Shedding Light on Dark Energy

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What is the true nature of so-called ‘dark energy’, the mysterious force speculated to be accelerating the expansion of the universe? Is the amount of dark energy in any given space constant, or increasing with time? Or is there an even weirder solution to the accelerating universe problem that is being overlooked by cosmologists? The Dark Energy Survey (DES), a worldwide collaboration of institutions, including UCL, aims to uncover answers to these questions, and could reveal a little more on the final fate of the universe.

The phenomenal discovery in 1998 of the acceleration of the expanding universe by two independent teams of astronomers was revolutionary in that there was no element in modern physics that described such a process. Both teams discovered the light from a certain type of supernovae (an exploding star) in distant galaxies were stretched in such a way that could only be explained if the galaxies were accelerating away from us. The term dark energy was coined to explain the energy that provided this expansion, though many physicists believe that by modifying the theory of general relativity they can more aesthetically explain the acceleration. Others are rejecting the ‘cosmological principle’, which states that the universe is homogeneous (or the same in all directions) over incredibly large distances, to explain why our part of the universe seems to be running away with itself. Understanding if dark energy exists, and, if it does, in what manner, is perhaps the most fundamental problem of cosmology for this century.

The UCL Professor Ofer Lahav, an expert on the subject of dark energy, summed the ambiguity up perfectly when asked to explain the nature of dark energy: “The short answer is that we don’t know - there might not even be any dark energy, it could just be space curved in a funny way, mimicking dark energy.” The conventional theory of dark energy is to view it as the ‘cosmological constant’ in Einstein’s general theory of relativity - the solution to his equations that would enable a static (rather than expanding or contracting) universe. This solution turned out to be unworkable, and with the discovery of the expanding universe Einstein later called it the biggest blunder of his life. But in recent years the cosmological constant has come back, not least because it helps explain the reason for the accelerating universe.

The gravitational repulsiveness of dark energy is what’s thought to be causing the expansion of the universe to accelerate. If the concentration of dark energy in space is fixed, i.e. one litre of space always holds the same amount of dark energy, then as space keeps expanding the amount of dark energy keeps increasing. While the expansion of the universe is weakened by the gravitational influence of matter, due to the increased amount of space dark energy could eventually become dominant and thus accelerate the expansion of the universe.

All this depends on the repulsiveness of dark energy and how it changes with time: “And at the moment most of the observations are consistent with non-fluctuating dark energy”, according to Professor Lahav, “but not consistent enough. That is about to change.”
Professor Lahav and a group of physicists at University College London are one of the key players in the biggest ever survey of the universe, the Dark Energy Survey. The aim of the survey is to see whether the acceleration of the expansion of the universe changes with time and if it does, by how much. This would give scientists a better understanding regarding the nature of dark energy. The survey is unique in that is uses several different methods to measure the rate of expansion, such as determining the spatial distribution of galaxy clusters and looking at over 2000 supernovae. This could allow the survey to distinguish between other possibilities such as modified gravity, or large scale inhomogenity in the universe (in other words, saying that our local universe may be different from the ‘wider’ universe beyond our reaches).

The initial steps of the survey are underway and involve building a new generation of wide-field cameras, which will be able to take pictures of large areas of the sky simultaneously. The more supernovae that can be tracked down and measured the more consistently a value of the rate of expansion can be achieved. An incredible 500 million galaxies will be photographed during the survey. Currently Professor Lahav and the team at University College are working at the construction of the camera lens, which is scheduled to be operational in 2010. And Professor Lahav promises some provisional results on dark energy and its nature within two to three years after they’ve started, but the final results of the study are expected to be in 2015 – so dark energy will have to stay elusive from us for the time being.

My Favorite Bill Gates Story - Agenda Conference 1997

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In seeing all the Goodbye Bill stories (like the epic email about moviemaker). I can tell you a ton of stories from 1996-97 when the IE3 team was assembling to kill Netscape..boy if the government knew I existed … I definitely would have been in court. Thank God I wasn’t called to testify. I think Microsoft deserved to crush Netscape .. Microsoft’s competitive strategy execution during that time was brilliant (Will Poole, Joe Belfoire, Scott Berkin, Paul Osbourne and tons of others I can’t remember). Anyway back to my favorite Bill Gates story.

