Tuesday, November 24, 2015

FSU Researchers Develop "New Generation" LED



FSU Researchers Develop "New Generation" LED


It's being called the next generation LED. It has the potential to brighten your TV, phone and computer screens.
Researchers at FSU say they've created a way to make a brighter, cheaper LED and they're trying to land the patents to prove it.
It's a tiny light with big potential.
This LED - made with something called "perovskites" - glows about 25 times brighter than the same LED used in a typical computer screen.
FSU researchers Hanwei Gao and Biwu Ma says that could be a game changer.
"Under small voltage or low power we can achieve high brightness, so you can really tell this technology is power efficient," said Dr. Biwu Ma, an associate professor of chemical engineering.
"For example if you have two bulbs, an LED and a CFL, right, people would definitely go for the LED if the price were the same, because they know the LED consumes less energy and that means smaller bills, electricity bills," said Dr. Hanwei Gao, an assistant professor of physics. "So if we can reduce the cost of the LED, then the LED will win."
We visited FSU's Ditmer lab where Gao and Ma and their students have been working on the organic-inorganic hybrid.
Not only does the LED technology have the potential to lower the cost of light bulbs, televisions and other screens, they say, but both the device and the luminescent material inside can be made quickly and easily in the lab.
The research team made one for us in about an hour.
"We can solution process it in air, without high temperature, without high vacuum, which is usually required for conventional LED devices," Dr. Gao said.
Gao and Ma have applied for patents for their technology, but say it's hard predict how quickly it'll go from this lab to commercialization to a store near you.
"It's very exciting," Dr. Ma said.
The professors tell us that this type of LED technology tends to be unstable in humidity, so they've tweaked their design. They're confident if they can get it to work in hot, humid Florida, they can get it to work anywhere.

UF Gatornation











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Friday, November 20, 2015

Factoid of the Day




'The Hunting Ground' crew caught editing Wikipedia to make facts conform to film





'The Hunting Ground' crew caught editing Wikipedia to make facts conform to film


A crew member from "The Hunting Ground," a one-sided film about campus sexual assault, has been editing Wikipedia articles to make facts conform with the inaccurate representations in the film.
Edward Patrick Alva, who is listed on the film's IMDB page as part of the camera and electrical department, has been altering Wikipedia entries for months, in violation of the website's conflict-of-interest guidelines. Alva is the assistant editor and technical supervisor for Chain Camera Pictures, the production company associated with "The Hunting Ground" director Kirby Dick.
Wikipedia guidelines state: "Do not edit Wikipedia in your own interests or in the interests of your external relationships." As a member of the film's production team, Alva should not have been editing pages about the film or related to the film.
 
      
 
Alva's Wikipedia username is Edwardpatrickalva, and he acknowledges in his user bio that he has "a conflict of interest when I edit articles on Wikipedia that are related to Chain Camera Pictures." Yet Alva continues to do just that.
Alva created his Wikipedia account just two weeks after Florida State University President John Thrasher first called out the filmmakers for their inaccurate and unfair portrayal of the school and its handling of the rape accusation against former star quarterback Jameis Winston. It wasn't until September 18, six months after creating his user profile, that Alva acknowledged he had been editing Wikipedia pages related to "The Hunting Ground."
Nearly all of Alva's Wikipedia edits have related to "The Hunting Ground," either through edits to the film's main Wikipedia page or through edits to the pages of some of the people featured in the film.
Alva took particular interest in editing the Wikipedia page of Jameis Winston, the only person named in the film as an alleged rapist. Winston was cleared by three separate investigations, yet activists — and the film — claim this was due to a biased process and investigators seeking to protect a star football player. The film doesn't mention the holes in Erica Kinsman's accusation against Winston and in fact allows her to tell a story that contradicts physical evidence.
On March 31, 2015, Alva edited Winston's Wikipedia page to remove much of the explanatory material surrounding the FSU and Tallahassee police investigations into Winston and to soften the doubt in Kinsman's story.
 
