#Beer and Food Scraps Can Power Chevrolet Bi-fuel Impala Trash to fuel the stuff of the 1980s sci-fi comedy movie trilogy ack to the Futureis now a reality.
The 2015 Bi-fuel Chevrolet Impala not a tricked-out Delorean really can run on leftovers table scraps and oh yeah grains from brewing beer.
And don forget beer: Anheuser-busch Columbus brewery provides an organic by-product to quasar for conversion to methane gas. f you can buy renewable fuel at $1. 95 per gallon
including a leading global distributor of beer. Agreements are in place to manufacture the system, and a family of related products are under way
and reprogrammed these simple cells to make opioid-based medicines via a sophisticated extension of the basic brewing process that makes beer.
#Nanoribbon material keeps gases captive Rice university rightoriginal Studyposted by Mike Williams-Rice on October 11 2013an enhanced polymer could make vehicles that run on compressed natural gas more practical and even prolong the shelf life of bottled beer
and make the beer go bad. Bottles that are effectively impermeable could lead to brew that stays fresh on the shelf for far longer Tour says.
and even lead to better beer say researchers. The global wheat industry can lose up to $1 billion a year from grains that germinate in humid conditions before they are fully mature.
wheat in future we should also end up with better beer. he research opens up a whole new area of exploration for scientists as they try to increase the yields of wheat and decrease losses due to excessively humid conditions.
#Gene protects beer crop from nasty fungus Original Studyposted by Ron Hohenhaus-Queensland on August 5 2013 Finding the gene that gives barley resistance to leaf rust could benefit people who rely on the crop
for food and beer. Researchers have discovered that the gene Rph20 provides resistance to leaf rust in some barley variety adult plants.
because the country's primary use of barley was to make beer as well as stock feed.
beer and goods produced in factories far away. To take one indicative example: The Homestead steel mill, across the river from Pittsburgh, is now a mall e
to juice, to vegetables, to beer, to soup, and much more. Transporting water is expensive,
So, the The Nature Conservancy (TNC) has joined forces with America beer brewers to change how farmer irrigate their crops.
but we re told its scans are of high enough fidelity to distinguish, not just milk from beer,
fruit sodas, energy drinks, protein shakes, beers, wines, orange juices with pulp, orange juices with no pulp, and everything in-between.
and beer Boeke told Livescience. Today he said the fungus is used also to makevaccines medicines
codeine and drugs using a simple home-brew beer kit. The discovery, published in the scientific journal Nature Chemical Biology, comes on the heels of a study published last month in the journal PLOS ONE.
and basic skills in fermentation would be able to grow morphine-producing yeast using a home-brew kit for beer-making,
brew beer and leaven bread. Now Stanford researchers have engineered genetically yeast to make painkilling medicines,
and produce in beer. Researchers at the Technical University of Dortmund in Germany and firm Hyasynth Bio have now found a way to genetically engineer a strain of this bacteria to produce THC.
'but there's bigger potential there than just making a beer. The newly engineered yeast could
showcasing a team of three robots that work together to deliver beer, suggesting the technology responsible could translate to cooperative robotic systems for not only bars and restaurants,
prompting the robot to return to the"bar"where a PR2 robot was waiting to dispense cans of beer MIT's robotic bartending service in action.
the technology might be able to make a beer belly look flatter. Alternatively, a face mask could hide pimples and wrinkles from view."
just like beer or wine are, possibly in the privacy of your own home. Advances in bioengineering had allowed scientists to understand the complex processes within the poppy plant that convert sugar to morphine,
#A Team Of MIT Bartender Robots Serves Beer More Efficiently Using robots, a team at MIT Computer science and Artificial intelligence Laboratory has solved an ancient problem:
needing another beer but not wanting to stand up and get it. Two small Turtlebots (which look like coolers on wheels) travel between a beer-providing PR2 robot bartender
and rooms of students at work, asking the students if they need a beer and then returning with a beverage
if one is ordered. Bartending is a good task to demonstrate machine teamwork: the waiterbots each check in with a room full of humans,
and it easy to imagine the same robots that here dispense beer instead taking orders for water bottles and crackers at an emergency shelter.
this bartending team mainly just takes orders for beer in cans and then delivers cans of beer.
MIT robot team won be headlining any fancy cocktail parties, but could ably staff a low-key dive.
Which, after a long day spent making robots fetch beers, is all anyone really needs, anyway w
From a genetic perspective at least, the ingredient that helps make bread rise (and beer so compelling) shares more than a few things in common with you and
which include free beers, discounts on groceries and 50 percent off of bike repairs. Individuals, collectives and schools can also take advantage of a free educational package
brew beer and leaven bread. Now researchers at Stanford have engineered genetically yeast to make painkilling medicines,
He used the robot arm to lift a bottle of Modelo beer to his mouth
first turning wild strains of the fungus into the life-affirming fermenters that give us beer and bread.
