rlebherz wrote: Alf,
Interesting article. I think the Cloud services and cloud infrastructure lines are a bit blurred, but I agree with most of what you are saying.
Dont underestimate the SLA's role in accountability. For companies that have dynamic requirements and no down time can be afforded, make sure you have very tight SLAs. For example, OpSource provides a 100% SLA in the cloud and 100%SLA around production application environments. Now 100% is ideally perfect, it comes down to accountability, yo...
Konarka Technologies, Inc., an innovator in development and
commercialization of Power Plastic®, a
material that converts light to energy, today announced the company
successfully conducted the first-ever demonstration of manufacturing
solar cells by highly efficient inkjet printing. The company discusses
and analyzes the performance of highly efficient inkjet printed organic
bulk heterojunction solar cells in a paper recently published in Advanced
Materials, entitled, “High Photovoltaic
Performance of Inkjet Printed Polymer:Fullerene Blends”
by Dr. Stelios A. Choulis, Claudia N. Hoth, Dr. Pavel Schilinsky and Dr.
Christoph J. Brabec, all of Konarka.
“Demonstrating the use of inkjet printing
technology as a fabrication tool for highly efficient solar cells and
sensors with small area requirements is a major milestone,”
commented Rick Hess, president and CEO at Konarka. “This
essential breakthrough in the field of printed solar cells positions
Konarka as an emerging leader in printed photovoltaics.”
Inkjet printing is a commonly used technique for controlled deposition
of solutions of functional materials in specific locations on a
substrate and can provide easy and fast deposition of polymer films over
a large area. The demonstration confirms that organic solar cells can be
processed with printing technologies with little or no loss compared to “clean
room” semiconductor technologies such as spin
coating. The most popular printing tool for organic electronics, inkjet
printing could become a smart tool to manufacturer solar cells with
multiple colors and patterns for lower power requirement products, like
indoor or sensor applications. Inkjet printing is considered very
promising because the polymer devices can be fabricated very easily
because of the compatibility with various substrates and it does not
require additional patterning.
About Konarka Technologies, Inc.
Konarka builds products that convert light to energy –
anywhere. As the leading developer of polymer photovoltaic technology
that provide a source of renewable power in a variety of form factors
for commercial, industrial, government and consumer applications,
Konarka has a broad portfolio of patents, technology licenses and an
accomplished technical team. The Company's Power Plastic®
technology is focused on delivering lightweight, flexible, scalable and
manufacturable products. Konarka Technologies is headquartered in
Lowell, Mass., U.S.A., with European headquarters in Nuremberg, Germany,
business development offices in Asia and a research and development
facility in Austria. For additional information, visit http://www.konarka.com.