Vacuum coating involves deposition techniques that are on the whole very interesting. One reason is the look and feel of the finished product. Another reason that earth-conscious people will appreciate is the environmental impact is greatly reduced when using this highly versatile process.Characterizations of Vacuum Deposition TechniquesAll vacuum deposition techniques are characterized in the following manner:
Parts set aside for coating are usually placed in an evacuated chamber until the pressures reach 10-5 mbar.
Vapors of the materials that are placed inside the chamber form the actual coating.
Vapors then diffuse as they reach the substrates and condensate.Condensation typically happens when the process of gas being introduced into the chamber occurs in a controlled mode. It works because this allows the condensation to be accompanied by chemical reactions, leading to the formation of a different compound substance.Often, the deposited layer is subjected to the intense barrage where gas ions or vapors collide, which delivers remarkable positive effects on the properties. Finally, the coating begins to form while imperfect molecules that are not absorbed are eliminated.Instead, the materials are mechanically compacted to the entire coating. The result is the formation of defect-poor, dense and adhering coatings.Advantages to Using These TechniquesThere are multiple advantages to using vacuum deposition techniques such as:
Vacuum is a clean, environmental-friendly technique with ambient that reproduces easily. These coatings will only contain elements or molecules that are introduced into the chamber for preparation. This ensures a high-quality coating for different surfaces.
Devices used for the vapors only work within the vacuum.
Conditions necessary for proper deposition means the majority of materials are oxidized in conventional atmospheres.
The average free hop of vapor molecules takes less than a millimeter and cannot reach the substrates.Overall, there are two main families in which vacuum deposition techniques are divided: Physical Vapor Deposition and Chemical Vapor Deposition. Known by the acronyms PVD and CVD respectively, each technique serves its own purpose.For PVD techniques, vapors condense to form a film from sputtering or heating means. With CVD techniques, instead of vapors being obtained from condensing, they are obtained by dissociation of gaseous species.Many different techniques are involved with both of these families. PVD techniques are often performed through evaporation that occurs from an electronic gun, the sputtering, a molecular beam epitaxy or evaporation from the cathodic arc. CVD techniques include a plasma activated process or through thermal means.
April 2024
Tory MP claims boys are disadvantaged by ‘over-feminised’ school system
Boys are becoming increasingly disadvantaged in school due to the system becoming “over-feminised”, a Tory MP has claimed.
Karl McCartney, Conservative MP for Lincoln, has suggested the gap in attainment between boys and girls in schools is being ignored by the government in a way that would not be tolerated if the situation was reversed.
The reason boys fall behind is partly down to a lack of male role models in a society which makes it “fashionable to advance the cause of the female gender”, he said.
His comments follow a debate over the issue in parliament this week, after A-Level and GCSE results fell across the board with boys particularly affected by lower grades.
Grade outcomes for all candidates last month showed a decline in the number of A*-C grades by as much as 2.1 percentage points on last year – the biggest ever drop since the exams were introduced more than 25 years ago.
Girls continue to outperform their male peers, increasing the gender gap on previous years.
Speaking to i, Mr McCartney called on the government to do more to tackle the growing academic divide.
He said: “If equality means anything, it’s equality for all.”
“If it was the other way around, there is no way that status quo would have been allowed to continue,” he said.
Labour MP Siobhain McDonagh responded that the issue lay not with gender, but rather the “white working-class”.
When pressed on why the gender education gap was not being addressed, McCartney later said: “You don’t have to go too far back to when the playing field was certainly slanted towards boys and the male gender rather than the female one… that had to change and rightly so.”
He continued: “It’s been fashionable to advance the cause of the female gender for quite a long time, and rightly so – I’m not denigrating anybody who does that.”
But, he said, the tables had since reversed and the issue needed to be addressed.
Quoting Office for National Statistics figures, Mr McCartney said on average men in full-time or part-time work under 29 years of age were paid less per hour on average than women.
This, he said, flew in the face of the “shrill equal pay brigade, who while proclaiming the need for equality seem quietly to gloss over that fact when shouting from the rooftops with regard to equal pay”.
