Déjà vu all over again this time.
I admit I'm lazy today. I could search international patent databases to see if my friend's invention already exists but I feel like I don't have to. I feel like I've seen this before. Have you?
Have you ever turned a field of sunflowers into sun-tracking solar power extractors that simultaneously operate like a network of parallel processors?
See what I mean?
I mean, his invention works. His partner and co-creator (who happens to be his wife, too) has verified and reverified the test results.
Plus, at the same time I can run deep space field pulsar source simulations from a mobile phone to the sunflower field and back in a matter of seconds.
All this while the sunflower field produces tasty seeds for wild birds.
Years of analytical computing research that culminated in a new branch of organic gardening.
But you don't know what I'm talking about yet, do you?
Nanotechnology applied to organic fertilising methods seems contradictory, doesn't it?
But what if the nanotechnology was "organic" at all stages of development and application?
I can only divulge so much here, NDAs being what they are.
And he says his inspiration was a power cord coil attached between a portable GPS unit and an automobile cigarette lighter socket! Symbiosis, or something like that. So he put his theory to the test and there it is, out standing in his field.
More as it develops (punniness not intended to be tended).
2010-05-13
Dunn, Wright and Cheepe
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