Showing posts with label Charge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charge. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 April 2014

VIDEO: Charge your smartphone in 30 secs

An Israeli startup company has developed a new product that can charge your smartphone from empty to full in 30 seconds.

Dr Doron Myersdorf, from StoreDot, demonstrated the product, which uses nano-technology.

But technology journalist Rupert Goodwins questioned how much power such a short charge could supply.

Thursday, 6 October 2011

'CIA doctor' faces treason charge

6 October 2011 Last updated at 18:12 Osama Bin Laden Bin Laden was top of the US 'most wanted' list A Pakistani commission investigating the US raid that killed Osama Bin Laden says a doctor accused of helping the CIA should be tried for high treason.

Dr Shakil Afridi is accused of running a CIA-sponsored fake vaccine programme in Abbottabad, where Bin Laden was killed, to try to get DNA samples.

He was arrested shortly after the 2 May US raid that killed the al-Qaeda chief.

The commission has been interviewing intelligence officials and on Wednesday spoke to Bin Laden family members.

Pakistan, which was deeply embarrassed by the raid, has described the covert US special forces operation as a violation of its sovereignty.

A government commission, headed by a former Supreme Court judge, has been charged with discovering how the US military was able to carry out the raid deep within Pakistan without being detected.

It is also investigating how Bin Laden was able to hide in Abbottabad, a garrison town, for several years.

DNA sought

After questioning Dr Afridi, the commission said that in view of the record and evidence it was "of the view that prima facie, a case of conspiracy against the State of Pakistan and high treason" should be launched against him.

Washington has been arguing that Dr Afridi should be freed and allowed to live in the US.

In the weeks after the Bin Laden raid, reports emerged that Dr Afridi, a senior Pakistani doctor, had been recruited by the CIA to organise the phoney vaccine drive.

After having tracked down a Bin Laden courier to a high-walled compound in Abbottabad, the CIA wanted to confirm Bin Laden's presence by obtaining a DNA sample from the residents.

It is not clear if any DNA from Bin Laden or any family members was ever obtained.

After the raid, Pakistani authorities took three of Bin Laden's widows and two of his daughters into custody.

The commission said on Thursday that statements had been taken from them and they were no longer required for its investigation.

Tuesday, 21 June 2011

Murder charge filed against Anaheim man accused of gunning down estranged wife

Print   Email   Font ResizeDaily News Wire ServicesPosted: 06/20/2011 11:18:39 AM PDT
SANTA ANA - A murder charge was filed today against a 35-year-old Anaheim man accused of gunning down his estranged wife near the Irvine day care center where she worked.

John Rand Agosta is also facing a special circumstance allegation of lying in wait, which makes him eligible for the death penalty if convicted. Prosecutors will decide later whether to pursue capital punishment or life in prison without parole. http://shop.ebay.co.uk/i.html?_from=R40&_trksid=p5197.m570.l1313&_nkw=dvd+with+media+on+it&_sacat=See-All-Categories

An armed Agosta allegedly waited Thursday in his Ford Mustang outside the workplace of his estranged 28-year-old wife, Alejandra Hernandez, said Farrah Emami of the Orange County District Attorney's Office.

When Hernandez left the day care center in the Turtle Rock neighborhood to get lunch about 2 p.m., Agosta allegedly trailed her in his car for about a half-mile. When she parked her car in a cul de sac and got out, Agosta allegedly shot her nine times in the chest, Emami said.

Agosta tried to get away in his car, but for some reason it wouldn't start and he ran away instead, but not before allegedly kicking Hernandez as she was bleeding to death, Emami said.

Agosta called a friend -- who was unaware of the shooting -- to pick him up and take him to his friend's home in Mission Viejo, where he was eventually arrested, Emami said.

Agosta, who was being held without bail, was scheduled to be arraigned sometime this afternoon.

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Friday, 18 February 2011

New murder charge filed in Green River killings

By Associated Press
Tuesday, February 8, 2011 - Added 3 hours ago

SEATTLE — Green River Killer Gary Ridgway, already serving 48 life terms for a strangling binge that made him one of the nation’s most prolific murderers, was charged Monday in yet another death after teenagers exploring a ravine south of Seattle discovered the skull of one of his earliest victims.