The MP went on to suggest there could be many factors behind the gender education gap, including boys developing at a slower rate than girls, the “over-feminisation” of the education system and a lack of male teachers at school.
Boys could also be affected by not having a male role model at home to impart “the importance of education”, he said. “Boys need outlets for their creativity, energy and natural instincts. They need to know it is okay to be masculine, and that masculinity is the equal of femininity.”
Mr McCartney said the traditional masculine roles needed to be celebrated as they were what “males were born to do”.
Nick Gibb, the Schools Minister, responded: “Tackling the inequality driven by socio-economic background is a key priority for the Government, as is tackling the inequality driven by gender.”
Responding to Mr McCartney’s comments in parliament, Anne Heavey, an education policy adviser at the Association of Teachers and Lecturers, said he was right to debate the issue, but that his comments were “unhelpful”.
“The biggest question is why the system isn’t working for so many children, both girls and boys, and whether we should be opening up vocational opportunities for all pupils,” she said.
“I think when we’re talking about gender and diversity, entrenching very stereotypical gender norms is unhelpful. We have moved on, and I don’t think we want to go back to the time when the girls did the needlework and the boys did the woodwork.”
Shadow Education Secretary Angela Rayner said she shared McCartney’s “justified concerns” about boys falling behind in education, particularly those from working class backgrounds, but said government cuts were jeopardising all pupils’ access to a “good quality, free education”.
“We should be encouraging children to see beyond traditional gender stereotypes and work towards all children succeeding regardless of their race, gender and class background,” she said.
A Department for Education spokesperson said: “We want Britain to be a country that works not just for a privileged few, but for every one of us, regardless of background.
“We are seeing record university application rates among young people from disadvantaged backgrounds, however too many are still missing out. We know that white working class boys particularly lag behind, and we must now focus on extending opportunity for all.
“The Prime Minister has been clear that this Government won’t be looking to entrench advantage among the fortunate – we will look to help everybody reach their potential.”
[Source:- independent]
The head of admissions at the University of St Andrews said it had a good “student diversity” policy without having to be a “charitable venture”.
Mike Johnson said the elite Fife institution had outreach programmes which connected with local communities.
Recent figures showed that the number of 18-year-olds from Scotland’s poorest areas going to university was down.
Mr Johnson said a good university needed “diversity of thought” from its “diversity of students”.
The admissions’ director was speaking to BBC radio presenter Bill Whiteford who was hosting Thursday’s Good Morning Scotland programme from St Andrews, Scotland’s oldest university.
Mr Johnson said: “We meet our funded places allocation with Scottish students, we cannot go above that cap but we always meet that number in terms of Scottish students.
“What we want to see is the diversity of the student, wherever that student comes from.
“It shouldn’t be seen as some charitable venture at universities – this is about the diversity of a student bringing diversity of thought, we want many world views.
“When students are in tutorials we want them to come from different backgrounds, this is good for universities, there is no doubt about that.”
The Scottish government has placed a major focus on cutting the attainment gap between rich and poor, and increasing the number of Scots from the worst-off communities making it to university.
However, some politicians and education experts believe the cap on funded university places needs to be lifted if the system is going to target poorer students without impacting on the wider student population.
Convenor of Universities Scotland, Andrea Nolan, told the programme it was important to give “as many opportunities as we can to people who we believe have the potential and the ability to succeed”.
She explained “In Scotland we have a fixed number of places for Scottish and EU domicile students and as we seek to widen access to people from communities that are underrepresented at universities that is going to put pressure in a fixed system.”
Wide choice
Ms Nolan said lifting the cap on places was one way of “expanding the system”.
She added: “There are other ways where we can work more efficiently with our colleagues in the college sector, but we are keen to have the opportunity available to those attending higher education, if that is the right pathway for them. So that may involve expanding places.”
Ms Nolan said universities were keen to talk with the Scottish government about ensuring that “everybody who has the potential and ability to succeed at university gets that opportunity”.
Education Secretary John Swinney said work was under way to improve access to education for those from the most deprived backgrounds.
