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friendly_iconoclast

(15,333 posts)
26. One of those "necessary geniuses" just passed away- Stanford Ovshinsky
Fri Oct 26, 2012, 10:38 PM
Oct 2012

Inventor of the nickel-metal hydride battery, amongst many, many other things:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanford_R._Ovshinsky


Stanford R. Ovshinsky


Stanford Robert Ovshinsky (November 24, 1922 – October 17, 2012) was a prolific American inventor and scientist who had been granted well over 400 patents over fifty years, mostly in the areas of energy and information.[1] Many of his inventions have had wide ranging applications. Among the most prominent are: an environmentally friendly nickel-metal hydride battery, which has been widely used in laptop computers, digital cameras, cell phones, and electric and hybrid cars; continuous web multi-junction flexible thin-film solar energy laminates and panels; flat screen liquid crystal displays; rewritable CD and DVD discs; hydrogen fuel cells; and nonvolatile phase-change memory.[2][3] Ovshinsky opened the scientific field of amorphous and disordered materials in the course of his research in the 1940s and 50s in neurophysiology, neural disease, the nature of intelligence in mammals and machines, and cybernetics.[4][5] Amorphous silicon semiconductors have become the basis of many technologies and industries. Ovshinsky is also distinguished in being self-taught, without formal college or graduate training.[5] Throughout his life, his love for science and his social convictions were the primary engines for his inventive work.[5]

In 1960, Ovshinsky and his soon-to-be second wife, Iris Dibner, founded Energy Conversion Laboratory in a storefront in Detroit, dedicating the laboratory to the solution of important societal problems using science and technology.[5] Focusing on the critical areas of energy and information, their new company, reconstituted in 1964 as Energy Conversion Devices (ECD), went on to become a forefront invention and development laboratory whose products have built new industries, many of them aimed at making fossil fuel obsolete. ECD continues (through joint ventures and license partners) to be a leading solar energy and battery production firm.[6]

Roughly a year after Iris Ovshinsky's death in August 2006, Ovshinsky left ECD and established a new company, Ovshinsky Innovation LLC, devoted to developing the scientific basis for highly innovative and revolutionary energy and information technologies. In October 2007 he married Rosa Young, a physicist who had worked at ECD on numerous energy technologies including a hydrogen-powered hybrid car and on Ovshinsky’s vision of a hydrogen-based economy...


http://boingboing.net/2012/10/22/rip-stanford-ovshinsky.html

RIP Stanford Ovshinsky — inventor with an eye on energy and communication

Maggie Koerth-Baker at 9:40 am Mon, Oct 22

America lost a great Maker last week. Stanford R. Ovshinsky was a self-taught engineer and inventor who held more than 400 patents when he died on October 17th at the age of 90. The name may not be familiar to you, but his work is. Ovshinsky is credited with inventing key technologies behind flat-panel liquid crystal displays that we use to watch TV, work on the Internet, or play with our phones.

He was also the inventor of the nickel-metal hydride battery — a rechargeable battery that now powers everything from laptops to the Prius. Ovshinsky (along with his wife, Iris, who held a Ph.D. in biochemistry and was his research partner for much of his life), began working on improved versions of batteries, solar cells, and other energy technologies beginning in the early 1960s. More than a decade before climate change became a well-established fact, Ovshinsky was concerned about the pollution and political instability that went along with fossil fuels. He spent the rest of his life developing better alternatives....

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I'd love to buy some old lever guns trouble.smith Oct 2012 #1
true, what's wrong with new lever guns? nt gejohnston Oct 2012 #4
other than the lack of historical significance, nothing. trouble.smith Oct 2012 #9
You can get close with an Alaskan rifle.. pipoman Oct 2012 #33
It's available trouble.smith Oct 2012 #36
Passed on a Savage 99 in .243 ($180). My Stupid burns so-o-o-o much. nt Eleanors38 Oct 2012 #16
Choice is one well placed shot vs. several in the area of a target. Ammunition discipline and all jody Oct 2012 #5
And so do bayonets as taught in Marine Basic Training. nt jody Oct 2012 #2
Just picked up a nice used Winchester '94 in 30-30 DonP Oct 2012 #3
I had a Marlin 336 gejohnston Oct 2012 #6
Still have my 336 Hangingon Oct 2012 #20
My first deer rifle was a 336 in 35rem. ileus Oct 2012 #39
DoD has been trying to replace John Browning's .50 caliber M2 and variants without success. jody Oct 2012 #7
One of those "necessary geniuses" just passed away- Stanford Ovshinsky friendly_iconoclast Oct 2012 #26
Have the same '94/Williams sight set up. Reasonably accurate, more so w/ Leverevolution... Eleanors38 Oct 2012 #12
My uncle used to collect them. bluedigger Oct 2012 #8
Oh, that's rough. So many '73s were used up by Hollywood oaters, they fell to using '94s. Eleanors38 Oct 2012 #15
He was devastated. bluedigger Oct 2012 #18
Is this a Ronald Reagan movie? aletier_v Oct 2012 #10
his training movies were US Army gejohnston Oct 2012 #11
I'm pretty sure he made a couple of westerns. :) aletier_v Oct 2012 #14
He hosted a T.V. series in the late 50s/early 60s (?). Eleanors38 Oct 2012 #13
Death Valley Days. MicaelS Oct 2012 #17
Yeah, I remember those sbows. Foundation for his presidential run. Eleanors38 Oct 2012 #31
+1 N/T GreenStormCloud Oct 2012 #37
I prefer my lever guns in larger calibers. oneshooter Oct 2012 #19
To get a good Marlin ... holdencaufield Oct 2012 #22
My Marlin was purchased several years ago. oneshooter Oct 2012 #24
It amazes me that people think ... holdencaufield Oct 2012 #25
I don't know if you could find ammo for it. oneshooter Oct 2012 #28
I have the slightly shorter second rifle. AtheistCrusader Dec 2012 #46
Absolutely right! holdencaufield Oct 2012 #21
your post perfectly illustrates why it doesn't make sense to purchase anything trouble.smith Oct 2012 #23
The Sheriff is correct... Some around here call those handy rifles "appalachian assault rifles".. virginia mountainman Oct 2012 #27
I dunno.... PavePusher Oct 2012 #29
these guys can set you up gejohnston Oct 2012 #32
Yep, I've seen that one..... PavePusher Oct 2012 #34
My lovely wife carrys glacierbay Oct 2012 #30
My grandmother has a 1894 Winchester .30-30... PavePusher Oct 2012 #35
Don't ever forget that there are those who would have such rifles destroyed in the name of "safety" oneshooter Oct 2012 #38
Those same people never volunteer for the confiscation teams. PavePusher Oct 2012 #40
The .38/357 lever action carbine Kaleva Dec 2012 #41
I used a Marlin 336 gejohnston Dec 2012 #42
If I wanted a dedicated deer gun, I'd go with something more powerful then what I mentioned. Kaleva Dec 2012 #43
That's exactly what I'm looking to purchase next rl6214 Dec 2012 #48
FWIW the Rossi Puma is a nice gun and reasonably priced DonP Dec 2012 #49
I saw a Rossi 92 357/38 on sale at on site for $485 plus shipping Kaleva Dec 2012 #50
The .44mag or .357mag rifles have lots of extra mass, recoil is nada. Remmah2 Dec 2012 #51
I have a lever gun I really love Berserker Dec 2012 #44
Four lever guns ... so far ... maybe five DonP Dec 2012 #45
I'm looking to buy a lever action in 357 mag rl6214 Dec 2012 #47
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