Category writing

Portrait of the Science Writer as a Young Woman

A friend was going through some old papers and came across an article in the Kansas City Star about a local kid who made good by winning an internship at The Economist. Yup, that’s my smiling face! I was giddy! I couldn’t have asked for a more amazing introduction to writing about science.

So how am I doing with those interest and goals mentioned in the piece? Well, I’m definitely writing about solid-state lighting and foldable displays. I don’t have a book about the periodic table in the works, but I still like the idea. The big disappointment is that I’m not actually an astronaut right now. Yeah. That’s a dream that’s never going to die.

Clock Towers of San Francisco

In a departure from my normal high-tech writing ways, I’ve written a piece about antique clocks. The story was inspired by an antique clock repair shop a few blocks away from my apartment and its owner, a man named Dorian Clair. Dorian is the kind of guy who will answer all the questions you ask, and then go on to answer unasked ones as well. Before I knew it, he was telling me stories about the history of San Francisco’s tower clocks and how he takes care of them. It turns out that Dorian watches the clocks at the Ferry Building and the pendulum clock at UCSF Medical Center. He also built the clock in the tower that overlooks the Bay Bridge viaduct.

The piece is about my attempt to get him to take me up into these clock towers. In it, I include a smattering of clock work, clock history, and Dorian’s history. I had a fantastic time researching and writing this piece, and I’m happy to have it appear in the Bold Italic, a new online publication that features unique people, places, and things to do in San Francisco.

You can read the story, All Along the Watchtower, here: http://thebolditalic.com/kategreene/stories/268-all-along-the-watchtower

Recent Stories: Cyborgs, Solar, and Data Storage

This post is a roundup of the stories I’ve written over the past few weeks.

Without doing it consciously, I’ve totally carved out a cyborg beat. The most recent story is about a neural implant that is wirelessly controlled and wirelessly powered. The researchers, led by Brian Otis at the University of Washington, hope to implant this in humans someday, but have so far just demonstrated the sensor on a moth.

Another cool human-computer interface story I did was about a Microsoft Research project that uses muscle electrodes to interact with a computer. The main researcher, Desney Tan, is really trying to make muscle sensors cheap and easy to use so that the group’s prototype can eventually turn into something commercial. An awesome video of the technology, where a person plays Guitar Hero without the guitar, is here .

For The Economist, I wrote an update on a project by Babak Parviz at the University of Washington. Parviz is building a bionic eye by adding electro-optic devices to a contact lens.

Side note: all of the above researchers know each other and are either currently collaborating or have worked together on projects in the past.

I’ve also written one story about solar energy, a more efficient photovoltaic that uses nanopatterns to trap light better. The really interesting thing about this research is the physics behind it. These nanopatterns convert three-dimensional waves of light into two-dimensional waves that are confined to the surface of a metal. This process makes sunlight easier to turn into usable energy. The key to this 3D to 2D conversion is a quasiparticle called a surface plasmon. I have a little crush on plasmons (ever since grad school!), so I’ll be writing more about these in the future. Stay tuned!

Another piece I wrote was about researchers at Rice who use graphite–the same stuff that’s in pencils–to make a new type of chip-based memory that can hold more data than flash.

I covered research from NIST in which scientists developed a technique to scale up quantum computers, hopefully making them more practical.

And finally, I wrote about Intel’s announcement of an optical cable that the company would like to eventually replace the slow and heavy copper wires that people use to connect their computers, televisions, peripherals, etc. together. (For some background and more info on this topic, check out a post I wrote a while back.)

My Writing, Now in .pdf

I have a collection of articles, including some of the work I’m most proud of, trapped behind  pay walls at various publications. I recently asked a friend with the know-how and technical tools to extract and transubstantiate them into .pdfs. Here are the first few:

“What Is He Doing?” Profile of Ev Williams in the early days of Twitter. Technology Review, November/December 2007

“Racetrack Memory” TR10 winning technology, developed by Stuart Parkin of IBM, the father of the modern magnetic hard drive. Technology Review, March/April 2009.

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