Ridgway already confessed to killing Rebecca "Becky" Marrero, a 20-year-old mother and prostitute last seen when she left a motel in 1982. But prosecutors declined to include her case in a 2003 plea deal that spared Ridgway the death penalty, because he was not able to provide conclusive evidence that he killed her.

The plea deal required Ridgway to plead guilty to future King County charges based on new evidence, and he is expected to do so on Feb. 18 at the Regional Justice Center in Kent. Marrero’s family will have the opportunity to confront him.

"They always thought maybe he had killed her but they didn’t know for sure," said King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg. "It’s important for the family to be able to have the answers."

Ridgway, a commercial truck painter, is one of the nation’s most prolific serial killers, having been convicted of 48 murders and having confessed to or been suspected of dozens more. He preyed upon women and girls at the margins of society — runaways, prostitutes and drug addicts strangled in a spree that terrorized Seattle and its south suburbs in the 1980s. Several victims were dumped in or posed along the Green River.

Ridgway was arrested in 2001 after advances in DNA technology enabled authorities to link a saliva sample he gave authorities in 1987 to some of the bodies. He pleaded guilty two years later, agreeing to help authorities locate as many remains as possible.

He is serving life without release in solitary confinement at the state prison in Walla Walla, where he’s allowed out of his cell one hour a day four times a week.

Ridgway’s lawyer, Mark Prothero, confirmed that he expects Ridgway to plead guilty.

"He acknowledged he killed her back in 2003," Prothero said. "He was glad they were able to find more remains and hopes they’ll be more successful finding others as time goes on. He’s prepared to accept responsibility."

Marrero’s remains were found Dec. 21 in an Auburn ravine, 100 feet from where investigators found another of Ridgway’s victims, Marie Malvar, in 2003. The Marrero family recently gave her a proper burial, Satterberg said.

© Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg...King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg places a photo of murder victim Rebecca ‘Becky’ Marrero in front of him before beginning a news conference Monday, in Seattle.

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Friday, 26 November 2010

Ditch the Cord, Let the Road Charge Your EV

Entrepreneurs in New Zealand have developed a “power pad” capable of wirelessly charging an electric vehicle that’s parked on top of it. It could even charge cars on the go.
The folks at Halo IPT see the pads being installed in parking lots, garages and driveways to charge cars with cords. But they’ve got bigger things in mind. They’re betting the technology could be embedded in roads by 2020 to charge cars as they drive.
“Continuous induction charging, which we call dynamic in-motion charging, could be used to create ‘e-ways’ — motorways with dedicated charging lanes, set with charging pads spaced at regular intervals,” said Halo’s Helen Fitzhugh. “As the electric car drives over the pads, it picks up enough charge to ensure that the driver always leaves the e-way with more power than when he or she began the journey.”
Halo IPT’s power pads use inductive power transfer (IPT) to charge an EV. A “pickup pad” is magnetically coupled to an electrified coil in the power pad. When the two are “tuned,” power is wirelessly transferred between the charger and the EV. This isn’t news to anyone who uses a wireless charger to juice up their iPhone, but induction charging already is available outside of a Brookstone catalog.
“The technology is ready today,” said Fitzhugh. “In fact, induction charging is already used in manufacturing, car assembly and robotics to power machinery on the move, so the principle is nothing new. The difference is that we are taking the technology out of the factory and applying it to electric vehicles for the first time.”
Well, not the first time. We must point out that GM’s late, lamented EV1 had a paddle charger that didn’t need to “plug” into anywhere — but it did require a cord connected to the wall, and one certainly couldn’t drive around while charging. These pads are self-contained, can work from underneath asphalt, snow and ice, and are resistant to vandalism and weather extremes. Unlike plug-in chargers, the conductors are not exposed. In the event of a natural disaster, pads shut off if they are severely damaged.
According to Fitzhugh, Halo’s induction chargers would first be available in pilot trials for in-home use. Initially, the chargers would cost around $2,000, about what you’d pay for a conventional charger. Fitzhugh believes the cost could fall to $800 within four or five years. E-ways would come much later.
“While the technology to do this already exists, clearly the infrastructure to support it remains to be developed,” Fitzhugh said. Though she estimates that adding power pads along existing roadways would add less than 10 percent to the cost of a roadway, “we do not expect e-ways to become a reality before 2020.”
Fitzhugh said Halo is talking to automakers who are interested in the system and have already supplied chargers to OEMs, but she “cannot discuss specific details until contract details are announced.”
Video: Halo IPT
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