He told the BBC: “We have to work collaboratively with the universities, with other players in the education system to make sure we strengthen the attainment of young people and ensure that young people are able to have a wide choice of what destination they want to pursue.”
[Source:- BBC]
Headteacher who sent home 50 pupils for breaking school uniform rules vows to continue with strict policy
The headteacher who sent home 50 children for breaking school uniform rules has vowed to continue.
Matthew Tate, headmaster at Hatsdown Academy in Margate, Kent, defended his actions in an interview.
Mr Tate reaffirmed the school’s policy and said he and his staff will not be changing their uniform policy.
“We’ve had an overwhelming number of people bullied in year 7 for wearing the wrong uniform, and we won’t move from our stance,” he said on ITV’s This Morning.
“The fact is, I care far too much about the children in this school to allow them to do what they like and the reality is, if we’re ensuring those tough standards and ensuring our children are behaving, they will do well.”
The headmaster argued the rules were needed to improve the school.
“For too long, this school has been known for being a bit scruffy, and something’s got to change,” he argued.
The news should not come as surprise as Mr Tate said parents had been warned this would happen in a letter earlier this year, according to Kent Online.
“We wrote to parents to say we would be ensuring our uniform policy is adhered to and that if children were not in perfect uniform today they would be sent home. The majority of our parents are pleased with that.”
[Source:- independent]
Moaning parents of Hartsdown Academy kids are irresponsible and should support strict uniform code
If I ever meet headmaster Matthew Tate I’m going to kiss him. He might not want me to kiss him but I won’t be able to help myself because this guy is my hero. And not just mine, it seems.
Parents up and down the country are applauding him for sending home pupils who turned up at Margate’s Hartsdown Academy on the first day of term wearing the wrong uniform .
Parents had been told back in July strict uniform codes would be enforced. An explanatory diagram was even posted on Facebook so there could be no confusion. But a bunch of lazy parents ignored it.
So Matt Tate did what he said he’d do and sent the offenders home – 60 on the first day, 20 on the second and 12 on the third.
But instead of admitting THEY were wrong, instead of being grateful the man who had achieved fantastic results in other schools had come to theirs, those parents staged a demo outside the school gates against Mr Tate’s “Gestapo-style rules”.
Others made excuses – little Johnny can’t wear a blazer because he gets hot and when he gets hot he gets headaches. Little Susie has to wear trainers, not proper shoes, because her feet hurt. Sorry but that’s b****cks!
Matt Tate is doing what every teacher, every headmaster should be doing: he’s trying to raise standards – an old-fashioned concept but they’re the cornerstone of everything.
We live by standards, some of us die trying to uphold them. We judge others on them. We try to live up to those of people we respect. They are the blueprint for everything that’s good.
And Matt Tate, God bless him, is determined to drive up standards at the Hartsdown Academy because its GCSE results are way below the Kent average and it has a reputation of being a “scruffy school” where the pupils do what the hell they want.
Well, not any more. But instead of being grateful that their kids might just get a decent start in life, these idiot parents are fighting him because he dared to say if children want to be in his school they have to follow the rules and wear the uniform.
Because anyone with half a brain knows uniforms aren’t just about the clothes. They’re about everyone starting on the same level playing field. They’re about discipline, standards, boundaries.
“People think caring for children is about letting them do what they want and having no expectations of them,” says Mr Tate. “But what’s needed is to say, ‘This is what we expect, this is what we believe in and we’re following through with it’.”
Now, that’s music to my ears. Yet all some of those dopey parents see are “Gestapo-style rules” and their precious offspring being told what to do by someone else – even if what he’s telling them is right. Well, maybe if those kids had been taught properly about rules at home, they wouldn’t have been sent home from school.
Yes, it’s a child’s instinct to kick against the traces. But it’s a teacher’s job (and a parent’s) to show them it won’t work.
And that’s what Matt Tate’s doing. It’s HIS school, HIS rules and if you don’t like it – shove off to a school capable of little more than preparing kids for life on the dole.
