2014年3月3日 星期一

Therapedic International Announces Partnership With Leading Colombian Manufacturer

Top 10 bedding producer Therapedic International announced it has launched a new partnership with Grupo Industrial UMO, Colombia’s leading memory foam manufacturing company. Grupo Industrial UMO will immediately begin producing and selling pillows under the Therapedic name while phasing in the manufacturing of Therapedic mattresses over the next few months. 

Grupo Industrial UMO, founded in 1968 as an automotive parts industrial product director, began creating its memory foam products in 2010 and has quickly established itself as a leading producer of motorcycle seats in Colombia, developing products for key customers including Yamaha, Suzuki and aftermarket Harley Davidson. The company, known for providing excellence in foam, is expanding its reach into the bedding segment exclusively through its partnership with Therapedic. Grupo Industrial UMO will begin with a regional license to manufacture pillows under the Therapedic brand and begin importing mattresses before beginning on-site mattress manufacturing in the company’s own facility.
“We have seen massive growth abroad over the last year. As we continue expanding, we remain dedicated to seeking out strategic partnerships with companies that share our vision for building an internationally respected brand,” said Therapedic President and CEO, Gerry Borreggine. “Grupo Industrial UMO is a leading manufacturing company that has developed a very strong production system with world class practices which has allowed it to be the leader in a very competitive industry.”

“Therapedic is an important player in the bedding industry holding key stakes in various markets worldwide. With expertise in creating and marketing the latest product technologies combined with key industry knowledge, Therapedic is an industry leader that shares our vision of providing customers with only high quality products at smart value prices,” said Camilo Barrera, general manager of Grupo Industrial UMO. “Grupo Industrial UMO is a company that believes in innovation tailored to meet consumers’ needs, which has not only allowed us to be very competitive but also proved us winners in each of our current product divisions. We are thrilled to partner with Therapedic to both extend our internal manufacturing practices as well as our external reach with plans to bring the brand to showroom floors throughout Colombia.”

Therapedic currently has licensees on six continents, in locations including: Canada, Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Guatemala, Trinidad, Jamaica, Colombia, Ireland, India, Korea, Malaysia, United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Morocco, New Zealand, Turkey, Australia and China. 

Therapedic International is a 55-year-old mattress and sleep products china Industry manufacturers, with over 50 licensees producing products under the Therapedic brand label throughout the world. It is a recognized top 10 mattress brand, and has significantly increased its brand awareness and distribution in the related sleep products categories over the past five years.

2014年2月25日 星期二

Samsung Reveals Galaxy S5 With Home Button Fingerprint Sensor



Samsung today revealed its next-generation Galaxy S5 flagship phone at its Unpacked 5 event at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. As rumored, the 5.1-inch Galaxy S5 includes a fingerprint gas sensor built into the device's home button, mirroring Apple's own Touch ID introduced with the iPhone 5s.

Unlike Touch ID, which utilizes a round home button that captures a motionless fingerprint, Samsung's sensor is activated using a swiping motion that scans the finger from base to tip as the phone utilizes a rectangular home button. SlashGear has a demonstration of the fingerprint scanner.

Design-wise, the polycarbonate Samsung Galaxy S5 looks similar to previous models, though it has a unique soft-touch textured backing, a water resistant casing, and it comes in both blue and copper gold along with black and white.

The 5.1-inch Super AMOLED display features a resolution of 1920 x 1080 and the phone offers a 2.5GHz quad core processor with 2GB of memory. It runs Android KitKat 4.4.2 and includes an upgraded 16-megapixel camera with quick autofocus and real-time HDR. It has a 20 percent better battery life than the previous generation phone and includes a built-in power saving mode that will activate a black and white display with limited app access when the battery is low.

Taking a cue from Apple's reported interest in health-related applications, Samsung has included a heart rate sensor next to the camera's flash, able to measure heart rate with a finger on the CO Sensor. The heart rate sensor accompanies the standard accelerometer, gyroscope, proximity sensor, compass and an IR-based gesture sensor.

