Tuesday 16 October 2012

Godspeed 1-ECE-1

Lord we Thank You for Giving Us A Good Semester

Thank you lord for giving us the energy and intelligence to do 
the task on this semester. You show us that even thought you think 
you cannot do it. You still can, by faith on you. You give us hope for the coming semester.
We wish you a good 2nd sem. and be united again us 1-ECE-1 please gave us
forgiveness for our wrong doings and the one who do wrong unto us. Amen. 

I WONT GIVE UP ON US(Jayson Mraz)


Disclaimer: I do not own anything in this video







ALL IZ WELL


Why Engineering?
The course engineering is hard and we all know that. So, the common question to us of other's is why do we take this course? Simple, the answer is watch 3 IDIOTS :)

Many of my classmates don't like the course because their parents only said them to take the course(maybe their parent's watch three idiot XD) but even so they are willing to pursue it. But there are also, who loved this course (like me) and our lucky because the hardwork is fun.


by: engineering facts/facebook.com



THE THREE IDIOTS

Disclaimer: I do not own any rigths in this video
this is copied only on youtube.com

















Fun facts about engineering, science and technology







b               by:http://www.scte.org/facts/
  •       220 million tons of old computers and other technological hardware are trashed in the United States each year.
  •   A diamond will not dissolve in acid. The only thing that can destroy it is intense heat.
  •  According to Moore's Law, microchips double in power every 18 to 24 months.
  •   Albert Einstein won the Nobel Prize for physics in 1921.
  • Although the famous first flight at Kitty Hawk took place on December 17, 1903, the secretive Wright Brothers did not demonstrate the technology to the broader public until August 8, 1908.
  • As of early 2009, there have been 113 space shuttle flights since the program began in 1981.
  • Bill Clinton's inauguration in January 1997 was the first to be webcast.
  • Chuck Yeager blasted through the sound barrier at Edwards Air Force Base in 1947.
  •  Einstein received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1921 for his explanation of the photoelectric effect, the phenomenon by which electrons are knocked out of matter by electromagnetic radiation such as light.
  • In 1901, the Spanish engineer Leonar do Torres-Quevedo was responsible for the earliest developments in the remote control with his Telekine that was able to do "mechanical movements at a distance."
  • 11.   In their Miyagi, Japan laboratories, beginning in 1924, Professor Hidetsugu Yagi and his assistant, Shintaro Uda, designed and constructed a sensitive and highly-directional antenna using closely-coupled parasitic elements. The antenna, which is effective in the higher-frequency ranges, has been important for radar, television, and amateur radio.
  •   Marie Curie was the first person to win two Nobel Prizes for Science
  •    No one has received more U.S. patents than Thomas Edison – 1,093 to be exact.
  •   On 11 July 1962, France received the first transatlantic transmission of a TV signal from a twin station in Andover, Maine, USA via the TELSTAR satellite.
  •    On 9 June 1906 the Winnipeg Electric Railway Co. transmitted electric power from the Pinawa generating station on the Winnipeg River to the city of Winnipeg at 60,000 volts. It was the first year-round hydroelectric plant in Manitoba and one of the first to be developed in such a cold climate anywhere in the world.
  • On December 12, 1901, a radio transmission of the Morse code letter 'S' was broadcast from Poldhu, Cornwall, England, using equipment built by John Ambrose Fleming.
  •   One third of the world population has never made a telephone call.
  •    Samuel Morse, the inventor of the Morse code, was a painter as well. One of his portraits is of the first governor of Arkansas and hangs in the governor’s mansion of that state.
  •  Telecommunications satellites, and other satellites that need to maintain their position above a specific place on the earth, must orbit at 35,786 kilometers and travel in the same direction as the earth's rotation.
  •   The circumference of the earth is about 25,000 miles. Its surface area is about 200,000,000 square miles and it weighs 6,588,000,000,000,000,000,000 tons.

Knowledge is Gold, Brain is the Bank, Heart is the Last Resort





Project


1.something that is contemplated, devised, or planned; plan;scheme.
2.a large or major undertaking, especially one involvingconsiderable money, personnel, and equipment.
3.a specific task of investigation, especially in scholarship.
4.Education a supplementary, long-term educational assignment necessitating personal initiative, undertaken byan individual student or a group of students.
5.Often, projects. housing project.
6.to propose, contemplate, or plan.
7.to throwcast, or impel forward or onward.
8.to set forth or calculate (some future thing): They projected
      the building costs for the next five years.
9.to throw or cause to fall upon a surface or into space, as aray of light or a shadow.
10.to cause (a figure or image) to appear, as on a background.



Origin:
1350–1400;  (noun) Middle English project e design, plan <Medieval Latin prōjectum, Latin:  projecting part, noun use ofneuter of Latin prōjectus,  past participle of prōicere  to throwforward, extend, equivalent to prō- pro-1  + -icere,  combiningform of jacere  to throw; (v.) late Middle English project e )(past participle) extended, projected < Latin prōjectus


http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCyBSZN9nCEiU71ZKHfdAuQ

http://sphotos-d.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/558622_529109323773020_701928196_n.jpg