At Agenda conference (like 1997 I think) at the Phoenician in AZ, Scott McNealy was giving a talk trashing Microsoft. I slipped up to my room (one floor up) to download my email on my state of the art 14.4 modem and I see on the TV Janet Reno going live on CNN declaring the Gov’t is going after Microsoft. Anyway I jump downstairs right under my room and decided to get a cup of coffee and wait for the crowd in the middle of the ballroom hallway. Well the doors open and Bill Gates is there..circled by John Markoff, Steve Levy, Walt Mossbert, tos of others… and he backs up and stands right next to me (like one foot away). Now we’re completely surrounded by people -Bill has no where to go. So I interrupt thim and whisper in his ear.. ” hey Bill ..Janet Reno was just live on CNN 5 mins ago - the gov’t is suing you for antitrust violation.bla bla bla..good luck …”… Bill Gates just looks at me deadpanned and looks left looks right and just runs. He grabs Craig Mundie and his posse and bolt…Meanwhile the entire press corps looks at me like “what the F&*k did you say to him. I just smiled. I never saw or spoke to Bill since.

My favorite memory was that I was the first one to tell him the gov’t has officially sued him for antitrust. Bill never came back to the Agenda conference again.

Now he only goes to the D conference.

Personal Note: I have no special relationship to Bill except seeing him over the years before Microsoft became popular then at conferences in the 90s. I have come to admire the guy and have huge respect for what he has accomplished as an entrepreneur and business leader - but most of all I will look at his competitive strategy moves as pure genius.

My history with Bill is as follows: In the early 80’s I was a member of SIGCHI at Northeastern University and I used to sneak away from the keg parties to geek out at the Boston Computer Society events where Bill was always at. He as just another CEO of a startup. Today he’d be at Techcrunch 50 or Demo.. just like that he’d chat with you … very approachable. By the way being a geek in the early 80s wasn’t cool like it is today. sneaking away to pirate lotus, dbase, dos, and then going to the Boston Computer Society meetings wasn’t cool ..


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Bill Gates - Biography and History

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Bill Gates was the founder and first chairmen of Microsoft.

By Mary Bellis, About.com

Cetty Images/Rick Gershon
Bill Gates came from a family of entrepreneurship and high-spirited liveliness. William Henry Gates III was born in Seattle, Washington on October 28th, 1955. His father, William H. Gates II, is a Seattle attorney. His late mother, Mary Gates, was a schoolteacher, University of Washington regent, and chairwoman of United Way International.

Bill Gates - Early Life

He had an early interest in software and began programming computers at the age of thirteen. In 1973, Bill Gates became a student at Harvard University, where he meet Steve Ballmer (now Microsoft's chief executive officer). While still a Harvard undergraduate, Bill Gates wrote a version of the programming language BASIC for the MITS Altair microcomputer.

Did you know that as young teenagers Bill Gates and Paul Allen ran a small company called Traf-O-Data and sold a computer to the city of Seattle that could count city traffic?

Bill Gates & Microsoft

In 1975, before graduation Gates left Harvard to form Microsoft with his childhood friend Paul Allen. The pair planned to develop software for the newly emerging personal computer market.

Bill Gate's company Microsoft became famous for their computer operating systems and killer business deals. For example, Bill Gates talked IBM into letting Microsoft retain the licensing rights to MS-DOS an operating system, that IBM needed for their new personal computer. Gates proceeded to make a fortune from the licensing of MS-DOS.

On November 10, 1983, at the Plaza Hotel in New York City, Microsoft Corporation formally announced Microsoft Windows, a next-generation operating system.

On January 1, 1994, Bill Gates married Melinda French Gates. They have three children.

Bill Gates Philanthropist

Bill Gates and his wife, Melinda, have endowed the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation with more than $28.8 billion (as of January 2005) to support philanthropic initiatives in the areas of global health and learning.

  • MS DOS The Operating System History

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    Authorized and unauthorized books on Bill Gates, Microsoft Chairman and the youngest self-made billionaire in history.






http://inventors.about.com/

Success and Spirituality in the New Business Paradigm

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Hanna Ashar

National-Louis University

Maureen Lane-Maher

National-Louis University

The article discusses a study we conducted on the concept of success with mid- and senior-level executives in a federal government agency. Contrary to our expectation that the study’s participants define success in materialistic—money, positional power, and status symbols—terms, they used terms such as being connected, balance, and wholeness to define and describe success. Indeed, the participants linked the concept of success to spirituality and stated that to be successful one needs to embrace spirituality as well. The article defines spirituality, discusses the study, its findings and implications, and suggests that spirituality and the notion of success are associated. In addition, it proposes a conceptual model of success that contains four components of both success and spirituality.