Samsung's Galaxy S5 is also designed to work with a new fitness device, the Gear Fit, which accompanies Samsung's recently revealed Gear 2 and Gear 2 Neo smart watches. The Gear Fit is smaller than Samsung's other offerings and focuses on Carbon Monoxide Sensor rate and counting steps. It incorporates an AMOLED touchscreen panel and offers smartphone notifications and alerts, but it does not include a camera, a microphone, or a speaker.

2014年2月21日 星期五

CST cooperates with SMIC with support of policy in domestic IC industry

With the support of policy for integrated circuit (IC) industry, many relevant companies are eager to have a try. Recently, Jiangsu Changjiang Electronics Technology (JCST) has teamed up with Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), intending electronics to build the domestic IC industry chain.


JCST announced today (February 20, 2014) that the company plans to cooperate with SMIC to establish a joint venture company which is capable of 12-inch bumping processing and integrated electronics. The registered capital for the joint venture company is planned to be 50 million USD, of which JCST offers 24.5 million USD, accounting for 49% of the whole registered capital; and the rest capital are provided by SMIC.

In the meantime, JCST also plans to set up an advanced wholly-owned subsidiary for back-end flip chip encapsulation testing near the joint venture company with 200 million RMB, so as to provide one-stop services from chip manufacturing, middle encapsulation to back-end flip chip encapsulation testing in the industry chain for top customers at home and abroad along with electronics international.

According to information, the cooperation this time is not only the need for SMIC to extend to the middle and back end of the industry chain, but also the amplification of JCST's advantages in packaging & testing technology. Thus, JCST is able to indirectly contact with some international customers like Qualcomm, etc and then better provide one-stop services of IC industry chain for end-users.
http://en.ofweek.com/news/JCST-cooperates-with-SMIC-with-support-of-policy-in-domestic-IC-industry-8197

2014年2月11日 星期二

50,000 still without power in Pennsylvania after last week's storm


Tens of thousands of Pennsylvanians began a fifth day without power Sunday as emergency crews worked through freezing temperatures to clear debris and downed power supply lines from roads.
Also Sunday, a tour bus crashed in rural southern Pennsylvania, sending 27 people to hospitals in Pennsylvania and Maryland, a Bedford County emergency dispatcher told the Los Angeles Times.
 
It was unknown whether there were fatalities. Twelve people were taken to a "safety area" to be picked up by the tour bus company, said the dispatcher, who said he was not authorized to identify himself or the company. A representative for the Pennsylvania State Police declined to comment.
 
The lingering danger of Wednesday's storm was felt the worst in Chester County, just west of Philadelphia, where county emergency officials estimated that 50,000 to 60,000 people still had no electricity.
 
Thirty Chester County residents have been hospitalized with carbon monoxide poisoning from trying to stay warm in their homes since the storm hit, one county emergency official told the Los Angeles Times.
 
“Unfortunately, there are some people that are being desperate and doing dangerous things like having a charcoal or gas grill in their homes, using their generators inside,” Robert Kagel, the deputy director for the county's emergency management, told The Times. "One guy took a Duraflame log and lit it on fire on his kitchen table."
 
PECO, a Pennsylvania linear power supply, said the aftermath of Wednesday's storm was the second-worst the company has seen after Superstorm Sandy wreaked havoc across the Northeast in the fall of 2012. Power may not be fully restored until the end of this week.
 
Pennsylvania's troubles began with a cocktail of two weather events early last week. On Monday, several inches of heavy, wet snow fell across the state, and then early Wednesday morning, a freezing rain encased that snow in ice.
 
Tree branches could not handle the weight of the snow and the ice, collapsing on roads and power lines.
 
At one point, more than 600,000 PECO customers were without power; that figure had fallen to a little more than 50,000 as of Sunday, according to the utility's website.
 