        
For instance, Alva removed a section of Winston's page that said no charges were filed against Winston because of "major issues" with the Kinsman's story. He also removed a large section that described how Kinsman "broke off contact with [the Tallahassee Police Department] and her attorney indicated that she did not want to move forward at that time."
Alva also edited the wording in a section about the New York Times' reporting of the case. The article originally stated that the Times "reported irregularities in the rape investigation involving Winston." Alva changed that sentence to read the Times "published the conclusions of its own investigation in April 2014, asserting that neither the TPD nor FSU had genuinely investigated the initial report."
This falls in line with the narrative of "The Hunting Ground."
On April 16, Alva again edited Winston's page and moved the rape accusation against him up to the summary paragraph at the top of the page. On Sept. 21 Alva altered language regarding a court decision that went in Winston's favor, changing the word "upheld" to "declined a motion to dismiss" when talking about Winston's claim for defamation.
Wikipedia employs "talk pages" to allow editors to discuss changes to articles. Alva used the Winston talk page to suggest the edit of "upheld" without disclosing his conflict of interest as a member of "The Hunting Ground."
 
       
 
        
Alva has also been editing the Wikipedia page for "The Hunting Ground" as well as other pages to include references to the film. On July 4, a Wikipedia editor told him he was "strongly discouraged" from editing the page because of his work for the director, and warned him that his account may be clocked if he did so.
As recently as Nov. 17, Alva was again warned that his editing violated Wikipedia's conflict of interest rules.
Back on April 30, Alva deleted a section of text from "The Hunting Ground's" Wikipedia page that detailed all of the shifting accounts of Kinsman's accusation against Winston. Some of what was deleted included references to Kinsman's claim in the film that she was drugged, even though toxicology reports found no known date-rape drugs in her system and the fact that a second semen sample from Kinsman's boyfriend was found on her pants from the same night.
On Nov. 17, the day Alva was reprimanded by a Wikipedia editor for breaking the conflict of interest rules, he had added several major sections of positive information about the film, burying criticism. He added information about the film being screened at American universities and in the United Kingdom above a paragraph detailing criticism of the film from Slate's Emily Yoffe.
Alva has also inserted mentions of the film into Wikipedia articles relating to campus sexual assault, such as the page about Title IX, the law being used to force colleges and universities to adjudicate felonies. On Aug. 24, Alva inserted a paragraph mentioning the film and its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. He did the same for the entry on the "Anti-rape movement."
On Mar. 24, Alva edited the Wikipedia page for Andrea Pino, one of the main accusers in "The Hunting Ground" to remove the word "alleged" before a description of the film.
Alva's other Wikipedia edits include changes to the pages of Harvest Moon (a video game) and "Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey."
Many of Alva's changes, especially to the Winston page, have attempted to change the articles to support the story told by the film. The film itself is inaccurate, as the president of FSU and 19 Harvard Law professors have noted. The film distorts the evidence and uses false statistics to paint a picture of a rape epidemic at American universities. (Despite the filmmakers insistence that it is a documentary and "completely accurate," emails between an investigator for the film and the lawyer of one of the accusers strongly suggest otherwise.)
The filmmakers didn't even reach out to those maligned in the film until after it was submitted to the Sundance Film Festival. FSU President Thrasher said his school wasn't contacted until Dec. 18. That was three months after the film was submitted to Sundance, and just about the time the Rolling Stone gang-rape hoax was falling apart because its author had failed to reach out to any of the students accused in the article.

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Never trust the media part 2413423798798279873238

Do not trust the media.  EVER.


A Smoking-Gun E-mail Exposes the Bias of The Hunting Ground


"Jeff Zucker, president of CNN Worldwide, let slip the network’s own bias at the Sundance premiere, where he brushed aside anticipated criticism of the film by universities — which it smears as covering up for rapists — by saying that “they are on the wrong side.”

The Herdy e-mail, originally sent to Kinsman’s then-lawyer (and aunt) Patricia Carroll, and related documents were made available to this writer today by Florida State, which obtained the e-mail in connection with Kinsman’s lawsuit against the school.

A second e-mail from Amy Herdy, dated February 12, 2014, asked accuser Kinsman’s lawyer whether she was “ok with us sending [to Jameis Winston] the official request this week” for an interview. Herdy added: “I’m sure he will say no . . . and then I want him to have a gap of a couple of weeks to get complacent because then we will ambush him.”

Also today, FSU president John Thrasher issued a statement that the film’s claim that FSU and many other schools have turned their backs on Erica Kinsman and other alleged victims of sexual assault “contains major distortions and glaring omissions to support its simplistic narrative.” He added: “It is inexcusable for a network as respected as CNN to pretend that the film is a documentary rather than an advocacy piece.”

