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Saturday, November 27, 2010

What’s holding India back ?

New Post (57: What’s holding India back ?

Indian society suffers from multiple fractures.

1. Caste is neither a strength nor a weakness.

BUT voting for a candidate based on their caste affiliation is a weakness.

2. Religion is neither a strength nor a weakness.

BUT deciding who to hate and who to like based on their religious affiliation is a weakness.

3. Language (& community) is neither a strength nor a weakness.

BUT making decisions based on who is welcome and who is not based on their language (& community) affiliation is a weakness.

So, what’s holding India back ? (from it’s great promise)

NOT India’s diversity. It’s how Indian’s themselves interpret this diversity …and what they choose to do with this diversity...

Tragically, what is India's greatest strength has been "actively" morphed into it's worst weakness !

The youth of India can stem this rot. “Only” they can. One generation can make all the difference. Will they ? I remain an incurable optimist.

Charlie Brown

Bye-bye Silicon. Hello Graphene.

New Post (56) : Bye-bye Silicon. Hello Graphene.

Carbon, the basis of all known life on earth, has surprised us once again.
Graphene is---The new face of Carbon
Imagine a sheet of material that's just one atom thick, yet super-strong, highly conductive, practically transparent and able to reveal new secrets of fundamental physics. That's graphene, isolated by Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov, 2010 Nobel Laureates in Physics.
Graphene is a form of carbon. As a material it is completely new – not only the thinnest ever but also the strongest. As a conductor of electricity it performs as well as copper. As a conductor of heat it outperforms all other known materials. It is almost completely transparent, yet so dense that not even helium, the smallest gas atom, can pass through it.
Geim and Novoselov extracted the graphene from a piece of graphite such as is found in ordinary pencils. Using regular adhesive tape they managed to obtain a flake of carbon with a thickness of just one atom. This at a time when many believed it was impossible for such thin crystalline materials to be stable.
With graphene, physicists can now study a new class of two-dimensional materials with unique properties. Graphene makes experiments possible that give new twists to the phenomena in quantum physics.
Also a vast variety of practical applications now appear possible including the creation of new materials and the manufacture of innovative electronics. Graphene transistors are predicted to be substantially faster than today’s silicon transistors and result in more efficient computers.
Since it is practically transparent and a good conductor, graphene is suitable for producing transparent touch screens, light panels, and maybe even solar cells.
When mixed into plastics, graphene can turn them into conductors of electricity while making them more heat resistant and mechanically robust. This resilience can be utilised in new super strong materials, which are also thin, elastic and lightweight. In the future, satellites, airplanes, and cars could be manufactured out of the new composite materials.

PS: Basic fundamental research paves the way yet again for a brave new world.

Just thinking aloud........Picture this. A mobile phone that is as thin as an adhesive tape and can be slapped onto the wrist like one does a watch or much like an athletes wrist band. Amazing ??? I’d always believed that the next step forward in technology innovation could make the technology “wearable”………..What next ??? Technology that makes possible computers that are “implantable” into the nervous system ??? …….A brave new world in the making. Indeed.

Charlie Brown