"Basically we’ve restored camping power supply to 93% of the customers affected by the  storm," Fred Maher, a PECO spokesman, told The Times. “They’re coming down at a pace. It’s a good pace, but we’d like it better. ... We’ve had some restoration times where it’s, 'OK, we’ll think we’ll get everybody online tonight at 11,' " and then workers find out there’s more work to be done.
 
The company has amassed 6,100 employees, contractors and utility workers from other states to help with the recovery effort, but they've been hampered by "bone-numbing" cold, Maher said. Sunday's high reached 27 degrees, with a low predicted of 18.
 
 In Chester County, officials were still struggling to reopen all the roads,   with 140 still closed, down from about 450 when things were at their worst and the county's drivers were blocked from getting where they needed to go.
 
"The challenge with a lot of it is that there’s utility lines tangled up in it," Chester County's Kagel said of the road debris. He said sometimes emergency workers would have to wait for PECO crews to make sure downed power lines weren't an electrocution threat before the roads could be cleared.
 
Waiting for PECO has become an unfunny game for Pennsylvanians still without power, who have taken to social media to broadcast their outrage over the possibility of waiting until the end of the week -- Valentine's Day -- to see the total return of power everywhere.
http://en.ofweek.com/news/50-000-still-without-power-in-Pennsylvania-after-last-week-s-storm-7553

2014年2月9日 星期日

Nest Competitor Monitors Your House’s Leaks on the Cheap


Earlier this month, as Google was snatching up the smart-thermostat maker Nest for $3.2 billion, a lesser known home sensor company made its own announcement. SNUPI Technologies, a Seattle startup, said it had garnered $7.5 million in funding. That might be pocket change compared to the Nest deal, but it was a significant endorsement just ahead of SNUPI’s first product launch: a low-power wireless sensor network called WallyHome that tracks humidity, water leaks, and temperature throughout a building.

There are already many home monitors on the market; some, such as Lowe’s Iris Home Management System and a water leak and flood sensor from General Electric, are even wirelessly networked. What makes WallyHome novel is its use of a low-power communication scheme that gas sensor send data back to an Internet-connected base station over significant distances and through obstructions like walls and floors while sipping power from a coin-cell battery.

SNUPI cofounder Gabe Cohn believes this long-distance, low-power approach will endear the product to homeowners who want a reliable sensor network that requires little maintenance and can be installed easily. The base station plugs into a wall outlet and an Internet router via an Ethernet cable. Six wireless sensors are placed in leak- or humidity-prone areas, such as behind a toilet, under a dishwasher, or near a sump pump. And each sensor’s battery should power the device for up to 10 years without a replacement, Cohn says.

Most sensor networks rely on wireless protocols like Wi-Fi, ZigBee, or Bluetooth to send a signal to a base station tens of feet away. Some of these networks require devices that boost a wireless signal so it can go around walls or through floors, and they tend to require multiple battery replacements during their lifetimes.

Instead of blasting a wireless signal tens of feet, the WallyHome sensors emit a relatively weak wireless signal. While the signal isn’t powerful enough to reach a base station on its own, it can reach inside walls and resonate with the copper wiring that carries electricity. WallyHome effectively turns these internal power lines into antennas, propagating honeywell sensors data to a base station, which is plugged into the same lines. Data is then uploaded to a cloud-based data collection and analysis service, and a person can check the status of a sensor using the Web and a smartphone app. The system sends a text, e-mail, or mobile phone alert if water is detected or temperature and humidity thresholds are exceeded. “You have these wireless sensor nodes you can place anywhere in the house or building because power lines go anywhere,” says Cohn.

The concept of using power lines to augment wireless sensor networks arose from research conducted by Cohn and co-inventors Matt Reynolds and Shwetak Patel, both professors at the University of Washington. In addition to cofounding SNUPI (Sensor Network Utilizing Powerline Infrastructure) in 2012, Patel, who was one of MIT Technology Review’s 35 Innovators Under 35 in 2009, also cofounded Zensi, acquired by Belkin in 2010. Patel was awarded a MacArthur award in 2011.