Thrasher likened the film to the notorious, now-retracted Rolling Stone article about what proved to be a fabricated story about an alleged sadistic gang rape, atop shattered glass, at a University of Virginia fraternity. The Rolling Stone article, Thrasher said, took a purported rape victim’s “story at face value without getting the other side or checking the details with other sources, including the accused.” He said that FSU had expressed to top CNN executives, to no avail, “our concerns about the factual, statistical and ethical defects in the film.”

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/427166/hunting-ground-smoking-gun-e-mail-exposes-filmmaker-bias-against-accused

Thursday, November 12, 2015

FSU athletic board approves new football ticket policy



FSU athletic board approves new football ticket policy

Changes will include an increase of slightly more than 8-percent across each donor membership level and a method that sets minimum per seat requirements by section inside Doak Campbell Stadium.

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Committed to providing student-athletes and coaches with more resources to compete at an elite level and football fans the best seats for their dollar, the Florida State Athletics Board Thursday approved changes to the Seminoles’ ticket priority policy beginning with the 2016 football season.
Changes will include an increase of slightly more than 8-percent across each Seminole Booster, Inc., donor membership level and a method that sets minimum per-seat requirements by section inside Doak Campbell Stadium.
This marks the first change in the policy by the FSU Athletics Board in 10 years. The only other across-the-board increase, since the policy was created in 1976, occurred in 2001 and 2006.
While the FSU Ticket Office and Seminole Boosters – the fundraising arm of FSU athletics – agree FSU’s ticket policy has worked extremely well over nearly 40 years, change was needed to continue to maintain a vital stream of revenue for the athletic department.
The Seminoles’ 2014-15 Athletics Budget totaled nearly $90 million across 20 sports programs.
In 2014, season ticket holders generated $13.56 million in ticket revenue with $14.2 million in booster contributions tied to those season tickets as part of the ticket priority policy requirements.
The Boosters project new policy will generate an additional $2 million with a renewal rate of 80 percent next season.
The Seminoles' home schedule in 2016 features games against Atlantic Coast Conference members Boston College, Clemson, Wake Forest and North Carolina, in addition to state rival Florida of the Southeastern Conference.
The fundamental difference between the policies is in determining the minimum donation requirement.
It will be based on a per-seat minimum contribution requirement for its section in the stadium. The number of seats a fan purchases within that section determines their minimum donation level.
In the old policy, the donation level determined how many seats fans could purchase, no matter where the seats were located.
FSU officials believe the new system features improved equity because the contribution requirement is based upon seat location.
Overall, 47-percent of the Seminoles’ football ticket holders will be affected by the new per-seat requirement, according to Booster officials.
The remaining 53-percent won’t be impacted by the new per-seat requirement because they are already giving more than either the new or the old policy requires.
The ticket holders most affected by the new policy, according to FSU officials, are those who have purchased the full allotment of seats in the highest demand sections (west side middle sections) and have contributed only the minimum donation required for those seats.
Booster officials stressed the change will give donors “a number of contribution options they didn’t have in the old policy.”
Sixty-two percent of Seminole Boosters’ 18,000 members use the organization’s season ticket priority benefits.
Many college football programs emulated FSU’s policy for years, but recently have adopted an equity method that sets minimum per-seat requirements by section of the stadium.
In the 10 years since the policy was last updated, the cost of athletic scholarships alone has increased by $4 million per year (from $7.5 million to $11.5 million).
The Boosters generate close to $45 million each year from various sources to fund athletics scholarships, facilities and operations.
One important component of those fundraising efforts is the $17.3 million Annual Fund which is most closely associated with ticket priority benefits. The fund is comprised of eight different membership levels ranging from $60 to $25,000 per year.
The Seminoles fund 246.2 scholarships – the maximum allowable for their 20 men’s and women’s sports – with about 500 student-athletes receiving some portion of the athletic scholarship aid.
The cost of scholarships is now $11.5 million annually and includes the cost of new NCAA legislation approving cost of attendance stipends for student-athletes in excess of scholarship costs, which is $2 million per year.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Provost Interview


http://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/2015/11/09/fsu-begins-provost-interviews/75485612/


