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GlobalData: China to replace US as diesel generator set market leader by 2020
2014-07-02 16:30:41| Green Car Congress
Citrus-Based Solvents replace Xylene products.
2014-07-01 14:31:10| Industrial Newsroom - All News for Today
FC-PRO-XR Series is based on citrus chemistry, specifically technical grade d-limonene, which consists of double-bonded hydrocarbon produced from skins of oranges. Environmentally safe and renewable compound is as effective as Xylene and other BTEX-type solvents in eviscerating pollutants that stifle production in oil and gas wells. U.S. FDA has determined d-limonene to be Generally Regarded as Safe and has been given Designated for the Environment label by U.S. EPA. This story is related to the following:Non-Toxic Solvents | Solvents
Tags: products
replace
solvents
xylene
Tegile Arrays Replace Compellent System to Overcome Storage Performance Issues Suffered by ...
2014-07-01 06:00:00| Industrial Newsroom - All News for Today
Hybrid arrays deliver consistently more IOPS to handle storage load of company’s ERP system<br /> <br /> Newark, Calif. – Tegile Systems, the leading provider of flash-driven storage arrays for databases, virtualized server and virtual desktop environments, today announced that chemical manufacturer and distributor Hawkins Inc. has replaced its existing Dell Compellent system with Tegile hybrid arrays to solve storage performance issues it was suffering in its enterprise resource ...This story is related to the following:Electronic Components and DevicesSearch for suppliers of: Arrays |
Tags: system
issues
performance
storage
Ryan Cos. promotes Tony Barranco to replace Rick Collins
2014-06-24 20:11:09| Grocery - Topix.net
Barranco, a winner of the Business Journal 's 40 Under 40 honor in March, was named vice president of development, office and mixed-use in the NorthCentral Region at Ryan Monday.
The vacuum tube strikes back: NASAs tiny 460GHz vacuum transistor that could one day replace silicon FETs
2014-06-24 14:12:20| Extremetech
Way back in the salad days of digital computing (the 1940s and '50s), computers were made of vacuum tubes -- big, hot, clunky devices that, when you got right down to it, were essentially glorified light bulbs. This is why early computers like the ENIAC weighed more than 27 tons and consumed more power than a small town. Later, obviously, vacuum tubes would be replaced by probably the greatest invention of all time -- the solid-state transistor -- which would allow for the creation of smaller, faster, cheaper, and more reliable computers. Fast forward to 2014, though, and the humble CMOS field-effect transistor (FET) is starting to show its age. We've pretty much hit the limit on shrinking silicon transistors any further, and they can't operate at speeds much faster than a few gigahertz. Which is why NASA's Ames Research Center is going back to the future with its new vacuum transistor -- a nanometer-scale vacuum tube that, in early testing, has reached speeds of up to 460GHz.
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