DraftKings KBO: Sunday Cheat Sheet
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This article is part of our DraftKings KBO series.
Rain threatened almost the entirety of Saturday s KBO slate, but four of the five games were able to go ahead, with only the Bears-Landers matchup getting canceled. The games that went forward featured a pair of blowouts. The Heroes scored 10 runs in the first inning against the Eagles, which was far more run support than Jake Brigham would need in the team s 15-1 win, as he struck out seven in 5.2 scoreless innings in his season debut. Jung Hoo Lee led the way for the Heroes with four hits and three runs. Elsewhere, the Twins were similarly dominant against the Lions, winning 14-4 behind six shutout innings from Min Ho Lee and contributions up and down the lineup.
DraftKings KBO: Sunday Cheat Sheet
Written by
This article is part of our DraftKings KBO series.
Saturday was supposed to be a very busy day in the KBO, with four doubleheaders set to take place after a quartet of games were canceled the night before due to fine dust making the air unsafe to play in. Unfortunately, the dust was still around, so all four of the early games were wiped out. Five late games were able to go through, with all the makeup games getting pushed back to Sunday.
The first half of each of those doubleheaders will be on Sunday s DraftKings slate, weather permitting, and they ll be joined by the day s lone Giants-Lions contest, which also takes place at 12:58 am ET. Note that both halves of doubleheaders in Korea still last the traditional nine innings, but the game will end in a tie after nine innings rather than heading into extras.
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by Blaine Friedlander (Cornell University/Science Daily) By borrowing nature’s blueprints for photosynthesis, bioengineers have found a way to efficiently absorb and store large-scale, low-cost renewable energy from the sun – while sequestering atmospheric carbon dioxide to use later as a biofuel.
By borrowing nature’s blueprints for photosynthesis, Cornell University bioengineers have found a way to efficiently absorb and store large-scale, low-cost renewable energy from the sun while sequestering atmospheric carbon dioxide to use later as a biofuel.
The key: Let bioengineered microbes do all the work.
Buz Barstow, assistant professor of biological and environmental engineering at Cornell University, and doctoral candidate Farshid Salimijazi have assembled theoretical solutions and models that calculate efficiency in microbes, which could take in electricity and store carbon dioxide at least five times more efficiently than photosynthesis, the process by which plants t
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Home > Press > An LED that can be integrated directly into computer chips: The advance could cut production costs and reduce the size of microelectronics for sensing and communication
MIT researchers have developed a bright, efficient silicon LED, pictured, that can be integrated directly onto computer chips. The advance could reduce cost and improve performance of microelectronics that use LEDs for sensing or communication.
Credits:Courtesy of the researchers
Abstract:
Light-emitting diodes LEDs can do way more than illuminate your living room. These light sources are useful microelectronics too.
An LED that can be integrated directly into computer chips: The advance could cut production costs and reduce the size of microelectronics for sensing and communication