Daniel Reed, one of four finalists for provost and vice president for academic affairs at Florida State University, was on campus Monday to discuss his views on higher education.
Reed is vice president for research and economic development at the University of Iowa and holds master’s and doctorate degrees in computer science from Purdue University.
About 30 members of the FSU faculty attended a morning session with Reed, who appeared comfortable and relaxed during his presentation. Later in the day, he was to meet with staff and students as part of a packed schedule.
Fielding questions, Reed talked about the challenges universities face with tight budgets and why that makes strategic planning critical. Institutions, he said, must evaluate what they are doing and what they want to be.
Responding to inquires about the national push toward STEM-based learning and the subsequent impact on liberal arts studies, Reed said there is room for both to excel.
“Almost all of the great problems we face in society do not involve science alone,” said Reed, who spent seven years with Microsoft before taking the position at University of Iowa. “Science and technology, arts and humanities, all intersect.”
Reed said “there is no reason to believe the future (of higher education) will happen as in the past,” and that universities need to decide on their priorities and maintain a focus of core values, including creating new knowledge and scholarly work, transferring knowledge to a new generation and engaging society.
When asked about his relationship with faculty unions, Reed said that’s an area where he hasn’t had much experience, but unionization of faculty is something being discussed at Iowa.
“Having honest and forthright conversations,” is one solution, he said, along with “discussing what university priorities are now” and listening to union members concerns.
“You have to understand what people are really worried about,” he said.
Reed, a first-generation college student, said diversity and inclusion also is important to him, and that access to higher education means giving people a chance.
“Everybody deserves a shot, not a guarantee, but a fair shot,” he said.
Florida State, he added, needs to promote “its rich history” in the arts and humanities and its strengths in science and engineering.
Challenges include the budget, he said.

The other three candidates are:

Mark Zupan, director, Bradley Policy Center, and Olin professor of economics and public policy, Simon Business School at the University of Rochester. Zupan earned his bachelor's degree in economics at Harvard and his doctorate at MIT in economics.
Zupan meets with faculty, staff and students on Tuesday.
Anne-Katrin Gramberg, senior counsel to the president, Auburn University, professor of German, Auburn and former dean of the College of Liberal Arts, School of Fine Arts, School of Communications and Journalism, Auburn. Gramberg holds a doctorate in German (emphasis, business), from Michigan State University.
Gramberg interviews Thursday with faculty, staff and students.
Sally McRorie, interim provost and executive vice president, academic affairs Florida State University; former interim provost and executive vice president and vice president for faculty development and advancement, FSU, May-November, 2014. McRorie also served as vice president for FSU's Office of Faculty Development and Advancement, from 2012 to 2015. She served as dean of the College of Fine Arts at FSU from 2004 to 2012.
McRorie holds a doctorate in Art Education, University of Kansas, a master's degree in art education and printmaking, East Tennessee State University and a bachelor's degree, art education and painting, University of North Carolina-Pembroke.
Her interviews are planned for Monday, Nov. 16.
(Full candidate resumes and interview schedules can be found at https://provostsearch.fsu.edu/.)
“I think we have four wonderful candidates, said Susan Fiorito, Faculty Senate President. “This is probably the best provost search in the country.”
She said FSU President John Thrasher is likely to depend on the provost to lead the university’s academic effort, while he focuses on his strengths in fundraising and legislative affairs.
“It is a great opportunity for a person to shape the academic lives of an institution,” she said. “Not all provosts have that opportunity.”
Contact senior writer Byron Dobson at bdobson@tallahassee.com or on Twitter @byrondobson.



http://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/2015/11/10/fsu-provost-candidate-promotes-strategic-planning/75550614/

