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Talented employees wanted. No investment is required in order to reach the financial success.
- To: <lojban-en@lojban.org>
- Subject: Talented employees wanted. No investment is required in order to reach the financial success.
- From: "holly minerva" <jackie@winternet.com>
- Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2007 15:52:00 +0000
The main challenge in 3-D IC design is performance-weakening heat dissipation, which is already a problem in 2-D chips, as any Stanford students who have written a term paper with their laptops on their laps know. The multi-layer design of 3-D ICs exacerbates the problem, and Mechanical Engineering Professors Ken Goodson and Tom Kenney have been working on flowing fluid through microchannels incorporated in the chips to conduct the heat away.
Hello,
First and foremost, we would kindly like to express our warmest greetings to you and your relatives and hope you all good condition and happiness and more success in dealing. Our International Company is looking for new staff on different vacancies. We are already for a long time in the market and now we recruit employees to occupation from home.
Our Company Main center is positioned in United Kingdom with branches all over the world. Our supreme wish now is to expand our business scale to more countries, so we are advertising here in hope of cooperating with you all. We highly appreciate sincere and ingenious employers. You do not need to invest any sum of money and we do not ask you to provide us with your bank account requisites! We are occupied in completely officially authorized activity and working in our corporation you can reach career growth at a permanent job.
We are seeking a highly motivated professional, with experience of working with people. The position is home-based. We offer a part-time position with flexible working hours. And we would be happy to consider a full-time job share candidate.
The right individual will have good consultation and interpersonal skills and some understanding of marketing. Candidates must be able to remain focused and motivated when working alone.
Thank you and we are looking forward to work together in long term basis with you all.
If you are interested in our vacancies, please feel free to make contact with us for further information.
The preference is given to people with understanding of foreign languages. If you are interested please send the following information to: KayHodgeZT@gmail.com
1) Full name
2) Contact phone numbers
3) Languages
4) Part time job/Full time
We are looking forward to hearing from you soon.
Yours sincerely,
aldon shan
Materials: Carbon Nanotubes Dr. Hongjie Dai, Chemistry Slice a layer of pencil lead, roll it up, and you have a carbon nanotube: a graphene sheet (a layer of graphite) rolled up into a cylinder. "A carbon nanotube is a clever way of making a fully saturated nanowire structure-a 1-D structure with all its atoms fully bonded," explains Professor Dai, who has developed catalysts that control where carbon nanotubes grow. "The big challenge is controlling the synthesis. More control leads to definite physical properties," says Dai. In contrast to conventional semi-conductors, where "the surface atoms are not happily bonded," as Dai puts it, the high degree of structural perfection in nanotubes leads to ballistic transport of electrons, which translates into high speed electronics. Dai predicts that while it is doubtful that carbon nanotubes will overtake the electronics industry, it is quite possible that they will replace some electronics components.
The main challenge in 3-D IC design is performance-weakening heat dissipation, which is already a problem in 2-D chips, as any Stanford students who have written a term paper with their laptops on their laps know. The multi-layer design of 3-D ICs exacerbates the problem, and Mechanical Engineering Professors Ken Goodson and Tom Kenney have been working on flowing fluid through microchannels incorporated in the chips to conduct the heat away.
Energy: Self-Assembling Solar Cells Dr. Michael McGehee, Materials Science and Engineering