cables

Hands On: Lian Li's Strimer Plus, an RGB Riot for Your PC's Boring Cables

This sequel to Lian Li's original Strimer RGB PC-modding accessory has bolder lighting and more advanced patterns to make your build shine. We built it into a PC to see how it glows.




cables

Underwater internet cables can detect offshore earthquakes

Undersea fibre-optic cables for transmitting data can also be used to detect earthquakes and find fault lines offshore




cables

The 3 Advantages of Assembled Cables

Ready-to-connect readycables® save you time on cable assembly and are guaranteed to last 36 months




cables

Elegant furniture made with discarded cables from Golden Gate Bridge

These old, thick cable ropes have done their job: now it's time to reuse them in a beautiful way.




cables

How two wires and cables manufacturers are trying to become household names

Now, wire makers want their spot in the light after providing us safe ways to light our homes.




cables

Double dipping in an NIH loan repayment program, and using undersea cables as seismic sensors

The National Institutes of Health’s largest loan repayment program was conceived to help scientists pay off school debts without relying on industry funding. But a close examination of the program by investigative correspondent Charles Piller has revealed that many participants are taking money from the government to repay their loans, while at the same time taking payments from pharmaceutical companies. Piller joins Host Sarah Crespi to talk about the steps he took to uncover this double dipping and why ethicists say this a conflict of interest.   Sarah also talks with Nate Lindsey, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Berkeley, about turning a 50-kilometer undersea fiber optic cable designed to move data into a sensor for activity in the ocean and the land underneath. During a 4-day test in Monterey Bay, California, the cable detected earthquakes, faults, waves, and even ocean-going storms. For this month’s books segment, Kiki Sandford talks with Dan Hooper about his book At the Edge of Time: Exploring the Mysteries of Our Universe’s First Seconds.   You can find more books segments on the Books et al. blog.   This week’s episode was edited by Podigy.   Ads on this week’s show: McDonalds; Salk’s Where Cures Begin podcast   Download the transcript (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts.   About the Science Podcast




cables

Sustainable ocean resource governance: deep sea mining, marine energy and submarine cables / edited by Markus Kotzur, Nele Matz-Lück, Alexander Proelss, Roda Verheyen, Joachim Sanden

Barker Library - K3485.S87 2018




cables

Peninsular Telephone Company workers laying cables along Franklin Street in front of the Tampa Furniture Co.