Mark Zupan, who has been associated with six AAU universities and has earned a strong reputation in dean’s positions, says he’s prepared to help Florida State University move toward its goal of becoming a pre-eminent university.
Zupan was on campus Tuesday as one of four finalists for the position of provost and executive vice president/academic affairs.
What the university needs to do immediately, he said, is to focus its attention on developing a sold strategic plan that charts its course for the next several years, establish a branding campaign that sells the university nationwide and use its own resources, including President John Thrasher, to secure more state, federal and private funding.
“You’ve got a wonderful history of accomplishments to be proud of,” Zupan told staff members on Tuesday. As for its goal of becoming one of the nation’s top universities as recognized by the Association of American Universities, Zupan said, “you’re on the cusp of that.”
In his presentation and in his application letter, Zupan went down a list of accomplishments for FSU:
Being ranked 43rd among top public research universities and 95th overall by US News & World Report
Classified as a Research University with Very High Research Activity by the Carnegie Foundation
Six-year graduation rate of 79 percent “exceeds the level predicted by your resource”
Securing $700 million towards the $1 billion “Raise the Torch” campaign.
But at the same time, Zupan said, he’s not sure if everyone understands where FSU wants to go in strategic planning. And, he said, the university must promote itself to high-school counselors across the country, as well as academia. For instance, Zupan said FSU’s website doesn’t promote faculty members who have earned Nobel Laureate distinction.
“This university is one of the state’s greatest treasures,” he said later. “How do we harness that to make it an even more effective magnet for positive change?”
He said branding is especially important to luring major donors, including alumni. With 300,000 alumni, “You’ve got an enormous upside if you can articulate who you are where you are going. You have 300,000 alums who want to help you more.”
Zupan currently is director, Bradley Policy Center, and Olin professor of economics and public policy at the Simon Business School at the University of Rochester.  He was dean of the school from 2004 to 2014, and before that, he was dean and professor economics at Eller College of Management at the University of Arizona from 1997 to 2003.
Zupan earned his bachelor’s degree in economics at Harvard and his doctorate at MIT in economics.
His strengths, he said, are in hiring strong faculty, fundraising and keeping a plan on track.
He said while President Thrasher identifies himself as “the lead driver externally,” Zupan said his skills would be “helping him on the internal side.”
Mark Hillis, a member of FSU’s board of trustees, sat in on Zupan’s presentation to staff and said he liked what he heard.
“I was very impressed by his presentation and his knowledge of FSU,” Hillis said. “He had done his homework.”
On other topics, Zupan said the entire university must buy into the strategic plan, the university must maintain its status in the liberal arts, while balancing a new STEM-focused vision.
“I think both are integral and it’s not an either, or, for the university,” he said.
Daniel Reed, vice president for research and economic development, University of Iowa, interviewed Monday.
Interviews continue Thursday with Anne-Katrin Gramberg, senior counsel to the president, Auburn University, professor of German, Auburn and former dean of the College of Liberal Arts, School of Fine Arts, School of Communications and Journalism, Auburn.
Sally McRorie, FSU’s interim provost and executive vice president, academic affairs (since January) interviews on Monday.
Full candidate resumes can be found at https://provostsearch.fsu.edu/.
Thrasher is expected to name the new provost in December.
Contact senior writer Byron Dobson at bdobson@tallahassee.com or on Twitter @byrondobson.

Factoid of the Day




Dan Wolken @DanWolken 22 minutes ago
Only 23 schools have a national championship since college football was integrated.

Top AD Budgets




http://csnbbs.com/thread-756555-page-4.html

1) Texas - $179,555,311
2) Ohio St. - $170,903,135
3) Alabama - $150,620,199
4) LSU - $138,917,636
5) Oklahoma - $135,660,070
6) Michigan - $132,336,025
7) Florida - $130,772,416
8) Penn St. - $127,930,142
9) Auburn - $126,647,970
10) Wisconsin - $125,790,567

11) Tennessee - $121,837,383
12) Florida St. - $121,319,469
13) Notre Dame - $121,260,381
14) Arkansas - $116,166,428
15) Georgia - $116, 151,279
16) South Carolina - $113,172,545
17) Kentucky - $110,450,933
18) Stanford - $110,240,490
19) Texas A&M - $110,004,867
20) Iowa - $107,404,210
21) Baylor - $106,078,643
22) USC - $105,919,366
23) Minnesota - $105,561,601
24) Louisville - $104,325,208
25) Nebraska - $103,763,277

26) Kansas - $103,326,170
27) Washington - $100,275,186
[Included because over $100M)

Top-25
SEC: 10
B1G: 7
ACC: 3 (inc. Notre Dame)
Big 12: 3
PAC 12: 2


Atlantic Coast Conference

Reporting Year: 7/1/2014 - 6/30/2015

01.) Florida State University - $121,319,469
02.) University of Notre Dame - $121,260,381
03.) University of Louisville - $104,325,208
04.) Duke University - $91,688,202
05.) Syracuse University - $87,175,761
06.) University of Virginia - $87,059,237
07.) Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University - $81,298,133
08.) University of Miami - $77,724,833
09.) Clemson University - $76,979,261
10.) North Carolina State University at Raleigh - $76,839,435
11.) University of Pittsburgh - $70,527,488
12.) Boston College - $69,300,736
13.) Georgia Institute of Technology - $65,304,486
14.) Wake Forest University - $58,672,116

15.) University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - Still Hasn't Up Dated (Still reporting 2013-2014).