I just hope the school governors and council back Mr Tate and don’t cave in to these idiots with their excuses about why THEIR kids should be exceptions to the rules. Because the future of these children is at stake here.
And better it’s in the hands of a man who knows how to shape it than a bunch of gobby parents who’d rather shout the odds outside the school gates than get on with the job of having their kids educated.
One father complained: “We’ve been called irresponsible.” You are matey. You are.
As for all those parents threatening to take their kids out of Hartsdown – do it!
It’ll make Matt Tate’s job a damn sight easier.
[Source:- mirror.co.uk]
Shortly after the Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017) was spotted on GFXBench, the Samsung Galaxy A3 (2017) has also surfaced on the benchmarking website, revealing some of its key specifications.
As per the listing, the device is powered by an octa-core 1.5GHz processor, and sports a 4.7-inch HD display. Keep in mind that benchmarks sometimes do get their display size estimates wrong, but that seems less likely here as the 2016 edition of the device also featured a 4.7-inch screen.
Moving on, RAM is 2GB, while internal memory is 8GB. In terms of camera, the phone features a 12MP rear unit and an 8MP front shooter. It runs Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow out of the box.
[Source:- gsmarena]
GPUs are a proven way to speed up the time-consuming task of machine learning, a crucial element of the recent rapid expansion of the use of AI solutions in many industries. The result has been an explosively-growing new market for GPU vendors Nvidia and AMD. IBM’s newly announced Power Systems S822LC aims to push machine learning performance even further — with two IBM POWER8 CPUs and four Nvidia Tesla P100 GPUs.
However, no matter how fast a GPU is, the large data requirements of AI applications means that memory access and inter-processor communications can quickly become a bottleneck. So IBM is also using Nvidia’s proprietary NVLink interconnect technology to address that problem.
The S822LC is slated to deliver 21 teraflops of half-precision operations; machine learning typically doesn’t need full or double precision for training neural networks, for example. Customers can also attach additional Tesla K80 GPUs over a more traditional PCIe bus.
NVLink dramatically improves memory access over PCI-e
Nvidia announced NVLink at last year’s GTC, and its Pascal-based GPUs are the first to support it. It is used both for communication between CPUs and GPUs, and between multiple GPUs. In raw data rates, Nvidia says it is 5 to 12 times faster than PCIe Gen 3 interconnects — yielding as much as a doubling in real world performance for data-intensive GPU applications.
As part of the announcement, IBM cited raw interconnect performance improvements from 16 GB/s over PCIe to 40 GB/s using NVLink. IBM has made a huge investment in what it calls cognitive computing, so it makes perfect sense that it would implement a version of its POWER8 processor with the highest performance interconnect possible. IBM says some of the early units will ship to high-profile customers, including Oak Ridge National Labs and Lawrence Livermore National Labs. The systems will be test beds in preparation for IBM’s Summit and Sierra supercomputers due in 2017.
IBM and Nvidia want developers to jump on the bandwagon
To help drive deployments, IBM and Nvidia are establishing a lab for developers. The IBM-Nvidia Acceleration Lab will work with client developers to get the best possible performance from the new systems. IBM has invited interested developers to contact them directly (email link) for more information.
[Source:- extremetech]
Most users lock their computer screens when they temporarily step away from them. While this seems like a good security measure, it isn’t good enough, a researcher demonstrated this week.
Rob Fuller, principal security engineer at R5 Industries, found out that all it takes to copy an OS account password hash from a locked Windows computer is to plug in a special USB device for a few seconds. The hash can later be cracked or used directly in some network attacks.
For his attack, Fuller used a flash-drive-size computer called USB Armory that costs $155, but the same attack can be pulled off with cheaper devices, like the Hak5 LAN Turtle, which costs $50.
The device needs to masquerade as an USB-to-Ethernet LAN adapter in such a way that it becomes the primary network interface on the target computer. This shouldn’t be difficult because: 1) operating systems automatically start installing newly connected USB devices, including Ethernet cards, even when they are in a locked state and 2) they automatically configure wired or fast Ethernet cards as the default gateways.