Elizabeth Mead, an analyst at IHS, a research firm, says that energy management is crucial for home networks. Low-power devices are becoming increasingly important, especially as the number of sensors in home networks proliferate.
http://en.ofweek.com

2014年2月7日 星期五

Winning combination for photovoltaics: graphene and perskovite

When it comes to graphene and photovoltaics, for the most part it's only been a story about replacing the indium tin oxide (ITO) used as the transparent electronics of organic solar cells.

But last year Spanish researchers in collaboration with teams from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Germany started to change the game and took graphene into the conversion and conduction layers of a photovoltaic cell.

Now, Spanish scientists at the Universitat Jaume I in collaboration this time with researchers from Oxford University have developed a photovoltaic system in which graphene and titanium dioxide combine to serve as the charge collector while perovskite acts as the sunlight absorber.

The mineral perskovite is enjoying a period of rapid improvements for its use in solar cells where its particular crystal structure offers an inexpensive solution for creating photovoltaics with high charge-carrier mobility and long diffusion lengths. These properties make it possible for the photo-generated electrons and holes to travel long distances without energy loss. In real world terms this means that the fct electronics in perskovite-based photovoltaics can travel through thicker solar cells, which absorbs more light and thereby generates more electricity than thinner cells.

This latest combination of perskovite with graphene, which is described in the journal Nano Letters ("Low-Temperature Processed Electron Collection Layers of Graphene/TiO2 Nanocomposites in Thin Film Perovskite Solar Cells"),  offers a way to produce perskovite solar cells more cheaply and with a high efficiency.

Previous perovskite cells needed a 500-degrees C sintering process to build the electron collection layer. So that pretty much rules out making solar cells on inexpensive polymer substrates as well as creating multi-junction device architectures.

But the graphene and the titanium dioxide consumer electronics collection layers can be produced at temperatures that never rise above 150 degrees C.

The researchers also report that not only can they produce the perskovite solar cells in a low-cost process but also that the energy conversion efficiency reached 15.6 percent, just slightly above the 15 percent achieved by the highestper-forming perskovite cells manufactured with the sintering process. The conversion efficiency also surpasses levels reached when silicon and graphene are combined.

Based on this latest research, It would seem that when graphene and perskovite are a winning combination in photovoltaics.
http://en.ofweek.com/news/Winning-combination-for-photovoltaics-graphene-and-perskovite-6882

2014年2月3日 星期一

Australia Heat Wave Strains Power Supplies, Sparks Wildfires



Temperatures soared to more than 46 degrees Celsius (115 degrees Fahrenheit) in southeastern Australia as a heat wave strained electricity supplies and sparked wildfires.

Extreme heat across the states of Victoria and South Australia is causing high demand for electricity and as many as 100,000 homes and businesses may be affected by power supply outages and reduced supply, Victorian Energy Minister Nicholas Kotsiras said in a statement. Bushfire warnings were in place across the two states and New South Wales, with high winds forecast to increase the danger tomorrow, emergency authorities said.

Play was suspended on some courts at the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne, with the temperature reaching 43.9 degrees Celsius. Top-seeded player Serena Williams, who reached the third round, said yesterday it was “too hot to get into rallies,” while two players and a ball-boy have received medical treatment due to the heat.

Electricity prices in Victoria surged 7 percent to A$72.25 a megawatt-hour on Jan. 14, the highest since Jan. 30, 2012, data compiled by Bloomberg show. switch mode power supply in South Australia climbed to A$81 a megawatt-hour on Jan. 13, the highest since March 2012.

AGL Energy Ltd. is working to bring online a unit at the Loy Yang astec power supply in Victoria after the extreme weather led to “unexpected equipment failure,” the company said in a statement.
http://en.ofweek.com