Google puts price on Google Maps

 From January 1, heavy users of the Google Maps API service will be slugged, the BBC reported. Charges will kick in when websites exceed a limit of more than 25,000 map "hits" a day. The change is aimed at travel firms and real estate agents, which use Google Maps to show customers a view of locations they are interested in. Google says the limit "will only affect 0.35 per cent of users." Thor Mitchell, product manager of Maps API at Google, said: "We need to secure its long-term future by ensuring that even when used by the highest-volume for-profit sites, the service remains viable." The BBC said Google is expected to charge $4 every 1000 views over the limit.
World's most powerful laser to tear apart the vacuum of space
Scientists have plans to build a laser so powerful it could boil the fabric of space and, in doing so, possibly reveal extra-dimensions. In today’s installment of potentially catastrophic science experiments, scientists have plans to create a giant laser that can emit a beam with an amount of energy equivalent to all of the power the Earth receives from the sun combined, reports Richard Gray in the Telegraph. It is believed such a laser will have the ability to rip apart the vacuum of space — literally boil the underlying fabric of the universe. This veritable death ray won’t be used to further the aspirations of an evil genius — at least, that’s not its purpose. Instead, scientists hope to prove the existence of tiny bits of matter, pairs of molecules known as “ghost particles,” that are believed to hide in the vacuum of space but have so far been undetectable by any other means. In addition, scientists hope the laser can help prove the existence of other dimensions.
“This laser will be 200 times more powerful than the most powerful lasers that currently exist,” said Professor John Collier, a leader of the project, and director of the UK’s Central Laser Facility. “At this kind of intensity we start to get into unexplored territory as it is an area of physics that we have never been before.” Dubbed the Extreme Light Infrastructure Ultra-High Field laser, or ELI, the project is expected to be completed within the next 10 years, at a cost of about $1.6 billion. The location for the ELI
laser has not yet been decided.Dubbed the Extreme Light Infrastructure Ultra-High Field laser, or ELI, the project is expected to be completed within the next 10 years, at a cost of about $1.6 billion.
The location for the ELI laser has not yet been decided. As Gray explains: The Ultra-High Field laser will be made up of 10 beams…allowing it to produce 200 petawatts of power – more than 100,000 times the power of the world’s combined electricity production – for less than a trillionth of a second. In order to achieve such a massive output of power, energy for the laser must be collected for a long period of time before it is fired. Already, the European Commission has approved plans to build three prototype lasers, each about half as powerful as the ELI Ultra-High Field laser, which will cost more than $320 million, and are expected to be completed by 2015.
HOROSCOPES

Wednesday, 2 November 2011