For example, if an attacker plugs in a rogue USB-to-Gigabit-Ethernet adapter into a locked Windows laptop that normally uses a wireless connection, the adapter will get installed and will become the preferred network interface.
Furthermore, when a new network card gets installed, the OS configures it to automatically detect the network settings through the DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol). This means that an attacker can have a rogue computer at the other end of the Ethernet cable that acts as a DHCP server. USB Armory is a computer on a stick that’s powered via USB and can run Linux, so no separate machine is required.
Once an attacker controls a target computer’s network settings via DHCP, he also controls DNS (Domain Name System) responses, can configure a rogue internet proxy through the WPAD (Web Proxy Autodiscovery) protocol and more. He essentially gains a privileged man-in-the-middle position that can be used to intercept and tamper with the computer’s network traffic.
According to Fuller, computers in a locked state still generate network traffic, allowing for the account name and hashed password to be extracted. The time it takes for a rogue USB device to capture credentials from a system using this attack is around 13 seconds, he said.
He tested the attack successfully on Windows and OS X. However, he’s still working on confirming if OS X is vulnerable by default or if it was his Mac’s particular configuration that was vulnerable.
“First off, this is dead simple and shouldn’t work, but it does,” the researcher said in a blog post. “Also, there is no possible way that I’m the first one who has identified this, but here it is.”
Depending on the Windows version installed on the computer and its configuration, the password hashes will be in NT LAN Manager (NTLM) version 2 or NTLMv1 format. NTLMv2 hashes are harder to crack, but not impossible, especially if the password is not very complex and the attacker has access to a powerful password cracking rig.
There are also some relay attacks against network services where NTLM hashes can be used directly without having to know the user’s plaintext password.
[Source:- infoworld]
If developing a cool gadget using the Raspberry Pi 3 seems like an insurmountable challenge, Microsoft’s got your back.
Microsoft’s IoT Grove Kit has the ingredients needed to ease development of gadgets with Raspberry Pi boards. The kit is a small collection of must-have components and connectors commonly used in making smart devices, drones, or robots.
It doesn’t come with the Raspberry Pi 3 board, which can be acquired separately for $35.
The kit is listed for $154.99 on the websites of online retailer Digi-Key and Seeed Studios, with which Microsoft co-developed the product. A shipment date wasn’t immediately available.
The kit has a 5-inch HDMI touch display, actuators, connector cables, an RGB LED bar, and weather, sound, and light sensors. Buyers of the kit won’t have to go through the arduous process of looking for relevant components online.
Microsoft announced the kit at April’s Build conference, saying it was for those scared of plugging in hardware or electrocuting themselves. Developing gadgets requires basic software programming skills and proficiency in handling hardware, but not all makers have that mix of skills.
Microsoft wants to put its Windows 10 OS in more devices outside of PCs, and the kit could help makers turn their ideas into reality. Windows has been used in robots, drones, an LG refrigerator with a transparent display, a facial-recognition door, and other interesting devices.
Some components are missing in the kit. For example, it doesn’t come with servos, which are important in the development of robots. But it has other components commonly used in robots, home automation products, and IoT devices.
Seeed Studios sells many of the components individually, but Microsoft has pulled them all together in one package.
[Source:- infoworld]
“The question is, how do we respond to rapid urbanisation, large-scale concentration of people in cities, exploring sustainable transportation solutions, efficient supply and management of water and energy and creating stronger security solutions for the age of the Internet of Things,” managing director Hitachi India Kojin Nakakita said while addressing the Hitachi Social Innovation Forum here organised in partnership with the Times Network.
“Delivering individual products and systems to customers will no longer suffice. Today the keyword is ‘connecting’ these products and systems through digitalization,” he added.
“The need of the hour is to promote digital communication that can integrate the country by bridging the gap between villages and cities. Technology is a great leveller. For instance, it can provide solutions and can transform remote villages that do not have accessibility to the world,” Fadnavis said.
Japanese ambassador to India Kenji Hiramatsu said that Japan is partnering India on various initiatives such as high speed railway, dedicated freight corridor, smart cities and Digital India.
[Source:- Indiatimes]