Read moreArchaeologists know that Maya Blue is made by heating the organic pigment indigo with palygorskite, a type of fibrous clay found in Yucatan. During this heating process, the indigo is somehow absorbed into the fibrous clay and this fixes the colour. But how this processes increases the longevity of the pigment hasn’t been known until now.
Dejoi et amis say that the clay fibres contain channels filled with water molecules. Their analysis shows that the heating process causes the water to boil away, allowing the indigo to enter these channels. When the material cools down, these channels then become sealed by “gatekeeper” molecules that prevent the indigo from getting out again.
That partly explains the longevity but there is another mechanism at work too. Dejoi et amis say that indigo looses its colour and becomes yellow when a carbon-carbon double bond in the pigment is broken. However, this cannot happen in Maya Blue because this bond is protected by the clay channels, a phenomenon known as steric shielding.
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The discovery of the secret of Maya Blue could have important implications for pigment manufacturers. Dejoi and pals say that now they know why Maya Blue is so long lasting, the same trick can be used for other colours too.
They even reveal the first new pigment designed in this way: a new kind of blue in which indigo is embedded in microporous zeolite which performs the same protective function as the palygorskite clay.
That, they say, is the birth of the new discipline of archaeomimetics in which the molecular structure ancient pigments is inspiring a new generation of long-lasting colour.
Author: m1k3y
Read morerather than it being a piece of furniture, historians believe it would have been a vast wood and stone structure which would have allowed more than 1,000 of his followers to gather.
Historians believe regional noblemen would have sat in the front row of a circular meeting place, with lower ranked subjects on stone benches grouped around the outside.
They claim rather than Camelot being a purpose built castle, it would have been housed in a structure already built and left over by the Romans.
UK Designer releases vat-grown couture
For the discerning biopunk, presenting vat-grown couture.
Via ecouterre comes “BioCouture, an experiment in growing garments from the same microbes that ferment the tasty caffeinated…
UK Designer releases vat-grown couture
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Despite the country’s showy internet speeds and some of the cheapest broadband around many Japanese are happier doing things the old way.
Figures for internet users in Japan remain around 70% compared to neighbouring South Korea’s 82%.
And even among those online there is a divide between those who are dependent on the internet and those who could live without it.
One government poll shows that although 44% of Japanese use the internet at least once or twice a month, the rest responded that they use it “hardly at all” or “not at all”.
Considering Japan’s top heavy society of over 50s, many of whom have not got to grips with the internet, and who make up 30% of the population and that figure begins to make sense.
Many of Japan’s older men – who are those most likely to run a business – have a marked preference to stay offline even in the office, says Tokyo-based entrepreneur Terrie Lloyd.
“There is a clear cut-off for Japanese bosses who know how to use PCs and mobile web-capable devices and those who don’t,” he said.
“The easiest way to tell is whether they have an e-mail address on the all-important name card. If they’re over 50 and don’t have an e-mail address, it’s a dead giveaway that you either use the phone or forget about contacting them.”
(via BBC News – Revealing Japan’s low-tech belly)
Read moreRead moreOur world is now riddled with what C. West Churchman referred to as ‘wicked problems’: issues like climate change, healthcare, and education that are difficult to address because of their complex interdependencies and changing requirements.

The series also features an anachronistic style: using fashion from the 1960s, technology that is a mix of ‘80s era computer technology alongside modern technology, and an alternate universe style political status quo in the form of the Soviet Union still being active in the year 2010. (via Archer (TV series) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
Read morehttp://mpegmedia.abc.net.au/rn/podcast/2010/07/bia_20100704.mp3
Prof Tim Jackson on “Prosperity without Growth?”
http://mpegmedia.abc.net.au/rn/podcast/2010/07/bia_20100704.mp3
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OLPC failed in its initial plan to drop millions of inexpensive computers into villages, to hook kids directly to the Web and, in effect, get them to educate themselves. The Indian establishment locked OLPC out precisely because it perceived the effort as inappropriate technological colonialism that cut out those responsible for education in the country—policymakers, teachers, curriculum builders, parents. OLPC never got into China either. Or most of the large nations it had originally targeted. (via Is Humanitarian Design the New Imperialism? | Co.)
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