Techie's plastic-to-fuel device passes patent office tests

CHENNAI: Is necessity the mother of invention? Well, not always.Determined to find a cheap and sustainable fuel, engineer Chitra Thiyagarajan developed a unit that converts plastic waste into a fuel similar to diesel. After a series of tests in a sustained three-year effort, Thiyagarajan finally perfected the device and applied for a patent.

C S M Sundaram, Thiyagarajan's guide, said the device was the result of backbreaking work, persistence and dogged tenacity. "It involved research, fieldwork and frequent upgrading of design," he said. "I may have helped her occasionally but the credit is all hers," said Sundaram, 80, a retired professor of St Xavier's College, Mumbai.

She applied for a patent for the device in June 2013. "The patent authorities checked the machine for two months and verified that it could be patented. They accepted my application in August," Thiyagarajan said.

Explaining how her 'pyro-plant' functions, she said, all plastics except PET bottles are put in a chamber and heated in the absence of oxygen over chromium micro band heaters (similar to those used in water immersion rods) to temperatures of between 350oC and 375oC. The gas generated passes into another chamber with a water coolants coils on two sides. It is then pumped into another compartment half-filled with water. The fuel floats on the surface. Non-soluble gas that passes into a condenser can be used as an LPG alternative.

The device is not expensive and requires just three hours to generate fuel. A 5kg unit costs around Rs75,000 and a 25kg variant, Rs3 lakh. Each kg of plastic produces 800ml of diesel. While the diesel can be stored, the LPG generated has to be used directly and cannot be compressed, Thiyagarajan said.

"A similar process is used to generate fuel in China but the production costs are high and it is a time-consuming process," Thiyagarajan said.

Indian Institute of Technology-Madras chemical engineering professor S Pushpavanam said the invention is feasible and could be used to produce fuel.

Thiyagarajan's other inventions include a night vision camera and an electromagnetic belt for physiotherapy.


Free messaging apps unsafe, claim hackers


Free messaging apps unsafe, claim hackers
NEW DELHI: The free text messaging app on your phone can be used to steal your personal information. Sounding this warning, hackers and cyber security professionals have claimed that internet companies can access a mobile user's chat logs and phone data, including location, contacts, mail and much more, through some of these free texting apps.

To prove their point, a team of young hackers demonstrated on Sunday how text messages sent through a Chinese free texting app can be decrypted. They said foreign governments could also be using this method to access data for surveillance or spying.

The vulnerability of free messaging users was one of several privacy issues that hacking enthusiasts discussed at The Hackers Conference in the capital on Sunday.

'Govt fails to tap potential of hackers despite web attacks'

Participants at The Hackers Conference in Delhi on Sunday said the government wasn't utilizing the potential of hackers despite its websites increasingly coming under attack.

Often considered an underground community, hackers are increasingly becoming part of the mainstream IT industry and contributing as security experts. Some also use their skills for larger good, to investigate government documents and data. At the conference, there were people from all of these categories.

"Hacking is like an art which needs skill to master. It is also like science, extremely logical. Today private companies use ethical hackers to make themselves secure. We know of companies that pay hackers more than they spend on developing software," said Kishlay Bharadwaj, 24, a freelance security analyst and organizing member of the conference. Hackers are paid around Rs 1 lakh per month by social networking sites, search engines and software companies, he said, adding that some of these hackers are just teenagers.

Kishlay and Mohit Kumar, 24, another organizing member, said it was about time that the government woke up to the potential of hackers. "The public sector doesn't hire freshers. There is also a misplaced idea that all hackers are criminals. They are just people who are technically sound. There is a 16-year-old hacker who is being paid Rs 4 crore per annum by a leading search engine. The Indian government should understand how important cyber security is," Bharadwaj said.

He said it was easy for hackers from other countries to deface central government websites, create fake pages and fake log-in credentials.

The Jharkhand police was the first government body to start a process of rewarding people who are able to find loopholes on any website or IT infrastructure of government departments. Dinesh O Bareja, an advisor with Cyber Defence Research Centre, Jharkhand police and state IT department addressed hackers on how the 'bug bounty' system was being used effectively.

According to Prabhjot Singh, 28, another organizing member, Indian hackers were increasingly making use of their skills to expose the 'bad' side of governments. "There are many Indians on the group called Anonymous, which is a network of hactivists. Those in 'Op India' of Anonymous are for instance leaking the list of Indian account holders in Swiss banks," Singh said. Edward Snowden, he added, was a role model who showed how leaking data can be for public good. "He is great and he should be given an honor for his bravery," adds Prabhjot.

Not everyone was so candid at the conference. Said Akshat Singal, 13, the youngest participant and member of the hacking community, "I can't say what I think of Snowden; it's controversial. All these issues about cyber security are controversial. But I like computer security and want to understand it. It affects everyone from a fruit vendor to a businessman. There is a rise in connectivity among people but nothing is safe or unsafe in the virtual world," says Singal who studies in class VII at Modern School, Barakhamba Road.

While Singal was probably the only school student at the meet, many other youngsters raised concerns about privacy. Saumya Vishnoi, 25, a security analyst, was appalled at the vulnerability of government's digital data and said there was lack of awareness about violations of privacy on smartphones.

Nordstrom disses ‘omni-channel’ term, but Alexandra Mysoor says it’s real

omni-channel approach
Nordstrom and other large retailers may not know what the term “omni-channel” means, but it is a real trend that’s happening. Jamie Nordstrom was quoted in a recent article saying he doesn’t get the term, but Nordstrom does strive to be where its customers are whether it’s online or offline.
In case you’re not familiar with the term either, “omni-channel” refers to the integration of a variety of channels into a customer acquisition strategy. Basically, you have to go where your customers are. It’s not a new concept, so I can understand the reluctance to give it a new label. But serial entrepreneur Alexandra Mysoor, who just launched a new company, Shanth, disagrees.
Shanth is part studio, part agency, and part incubator to help companies catapult brands into the mainstream using the ‘omni-channel’ approach. Mysoor believes it’s different than the cross-channel and multi-channel approaches, which others claim are similar, in that cross-channel and multi-channel don’t fully integrate or leverage the full shopping and brand experience for the customer.
Mysoor says, “We are moving from individual channels to touch points where customers can interact and transact. When you are in a brick and mortar store but instagraming your mobile shopping moment and bookmarking your future purchase, that is a touch point that only Omni-Channel Retail approach can track and leverage. Technology is allowing us to create a digital layer that encompasses all channels and creates an experience where the customer is truly at the center and can be delivered a personal experience.”
In my chat with her at the TIE (The Indus Entrepreneurs) event at Runway in San Francisco, Mysoor explains the omni-channel approach and how it can help just about any brand reach their customers anywhere. She also offers some critical advice for anyone launching a brand in today’s marketplace.

http://pandodaily.com/2013/05/03/nordstrom-disses-omni-channel-but-entrepreneur-contends-its-real/


[Image Courtesy: GenesyLabs.com]