Reporting Year: 7/1/2013 - 6/30/2014

01.) University of Notre Dame - $114,843,522
02.) Florida State University - $104,420,339
03.) University of Louisville - $89,428,348
04.) Syracuse University - $87,647,822
05.) University of Virginia - $80,983,121
06.) University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - $79,845,782
07.) Duke University - $79,645,699
08.) Clemson University - $73,791,753
09.) Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University - $73,015,503
10.) University of Miami - $71,785,978
11.) North Carolina State University at Raleigh - $70,500,811
12.) University of Pittsburgh - $66,089,664
13.) Boston College - $65,229,918
14.) Wake Forest University - $56,247,495
15.) Georgia Institute of Technology - $55,526,101

Sunday, November 8, 2015

Years since being ranked #1 in the nation

Years since being ranked #1 in the nation

TV Ratings FSU Clemson 2015


Kevin McGuire @KevinOnCFB 7 minutes ago
ESPN says the Clemson-FSU game was the best overnight rating (5.5) for a 3:30 game on ABC since Nov 24, 2012 (FSU-UF; 5.6).



ESPN PR@ESPNPR 34 minutes ago
: 5.5 overnight, best 3:30 pm ABC game since ’12, 3rd highest overnight of the ’15 season & up 112% y-o-y
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Saturday, November 7, 2015

FSU/ACC Factoid of the Day

Singleshot25 @Singleshot25 3 hours ago
Since the expanded in 1992 they've fielded the #1 team 45 times. Every one of them were . Today's the 1st time since then it is not

Friday, November 6, 2015

Bobby Bowden 30 for 30

Interesting inside info below.  FSU fans seem concerned this will just be ESPN taking shots at FSU like they love to do.

I would love to see ESPN push more pro ACC football type media given they are the ACC TV Network.


Bobby Bowden 30 for 30


"Not sure if this is old news or not, but ESPN is working on the 30 for 30 for Bobby now. They have already started interviewing former players and coaches. Not sure the release date though.
 
 
"The documentary is being produced and funded by fellow FSU grads. ESPN film and production staff have been hired to provide content and interviews.
 
12 hrb83, Today at 8:57 AM
Last edited: Today at 9:05 AM           "
 
"I am one of the FSU grads that is funding this project about Coach Bowden and you will be very happy with the director and the content. It's all about Coach Bowden, players and FSU dynasty years. We control content and narrative. Sorry. I am on the way to Clemson for the game.
 
  
 
"Listen, The story about Coach Bowden and the dynasty years will be produced about Bobby Bowden and his program at FSU. ESPN has no say in content and direction of footage. FSU will be very proud to have the real story told about our Coach and the FSU tradition.      
 

What are the top three items to be most optimistic about when it comes to the ACC?

Warchant.com has an ACC "insider" (I think he is an ACC HQ plant charged with pushing the ACC conference and shouting down any anti ACC discussion...he insists he is not an ACC employee) who loves to make predictions.

Here is his latest (below).  Hope he is correct, but like most ACC predictions, they are always a promise of something big happening in the future that we never see and later there is just denial that any predictions are made.  It is why I have saved some and LABELED them ("Predictions").

Here was his first incorrect prediction I recorded in 2014:  http://allthingsfsu.blogspot.com/2014/03/predictions.html



What are the top three items to be most optimistic about when it comes to the ACC?


"Wow, I feel like the bat signal went up or something. Top 3? Well that's tough because there really is so much to be excited about but if I had to pick 3 it would be:

1) Having the most champions in so many different sports and dominating especially in the Big 3--football, basketballs and baseball. I know some people think that only football matters but having a football champion in football 4 out of 5 years may get even those excited.

