Monday 4 May 2009

Technology Review: Cheaper Solar Concentrators


Skyline Solar, a startup that today announced its existence to the world, has developed a cheaper way to harvest energy from the sun. The company's solar panels concentrate sunlight onto a small area, reducing the amount of expensive semiconductor material needed to generate electricity.

The technology will bring the cost of solar power in line with the average cost of electricity, at least in sunny areas, says Ben Eiref, Skyline Solar's director of product management. Currently, solar power can be far more expensive than electricity from conventional sources; many governments have resorted to subsidies to increase its use.

Skyline Solar has raised $24.6 million to date and has been awarded $3 million by the Department of Energy to speed up production. It has also installed a pilot power plant that can produce 24 kilowatts of electricity, and has started production of its solar panels with the goal of selling them later this year. They are designed for commercial installations in the 1-to-10-megawatt range, such as on food-processing and water-treatment facilities at the edges of cities or in rural areas.

The startup isn't the first company to attempt to reduce costs by concentrating sunlight onto smaller solar cells. But Skyline Solar says that it can better compete with other energy sources by combining two technologies that can be produced in high volume using existing equipment and that have been demonstrated in the field for decades: conventional silicon solar cells and reflective parabolic troughs, which are used now in solar thermal plants. In these thermal plants, the long, curved troughs concentrate light on tubes, heating up a fluid inside them that, in turn, is used to drive power-generating turbines. Skyline Solar has replaced those tubes with narrow solar panels, adding a heat sink to keep them from getting too hot. The troughs concentrate the light by about a factor of 10, increasing the power output of the panels by about the same amount as conventional solar panels without concentrators. (To compensate for the increased power output, the company has incorporated larger electrical contacts into the panels.)

Another step in the right direction to reduce our dependence on carbon based fuels and slow down the effects of global warming.

If you would like to produce your own electricity and make your own contribution to reducing carbon emissions, why not build your own solar power panel.

Posted via web from martyn's posterous

Friday 27 March 2009

Social Bookmarking on Steroids

Posted via web from martyn's posterous


Can your social bookmarks do this?

What is tagfoot?

We like to say, tagfoot is a no-nonsense social bookmarking, wishlisting, and tagging hangout where we find it, tag it, rate it, share it and talk about it.

But really, tagfoot is different things to different people. To some, tagfoot is a way to amass a giant music library. To others, tagfoot represents the ultimate research tool in providing a means to store, organize, and access web site bookmarks from any computer. To others, a great way to keep track of gift ideas. And, yet to others, a way to promote their own self interest in the form of backlinks to their blogs or product pages.

In the end, what tagfoot is, is entirely up to you.

All tagfoot content is contributed and controlled by the tagfoot user community (HINT: that's you).

Why does tagfoot rock so hard?

Share everything and anything - on your terms. Everything you add to tagfoot has a privacy setting. And we mean EVERYTHING.

From bookmarks to videos, to the friends you add and the comments you post - if you like the idea of social networking, but want to be able to control just how much you share with whom and when, you've come to the right place.

Why sign up?
  • access
    easily manage and access all of your bookmarks from any computer
  • share
    quickly share anything you find on the web with your friends
  • private
    share what you want, when you want, with whom you want
  • free
    100% free - all the time (unless of course you'd like to pay us)
  • earn
    yep - you read that right - bookmarking pays dividends (really)
Just click on the link - Join Tagfoot Now and take your social bookmarking to a completely new level.

Thursday 26 March 2009

Save Electricity - Save the Planet


I am sure everyone would like to save on electricity costs. Not only is saving electricity beneficial to the finances, it can also help to reduce carbon emissions and other greenhouse gases. If you would some advice to help reduce your the amount of electricity you use to light your home or office, have a look at my latest Squidoo lens, Save Electricity Used For Lighting. It won't save the world from global warming, but I hope it will show how vrtually every household can make a small contribution to solving the problem.

Posted via web from martyn's posterous

Wednesday 11 February 2009

Get 19,530 new twitter followers in 30 days?


I just found this site that shows you a way of getting 1000's of new followers on twitter, I just started using it myself and its starting to work already.

http://tweetergetter.com/mlineker

Posted via web from martyn's posterous

Thursday 18 December 2008

New Year Resolution?


I know Christmas is not out of the way yet, but some of you may be considering your new year resolutions already. If your resolutions include anything to do with getting fit or losing weight, you should have a quick look at my latest Squidoo Lens: Body Solid EXM1500S - the best buy home gym available today!

Posted via email from martyn's posterous

Wednesday 19 November 2008

Backlinks for Squidoo Lenses


Email your Squidoo Lens details to your posterous blog for quickly indexed back links. My current most popular lens is Best RSS Feeds - why not give it the once over?

Posted by email from martyn's posterous

Saturday 20 September 2008

Trying Out A New Widget

I have decided to try out a new widget on this blog, provided by WidgetEasy. It is basically an RSS Feed presented in a nice scrolling box, as you can probably see above this posting. Of course, I could have used the Blogger RSS module, but this looks a neater I think.

You can choose any feed you like, your own or somebody else's. I have chosen my Squidoo Lensmaster Feed, but I may decide to vary this in the future, possibly getting more creative and merging feeds together from a number of sites. If you would like to know more about the benefits of utilising RSS Feeds, have a look at Seven of the Best Uses for RSS Feeds on Squidoo.