereby forming a scientific link between pop culture, the earthly elements and true Geekdom.

In 2012, they launched their website and began crafting a storyline to bring their characters to life. “Geek Zodiac: Infinity Core” is their first comic book, with subsequent issues in the works. And after so many requests from their fans, the duo finally published the “Geek Zodiac Compendium,” showing the GZ history, evolution and background, now available on Amazon.

So what’s next? According to Wright, he’s just happy that so many find the weekly horoscopes helpful! “The response from our fans has been amazing,” he noted. “We hope to continue delivering our geeky words of wisdom as we continue developing the GZ story.”

Interested Geeks can find out their signs and register for their free weekly horoscope at: www.geekzodiac.com.

Source: Jamie Broadnax at blackgirlnerds.com

African-American Women Paving The Way In Engineering Fields

Not only are African-Americans in engineering notably under-represented, but their graduation rates have in fact gone down in recent years. Rates for African-American women in engineering, though, present some intriguing questions. Could it be that, relative to other demographic groups of women, they are overachieving in engineering?

Looking at women by race and ethnicity, African-Americans are the most likely to get an engineering degree. And white women are the least likely. Earning 26.8% of all African-American engineering bachelor’s degrees in 2012, African-American women exceed the rate of women in all other demographics in their share of degrees, as broken out by sex.

    1. African-American, 26.8%
    2. Asian or Pacific Islander, 23.0%
    3. Hispanic, 22.5%
    4. American Indian, 22.3%
    5. White, 17.4%

Degree Ratios, Women:Men

Percentages, of course, can indicate many things. For example, these graduation rates also point up how many more African-American women than men attend college. Indeed, another list that African-American women top is the ratio of women getting undergraduate degrees to men getting them.

  1. African-American, 1.92:1 (113,601/59,267)
  2. American Indian, 1.57:1 (6,561/4,182)
  3. Hispanic, 1.56:1 (107,568/69,131)
  4. White, 1.28:1 (635,766/496,923)
  5. Asian or Pacific Islander, 1.19:1 (64,348/53,913)

In other words, African-American women earn about two of every three African-American undergraduate degrees, about 65%. White women earn about 11 of every 20 white degrees, or 56%. Because there are so many more of them to start with, relative to men, African-American women would be expected to get a higher portion of all degrees within their cohort than women in demographics more evenly divided by sex.

How Things Might Look with Full Representation

The question, then, is, how much higher a portion would they be expected to get? (Note: Please excuse the math to follow, but, hey, this is engineering we’re talking about—math is part of the deal.) Using the first set of percentages in combination with the ratios of women to men can help us understand what African-American and white women’s engineering degree rates would be if they earned degrees in engineering at the same rate as they do overall.

Suppose “full” representation in engineering meant African-American women earned 65% of engineering degrees, just as they do overall. Their real 26.8% share, then, is 41% of their theoretical, “full” share (26.8/65).
For white women, 56% of engineering degrees would be “full” representation. Their real 17.4% share is 31% of their “full” share (17.4/56).

To be sure, none of this is cause for celebration. Women remain, on all fronts, significantly under-represented in engineering. But seen from this angle, at least, African-American women seem to be completing engineering degrees at a higher rate than white women. (As it happens, only Asian or Pacific Islander women exceed African-American women’s 41%, with 23.0% registering as 42.6% of their full representation rate of 54% of all degrees.)

Read More from Eric Iverson at start-engineering.com

Is Halo The Best Video Game Brand Of All Time?

As I’ve written, and written and written, I am a ridiculous Halo fan.

I still contend that outside of Half-Life, no other game has changed the First Person Shooter genre more since the big green guy in the Mark IV MJOLNIR armor arrived. Despite the dismissive hand-waving of Sony Fanboy lifers, Halo is still the largest single platform shooter of all time (whose sales still rival Call of Duty as a multi-platform juggernaut) and a big reason that Xbox survived its embryonic stages after launch. Its 2004 follow up, Halo 2, was the largest entertainment release at the time. Considering there have been four official releases since, other Halo strategy games, merchandise, Legos, fiction novels, comic books, mini movies, etc, the canon that is Halo is strong and enduring and thick like a Jackal’s energy shield. So, is there any possible way of damaging that monolithic brand?

This question comes about because of Halo’s most recent release, the Master Chief Collector’s Edition that debuted November 11th, developed by 343 Industries. Now, this should have been a slam dunk. All the Halo games featuring the 7 foot man of few words protagonist, Master Chief (Halo: ODST and Halo: Reach don’t apply), all games that were legitimate Game of the Year nominees (and some winners), all games that had incredible sales records and all games worthy of a next gen upgrade. So the games are already great. And they were released for the 10-year anniversary of Halo 2, the series’ most ambitious and fabled entry. And a huge budget was allotted for Halo 2’s complete (and stunning) makeover with a multiplayer suite and tons of options across all 4 games. Retailers were charging $60 for this game, but Halo-stans like myself probably would’ve paid twice that for all that was included and folks, we’re talking about games up to 13-years-old. So what could possibly go wrong? Well, how about everything.

For context, the first three games of this collection were developed by Bungie, who is currently commanding this year’s biggest release in Destiny (which I’m still playing more than any other game by the way, but that’s a column for another day). Bungie left Microsoft to develop games for Activision, but Microsoft had already acquired Halo outright years before and hands it over to 343, who exceeded expectations and continued the storied legacy of Master Chief in Halo 4. It was 343’s first huge test and they passed with all skulls active, so when we finally heard about the Master Chief Collection, we trusted that 343 would deliver.

Read More from William Evans at blacknerdproblems.com