2) Notre Dame joining as a full time member in 2018. Seems like a long ways off but it will be here before we know it.

3) The ACC Network.
 



"Do I think PSU good be the 16th team? They certainly could. But there's also a good possibility that the Power 5 reorganizes as a whole which could move some schools around for better geographic and natural rivalry splits, but also de-emphasize the traditional conference aspect of it with a lot more cross-competition. Honestly I don't know the details of it, but from the little bits I have heard there are a lot of possibilities. There will be a convergence amongst the P5 soon enough and that will start to crystallize. Bottom line is that ND is slowly tying itself into the ACC as we know it and that will continue."


"Moz, when I 1st met you and your ACC friends at the ACC hotel in 2010 in Charlotte you told me that the ACC was about to drop a few bombs and I thought you were crazy. That we were expanding and Notre Dame would be one of the teams. Then it happened, I have thought back on that night a few times. I have to admit I didn't believe it at 1st. You also said that there's still a few more pieces to the puzzle that would be a few years off. Care to update? I also sent you a email in case there's something you don't want to say here. Lets plan on meeting in Charlotte after we win this weekend
 

New Athletic Department Revenues

Would love to know why FSU had such a large jump.


New Athletic Department Revenues 

Info From Equity in Athletics

Atlantic Coast Conference

Reporting Year: 7/1/2014 - 6/30/2015

01.) Florida State University - $121,319,469
02.) University of Notre Dame - $121,260,381
03.) University of Louisville - $104,325,208
04.) Duke University - $91,688,202
05.) Syracuse University - $87,175,761
06.) University of Virginia - $87,059,237
07.) Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University - $81,298,133
08.) University of Miami - $77,724,833
09.) Clemson University - $76,979,261
10.) North Carolina State University at Raleigh - $76,839,435
11.) University of Pittsburgh - $70,527,488
12.) Boston College - $69,300,736
13.) Georgia Institute of Technology - $65,304,486
14.) Wake Forest University - $58,672,116

15.) University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - Still Hasn't Up Dated (Still reporting 2013-2014).

Reporting Year: 7/1/2013 - 6/30/2014

01.) University of Notre Dame - $114,843,522
02.) Florida State University - $104,420,339
03.) University of Louisville - $89,428,348
04.) Syracuse University - $87,647,822
05.) University of Virginia - $80,983,121
06.) University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - $79,845,782
07.) Duke University - $79,645,699
08.) Clemson University - $73,791,753
09.) Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University - $73,015,503
10.) University of Miami - $71,785,978
11.) North Carolina State University at Raleigh - $70,500,811
12.) University of Pittsburgh - $66,089,664
13.) Boston College - $65,229,918
14.) Wake Forest University - $56,247,495
15.) Georgia Institute of Technology - $55,526,101


http://ope.ed.gov/athletics/index.aspx

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

FSU Provost Search and new College of Bus. building



http://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/2015/10/27/fsu-closes-search-provost/74694690/

A list of finalists for Florida State University provost should be released within a week, Search Committee Chairman Don Gibson said Tuesday.
Once the finalists are reviewed by FSU President John Thrasher, three or four will be invited to campus for interviews. Gibson, dean emeritus of the College of Music, said campus interviews should be completed before Thanksgiving, with Thrasher’s choice named in December.
The 23-member committee met with seven semifinalists last Thursday and Friday in Atlanta. Gibson would not say if interim provost, Sally McRorie, who applied for the post, is among the finalists presented to Thrasher.
“The committee felt very good about the finalists,” Gibson said. “We had strong consensus about the people we were going to be interviewing.”
Gibson, who in 2010 also chaired the search committee that led to the hiring of Garnett Stokes, said, “The candidate pool for that search was not as strong as the one for this search.
“We’ve got a number of people who have leadership experience in top institutions,” he said. “That’s what you want if you can get it.”
McRorie has served as interim provost since January, following Stokes’ resignation in December to become provost at the University of Missouri.


http://www.urbantallahassee.com/index.php/about/privacy/developments/planning2/placemaking/item/3256-fsu-legacy-hall-visioning-completed

PLANNING - The College of Business New Building Committee completed its Legacy Hall Visioning Study, which provides the building’s basic parameters – its uses, size, imaging of the space and an initial project budget. The college begins a search for the building’s architectural team later this fall.
“The 215,000-square-foot building is projected to meet student and faculty growth over the foreseeable future,” said Dean Gatzlaff, chair of the committee, Mark C. Bane Professor and director of The Center for Real Estate Education & Research.
Funding for the $80-million building will be provided equally from private donations and Florida State. Click here to read the Legacy Hall Visioning Study (PDF). Click here to learn more about the vision of Legacy Hall.

