Two Tiny!

March 23, 2010

Vervain

We should all recognize this creature as the animal with the highest metabolism of any other creature on earth!

While sipping nectar from a flower the hummingbirds wings beat 50 times per second and are capable of beating up to 200 times a second to escape a predator.  They can fly in all directions: forward, backward, and sideways. They can also stop in mid-air; their wings beating and rotating like little helicopters.

Where does the fuel come from to keep this little guy going?

The nectar provides the fuel; every one of the 1000 flowers that this little guy visits in a day is a fuel stop.

What always amazes me is that no one ever wonders, where does the  protein come from to repair and grow his little body?

NO, sugar (nectar) is not a source of protein.  

Ever notice that the flowers that this little guy sips the nectar from have no aphids? or caterpillars? or ants? or gnats? or mosquitoes?

Guess why.  He ate them!

20% of their daily diet is insects, but when it’s time for migration or nesting time comes along our little guy turns into quite the carnivore consuming almost half  his weight in insects. Nature helps by providing the ultimate “convenience store and fast food shop in one”  for the hummingbird; the local spider’s web!  It is there, caught in the web, insects too small for the spider to pay attention to, that our little guy can pick and choose until the owner of the web shows up.  To the hummingbird the spider is a big ball of food with eight legs!  

Then also the solution to the humming-birds “home” problem is solved.

What is the problem?  How to get a nest to  stay stuck to a branch and hold together when it’s just a little bigger than a half dollar. The solution is the spider’s silk from the spider’s web!  It’s the spider’s web that provides the means to hold the little nest together and keep it held to the tree.

What happens if the Hummingbird gets caught in the web? Well, if the hummingbird didn’t eat the spider before being caught in the web the hummingbird will be eaten by the spider. If the spider has been eaten and the hummingbird gets caught in the web he will die from exhaustion or starvation.

Processor with a grain of rice !

We should all recognize at least two of the objects in this picture, right?

The finger is a no brainer and the white object is a grain of rice but what about the object next to the grain of rice?
The object is the worlds most powerful processor for its size , the ATOM processor. It uses less than a volt of electricity and consumes less than a watt of power! Where is it used? In the NETbook computers. In cell phones. In network appliances.
What happens when you use it plugged into electricity rather than charging the battery and using the processor from the battery?
The same result that happens to the hummingbird when it is caught in the spiders web; game over! It’s killed. Normal voltage carries 3 to 4 volts spikes on the voltage line which is greater than the processor can take.
Charge your NETbook’s batery  first THEN use it when its not pluged into power.
 
Without the spider’s web there would be no hummingbirds, yet it’s the web of the spider that will kill the humming bird.
Same too the ATOM processor needs electricity to compute, yet it’s the electricity that will kill the ATOM processor!
TWO IRONIC! :)
 
Further reading
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