News Briefs
By Willie D. Jones
Wireless broadband, stripped-down desktops, and a novel battery
Wireless
broadband. Verizon Communications, the
largest of the U.S. Baby Bell telephone companies,
announced on 28 August that it has extended the coverage
of its broadband wireless network to the 60 largest U.S.
metropolitan areas, making it the first U.S. company to
offer nationwide high-speed wireless Internet service.
Built on top of the company's cellular network, the
service, which comes in one version for laptops and
another for cellphones, will allow users to surf the Web
at speeds close to 1 megabyte per second.
Stripped-Down
Desktops. On 23 August, Intel Corp. unveiled
a prototype PC [photo] optimized for use in developing
countries. Called the Community Computer, it will be
rugged enough to withstand desert temperatures, bugs,
and dust, capable of drawing power from an ordinary car
battery, and able to connect to the Internet via
built-in WiMAX wireless broadband technology. No word on
when it will be commercially available.
Waste Not.
Researchers at the Institute of Bioengineering and
Nanotechnology, in Singapore, have created a credit
cardĀsize battery powered by urine. The prototype,
described in the September issue of the Journal of
Micromechanics and Microengineering, comprises a
solution of copper chloride sandwiched between strips of
magnesium and copper, which is then laminated between
sheets of plastic. Adding a drop of urine creates a
chemical reaction that yields about 1.5 volts, the same
as a standard AA battery.
—Willie D. Jones