#'Home-brewed morphine'made possible Scientists have figured out how to brew morphine using the same kit used to make beer at home.
If you brew beer at home, then you are relying on microscopic yeast that turns sugars into alcohol.
and basic skills in fermentation would be able to grow morphine producing yeast using a a home-brew kit for beer-making,
Tetraplegic Patient Controls Robotic Limb With His Brain In a video by the researchers, Sorto used the arm to serve himself a beer.
what Sorto intended to do just"get the beer, "Andersen said. Sorto can't take the arm home
when I want to take a sip out of my beer and to not have to ask somebody to give it to me.
#Brain implant allows paralysed man to sip a beer at his own pace A brain implant that can decode what someone wants to do has allowed a man paralysed from the neck down to control a robotic arm with unprecedented fluidity
and enjoy a beer at his own pace. Erik Sorto was left unable to move any of his limbs after an accident severed his spinal cord 12 years ago.
Most importantly to him, he was able to smoothly pick up a beer and take a swig."
"The one thing he said he wanted to be able to do at the start of the experiment was to drink a beer with his friends
after drinking his beer.""I would hope some day that people with these conditions will have a robotic arm
#Robot Tongue Identifies The Correct Beer Every Time machines mimicking a human's sense of taste are going on a beer-tasting binge.
pouring beer onto wagging, mechanical tongues.""It's just a bunch of wires and buttons and computers,"said María Luz Rodríguez-Méndez, a professor of inorganic chemistry at University of Valladolid in Spain."
"However it looks, Méndez and colleagues developed an electronic tongue that accurately distinguished between four styles of lager beer 100 percent of the time.
A variety of screen-printed sensors"taste"electrochemical compounds in the beer to predict the brews'color index and alcoholic strength 76 percent and 86 percent of the time.
This means that one expert must always test the beer before it leaves the factory.""But your experts don't work at 3 a m
Electronic sensors could share a supporting role by continuing to check the beer while the brewmasters are sleeping."
antioxidants produced by the grains and ingredients that ferment into beer, such as barley and hops.
Phenols give beer its bitter taste, determine its golden color and conduct electricity. The electronic tongue distinguishes between lagers by detecting the different concentrations of polyphenols.
A beer is classified as a lager based on the type of yeast and a low fermentation temperature.
Méndez and her colleagues tested the electronic tongue on 25 types of commercial beer across four lager styles.
The researchers chose the styles based on their distinct alcohol strength and the European Beer Convention color value.
The four styles were alcohol-free beer, which has low polyphenol levels; Pilsners which have a light yellow to golden color;
the computer can then compare new beer samples against the established, learned signal patterns. They tested each of the 25 beer samples seven times.
Many existing tongues using an array of sensors only get one data point for each sensor,
The researchers immerse the electrodes in beer and track the electrochemical signals as they turn up the voltage,
the electronic tongue was able to place the commercial beer sample into the correct lager category with 100 percent accuracy.
It also predicted the beer's color with 76 percent accuracy and its alcohol content with 84 percent accuracy."
'Blue moon'Beer Celebrates Lunar Sight for 20th Anniversary In a coincidence of cosmic proportions, the second full moon of July rises tonight,
and the full Blue moon capped by a"specialty beer release.""The phrase"Blue moon"commonly refers to the second full moon in a single month,
In celebration of its 20th anniversary, Blue moon Brewing Co. which is owned by the Molson coors brewing Co.)will release a new beer that is part Belgian-style white and part Belgian-style Tripel.
It's not space beer, but we'll still try it).""The smooth-bodied ale has a warming finish and hints of coriander, orange peel, fruity esters, spicy esters and a touch of sweetness,
The company's founder said the beer brings back fond memories of the time he spent earning his Ph d. in brewing studies in Brussels."As a brewery,
food, music and great beer,"Keith Villa, founder and head brewmaster of Blue moon, said in the same statement.
I want to be able to drink my own beer to be able to take a drink at my own pace,
when I want to take a sip out of my beer and to not have to ask somebody to give it to me.
#Paralyzed man sips beer using robot arm he controls with his mind Erik Sorto hasn't been able to move his arms or legs in a decade,
and yes, drink beer, according to a study in the journal Science.""I want to be able to drink my own beer to be able to take a drink at my own pace,
when I want to take a sip out of my beer, and to not have to ask somebody to give it to me,
"Sorto says in a statement from the California Institute of technology.""I really miss that independence.""""I really miss that independence."
Information from the implants in the posterior parietal cortex transmit the intent to pick up a pint of beer
the benefits go beyond just drinking his own beer. The study has given him a sense of purpose."
< Back - Next >
Overtext Web Module V3.0 Alpha
Copyright Semantic-Knowledge, 1994-2011