Friday, May 22nd 2009

The Ultimate Search Tool (for nerds?)

There’s a new search tool in town from the boffins at Wolfram Research called Wolfram Alpha.

In their words, not mine: Wolfram Research is one of the world’s most respected software companies—as well as a powerhouse of scientific and technical innovation. As pioneers in computational science and the computational paradigm, we have pursued a long-term vision to develop the science, technology, and tools to make computation an ever-more-potent force in today’s and tomorrow’s world.

Founded by Stephen Wolfram, one of those guys you just know is über-clever even before he speaks, Wolfram’s core product is Mathematica; a tool developed over 20 years for computation, modeling, simulation, visualisation, development, documentation, and deployment.

So why are so many people (myself included) excited about this?

I love statistics, numbers, words, facts, science, information and learning. If you’re the same, you’ll love Wolfram Alpha.

Thankfully, Wolfram have been kind to us new users and have provided some great examples to get you start…

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Posted by Richard Peacock on Friday 22nd of May 2009 at 9:05am

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Monday, May 11th 2009

Fifty years of a design icon

2009 has been something of a milestone year for many motoring classics; 40 years of the Ford Capri, 40 years of the Porsche 914 (one of my personal favorites) and 50 years of the iconic Mini.

It was back in the midst of the ’50s oil crisis when petrol prices were soaring that motor companies started striving for a small, fuel-efficient car for the masses. Sound familiar?

The ultimate winner of the race was undoubtedly Alec Issigonis. Born over 100 years ago to a Graeco-German family in the Ottoman empire, Issigonis penned the Mini while he was deputy technical director at BMC’s Austin plant in Longbridge. By using a simple rectangular-shaped box, turning the four-cylinder engine sideways and placing the gearbox underneath it, he created the classic icon we know and love today.

The mini wasn’t without it’s critics. At the time Ford were so obsessed with winning the small-car battle, they bought a mini and took it back to Dagenham, tore it apart and priced up the cost of manufacture. They stated BMC must be running at a loss on every car built and that it couldn’t be done for the price on the forecourt.

Where the Mini really stuck gold was in celebrity endorsement, television and film appearances – a fantastic example of putting your product to work. Universally loved by young drivers, old ladies, pop stars, film stars and politicians, the Mini could do no wrong.

By the 1970s the honeymoon period was over. The Mini hadn’t really moved with the times. The Renault 5, Fiat 127, Ford Fiesta, Nissan Cherry and VW Polo and Golf moved forwards where the Mini should have developed.

Many sighted the now-knighted Issigonis as the problem. Often nicknamed ‘Arrogonis’ his small-car philosophy worked less well on his larger cars, many of which failed as spectacularly as the Mini succeeded, easily outclassed by contemporary Fords and the almost unbeatable competition from the Far East. His approach was uncompromising; “I design cars without any prompting from my employers to suit what they want for sale. I thought I knew better than the market research people what the public wanted. As is shown in the results”.

It’s such a shame that Britain no longer has the thriving car industry of the fifties and early sixties, many lessons were learnt during the Mini’s lifetime but many were ignored too.

Aside from the BMW-owned brand, the Mini will live on through a network of owners’ clubs and enthusiasts – a testament to great design and innovation where form followed function.

Mini happy retur…

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Posted by Richard Peacock on Monday 11th of May 2009 at 4:53pm

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Thursday, April 9th 2009

Happy Birthday Isambard Kingdom Brunel

Born in 1806 to his equally wonderfully named father, Marc Isambard Brunel, the greatest British engineer would be 203 years old today. Much of modern engineering is due to his genius and he is largely responsible for the creation of the railway system in Britain, appointed as chief engineer of the Great Western Railway.

His most important project was the Great Western steamship, the largest in the world at the time built. Such was the importance of shipping to the British Empire that his work in shipping has become one of his most important legacies. In fact, Brunel’s role in 19th Century British transport was hugely important in building the trade network that made Britain the richest country in the world.

For more information see BRUNELFATHER AND SON by John H. Lienhard...

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Posted by Tasha Harrison on Thursday 9th of April 2009 at 2:38pm

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