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    June 20

    Air Force Scientists Develop Transparent Transistors

    Air Force Scientists Develop Transparent Transistors

    File photo: A transparent transistor
    by Molly Lachance
    Arlington VA (AFPN) Jun 19, 2008
    Air Force Research Laboratory scientists have demonstrated world-record performance of transparent transistors created from thin-film nanocrystalline zinc oxide which can function, undetected, on clear surfaces such as glass or plastic.

    Lead investigator Dr. Burhan Bayraktaroglu of AFRL's Sensors Directorate and his team are responsible for developing and testing these transparent transistors under support from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

    PLS CLICK HERE FOR READ ALL STORY.

    June 19

    NASA

    NASA Extends Expendable Launch Vehicles Support Contract

    File image.
    by Staff Writers
    Washington DC (SPX) Jun 19, 2008
    NASA has awarded Analex an option for the Expendable Launch Vehicles Integrated Support, or ELVIS, contract. This second option period award is a hybrid performance-based, cost-plus-award-fee, fixed-price-award-fee, and fixed-price indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract.

    It extends ELVIS through Sept. 30, 2011. The award has a potential value of approximately $90 million.

    PLS CLICK HERE FOR READ ALL STORY.

    June 12

    PERSPOLICE. HISTORY OF IRAN.



     
    June 11

    Pentagon to Merge Next-Gen Binoculars With Soldiers' Brains

    Pentagon to Merge Next-Gen Binoculars With Soldiers' Brains

    Sharon Weinberger Email 05.01.07
    Darpa+says+a+soldier%27s+brain+can+be+monitored+in+real+time%2C+with+an+EEG+picking+up+%22neural+signatures%22+that+indicate+target+detection.
    Darpa says a soldier's brain can be monitored in real time, with an EEG picking up "neural signatures" that indicate target detection.
    Image: Darpa

    U.S. Special Forces may soon have a strange and powerful new weapon in their arsenal: a pair of high-tech binoculars 10 times more powerful than anything available today, augmented by an alerting system that literally taps the wearer's prefrontal cortex to warn of furtive threats detected by the soldier's subconscious.

    In a new effort dubbed "Luke's Binoculars" -- after the high-tech binoculars Luke Skywalker uses in Star Wars -- the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is setting out to create its own version of this science-fiction hardware. And while the Pentagon's R&D arm often focuses on technologies 20 years out, this new effort is dramatically different -- Darpa says it expects to have prototypes in the hands of soldiers in three years.

    The agency claims no scientific breakthrough is needed on the project -- formally called the Cognitive Technology Threat Warning System. Instead, Darpa hopes to integrate technologies that have been simmering in laboratories for years, ranging from flat-field, wide-angle optics, to the use of advanced electroencephalograms, or EEGs, to rapidly recognize brainwave signatures.

    CLICK HERE FOR ALL STORY.


    June 01

    Iranian opposition confident on EU case

    Iranian opposition confident on EU case PDF Print E-mail
    Tuesday, 27 May 2008
    Active ImageBRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - A court ruling in Britain could force the European Union to remove a prominent Iranian opposition movement from its list of terrorist organizations despite concern over Tehran's reaction, a senior opposition figure said Tuesday.

    Maryam Rajavi said she expects the EU to strike the People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran [PMOI/MEK] off the terrorist black list within weeks of a verdict this month by the Court of Appeal in London. The court backed the group's claim to have renounced violence.

    "We expect the EU to immediately remove the PMOI from the list," Rajavi told The Associated Press. "The EU decision was based on U.K.'s decision, which has been declared unlawful, therefore the EU must comply."

    EU diplomats are worried that such a move would provoke a furious reaction from the government in Tehran and derail efforts to restart international talks to bring Iran's nuclear program into line.

    The EU's foreign policy chief, Javier Solana, announced Monday that he hopes to travel to Iran soon to discuss international concerns about the country's nuclear program.

    He is expected to discuss a repackaged set of incentives from major world powers intended to persuade Iran to halt its uranium enrichment program ? a technology that could give Iran a pathway to developing nuclear weapons.

    Diplomats in Brussels fear Iran would halt talks if the People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran is removed from the list. But the EU may be forced to act, as the group has a separate appeal pending at the European high court.

    Tehran has denounced the British court verdict as "politically motivated and unacceptable." State radio reported that the government demanded Britain block the implementation of the verdict for the sake of relations between the two countries.

    Rajavi said that she expected that Home Secretary Jacqui Smith could make an announcement as early as Wednesday that the government is complying with May 7 court ruling. If so, Rajavi expects the 27-nation European Union to follow suit in the midyear review of its blacklist next month.

    Once removed from the list, the organization will be able to raise funds and campaign openly in the European Union.

    "It would sent a (strong) message to the Iranian people that Europe is no longer supporting the mullahs' regime," Rajavi said. "It will encourage the Iranian people to protest."

    She said delaying the decision to prevent an Iranian backlash would be counterproductive.

    "I think it's a great error by the Europeans if they accept that pressure," Rajavi said. "The policy of appeasement, the policy of negotiation has failed ... five years of negotiations has just given the mullahs' regime time to obtain the atomic bomb."

    Based in Paris, Rajavi traveled to Brussels to press the organization's case with members of the European Parliament. She heads the National Council of Resistance ? an umbrella organization for Iranian opposition groups that includes the People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran.

    The group has spent years arguing it is a legitimate, nonviolent group seeking to introduce democracy to Iran and should not be alongside organizations such as al-Qaida or Hezbollah on the EU's terrorist list. It says the 2002 decision to place it on the list was based on British evidence, now overturned by the court ruling.

    Rajavi said she expected any European Union decision to remove the group would be followed by the United States, which also classes the People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran as a terrorist organization.

    "After the verdict of the London appeal court, the US list is also without any foundation," she said.

    The People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran, which is also known as the Mujahedeen Khalq, or MEK, was formed in opposition to the U.S.-backed dictatorship of the late Iranian ruler Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

    The group says it officially renounced violence in 2001 and says it is working to bring democracy to Iran. "The PMOI is a resistance against a religious dictatorship," Rajavi said. "I'm sure one day the Western countries will present their apologies to the Iranian people ... for this error."