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Nuclear fusion, the holy grail that would finally end all the worlds energy problems, has been receding into the future at the rate of about one year per year all my adult life 鈥?it was always about thirty years away 鈥?but suddenly were catching up. Unfortunately, the change of pace comes too late to save us from an acute global climate <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.es>termo stanley emergency.The good news came on Tuesday from the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California. They have finally achieved ignition: that is, they have managed to get more energy OUT of fusing hydrogen molecules together to make helium than they had to put IN to make the fusion happen.Theoretically, that reaction should release a huge amount of energy from a relatively tiny amount of hydrogen. Thats the whole reason for working on the problem, and the physics works just fine. But its the engineering problem from Hell, and in more than fifty years of experiments theyve always had to put more energy IN than they got OUT.Indeed, a long-running joke in the field has been that research on getting useful energy out of nuclear fusion is subject to the Law of the Conservation of Difficulty : whenever one problem is solved, a new one of equal difficulty emerges to take its place. But those days may now be over.The big news from the Livermore Lab is that they focused 2.05 megajoules of
stanley mugs laser light onto a tiny capsule of hydrogen fuel for a few nanoseconds and triggered an explosion 鈥?well, first an explosion, the
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Oxford Networks announced it has launched a commercial data services center and has acquired a small Falmouth tech company to provide the expertise needed to run it.Oxford said it acquired Norton Lamb Co., a 10-person information technology consulting firm, for an undisclosed price.Oxford Networks President and CEO Craig Gunderson said his company also has acquired the commercial-space <a href=https://www.stanleycups.at>stanley becher assets of Resilient Tier V, a data security startup that the Lewiston-based telecom has invested in. Resilient retains the portion of its business that is focused on providing data services to governments.Oxford last fall had announced
stanley cup a planned $5 million investment in Resilient Tier V, which was based at Brunswick Landing, the site of the former naval air station. Gunderson told the Bangor Daily News that his company invested less than that but still put several million dollars into the startup and remains a minority owner.There were several delays in expected business progress last year, said Gunderson, and Oxford had the opportunity to acquire some of Resilients assets, which it did to form the basis of its n
stanley cup ew data center, called Oxford Networks Data Center. The data center will be a subsidiary of Oxford Networks and will provide IT services 鈥?including secure data storage 鈥?to business customers. On the heels of the prior investment that we made in that data center, Oxford is making another multimillion investment to evolve its business into being able to provide customers with an