Key Words: business paradigm • the human spirit • success at work • balance • wholeness • spirituality at work

Thanks to : http://jmi.sagepub.com/

The Titanic Story

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On that fateful night of April 14, 1912 there were 2,235 souls crowded aboard the R.M.S. Titanic. There was no wind to speak of. The frigid, dark sea was calm, like a plate glass mirror beneath the star-spangled heavens. It was an hour before midnight on a starry, moonless night. While the band played on beneath the decks in the first class lounge, and while the night watch paced the Bridge high above, the greatest maritime tragedy in the history of sailing, stealthily, silently awaited them in the ice-strewn midnight waters of the North Atlantic.

Survivors recalled a gentle shudder that briefly shook the 900 foot long vessel. It came and went so quickly that nobody gave it much of a second thought. Except for the occupants of the Bridge–who in the split seconds before that collision, saw the towering iceberg ahead, floating in their unlighted pathway. The helmsman swerved to miss the iceberg–but they would have been better off to have struck it head on. In narrowly avoiding a head-on collision, they suffered an even worse fate!


Three-fourths of the iceberg lay unseen beneath the calm ocean surface. When the Titanic swerved, it brushed the iceberg's underside on the starboard side of the bow, slitting a quarter of an inch wide opening more than 300 feet down the side of the vessel. Like a titanic can opener, the iceberg knifed open the side of the iron hull. The damage was just enough to cause the metal plates to buckle so that six watertight compartments began taking in sea water.

So scientifically had this great sailing ship been constructed, with 16 watertight compartments in a 1/6 mile long hull, that the captain had made a pre-voyage boast, "Not even God himself could sink her". The builders had calculated that even if four of the compartments should burst, the ship would still float! But on that starry night, six of them exploded and began to suck in the frigid water of the North Atlantic! Mathematically, the "unsinkable ship" was mortally wounded. And, in two hours she was gone. Commander Lightoller, one of the few crew members who survived the tragedy, described the moment she sank.

Of the 2235 occupants, 1522 met their death in those dark waters including most of the men, most of the third class, most of the crew, and all of the band. Only 713 people were rescued.

And the world lined up for hours to relive their tragic story in the most watched movie ever in human history. Why?

Could it be that Titanic is more than a tale about love and death of heart throbs Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio? Could it be that there's a deep, subconscious sense the world over that this tragedy at the beginning of the 20th century was in fact a warning parable of an ominous unnamed tragedy that hangs like Damocles' sword over our planet, while we're partying to beat the band?

How I Be, For Those Wondering

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For those of you wondering how I be …

… we arrived safely here in London last Wednesday, and the praise is Allah’s. All our baggage was intact, with the exception of one of our strollers, which was pretty much destroyed by the airline (one handle bent and the other broken clean off). We’re still waiting to hear from either the Baggage Services desk at London-Gatwick airport or the airline company itself to see if we’ll be compensated for the damages.

I was wrong about my wife’s parents not having internet access; they have internet access, they just don’t have a computer. My sister-in-law has left her Apple MacBook here for us to use, but I’m not really a big fan of it. All I’ve been using it for thus far has been checking email and some random web-surfing. My laptop hasn’t been repaired yet; we’re going to check out a computer shop a friend recommended close by. Hopefully, after it’s working properly, I’ll be able to get some work done and get some new articles up for you to read and hopefully benefit from. In the meantime I’ve been reading Shaikh Ahmad bin Sâlih az-Zahrânî’s new book, Tark al-’Amal adh-Dhâhir wa Atharuh fil-Îmân (trans. Leaving the Outer Deed and Its Effect on Faith). I’m only on page 70 (the book’s about 250 pages long), and already, I’m finding it very beneficial. If any of you guys can, download the book off the shaikh’s website and read it! It’s great.

With regards to our trip, the family has been very welcoming and things have been going pretty smoothly, with Allah’s praise. We took the kids to the Natural History Museum this past Monday; man, was it packed!!! Way too crowded for my liking and way too much walking. The kids had a blast, though, which is what really matters.

I also got a chance to hook up with brother AbdulHaq Addae of SalafiManhaj.com during the weekend. We hung out for a short while before I had to get back to my in-laws’ place. Allah willing, we’ll be able to hook up a few more times before the trip’s done.

Anyhow, that’s my update for today. As I said, Allah willing, my own laptop will be in working order soon and I’ll be able to post up stuff for you. Hopefully, that’ll be sooner than later.