FSU researcher has discovered an artificial material that mimics photosynthesis and potentially creates a sustainable energy source



FSU researcher has discovered an artificial material that mimics photosynthesis and potentially creates a sustainable energy source


"A Florida State University researcher has discovered an artificial material that mimics photosynthesis and potentially creates a sustainable energy source.
In The Journal of Physical Chemistry, Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering Jose L. Mendoza-Cortes details how this new material efficiently captures sunlight and then, how the energy can be used to break down water into oxygen (O2) and hydrogen (H2). This process is known as oxidation, and it is also what happens during photosynthesis when a plant uses light to break down water and carbohydrates, which are the main energy sources for the plant.
His discovery generates exciting new prospects for how this process could be used to forge new energy sources in a carbon neutral way. Potentially, hydrogen could be transported to other locations and burned as fuel.
“In theory, this should be a self-sustaining energy source,” Mendoza-Cortes said. “Perhaps in the future, you could put this material on your roof and it could turn rain water into energy with the help of the sun.”
But, unlike many other energy sources, this won’t have a negative effect on the environment.
“You won’t generate carbon dioxide or waste,” he said.
Mendoza-Cortes, a computational and theoretical chemist, said the challenge he faced was designing something that didn’t rust from the process of breaking down water that also trapped the energy and was inexpensive to create. To do this, he initially developed a multilayered material out of manganese oxide, commonly known as birnessite.
But something exciting happened when Mendoza-Cortes and his team peeled back the layers of the material so just a single layer of the material remained — it began trapping light at a much faster rate.
In technical terms, it transitioned from an indirect band gap material to a direct band gap one.
Light with photo energy can penetrate indirect band gap materials much more easily without getting absorbed and used for other purposes. Silicon, for example, is the most commonly known indirect gap band material. But to make the material effective, silicon solar cells are typically stacked and thus hundreds of micrometers thick. If they were any thinner, light would simply pass through them.
Creating a single-layer material that can efficiently trap light is a much more desirable outcome because it is much simpler and cheaper to manufacture.
“This is why the discovery of this direct band gap material is so exciting,” Mendoza-Cortes said. “It is cheap, it is efficient and you do not need a large amount to capture enough sunlight to carry out fuel generation.”
Mendoza-Cortes came to FSU by way of the Energy and Materials Strategic Faculty Hiring Initiative. He is a researcher at FSU’s High-Performance Materials Institute (HPMI), a multidisciplinary research institute dedicated to the research and development of advanced materials and manufacturing technologies.
Mendoza-Cortes’ research is supported by HPMI, the FSU Research Computing Center, the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where he completed a postdoctoral fellowship. Mendoza-Cortes’ former intern, Kevin Lucht, is a co-author on the paper. "

Monday, November 2, 2015

Swofford calls report on ESPN delaying an ACC channel 'premature'

So the same guy who has slow played ACC Channel expectations is now countering reports that the Channel is delayed.

Smell BS anyone?  I do.

Time is running out and even the creation of one means nothing without SIGNIFICANT revenue.


Swofford calls report on ESPN delaying an ACC channel 'premature'

"Wednesday marked the first time in several years that a John Swofford news conference did not include a question about a potential ACC cable channel. The league’s commissioner since 1997, Swofford has long championed the project internally while offering little insight publicly.
Talking with Swofford after his Q&A at the ACC’s basketball media day in Charlotte, N.C., I mentioned the absence of channel queries and asked if he had anything new to offer. He said no.
But Thursday afternoon, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Ken Sugiura reported that Georgia Tech president Bud Peterson told the school’s athletic association quarterly board meeting last week that ESPN would like to delay the channel’s launch date “for a couple of years,” possibly in exchange for higher rights fees in the interim.
The conference’s primary media partner, ESPN would be a joint stakeholder in an ACC channel, just as it is in the SEC Network.

ESPN “had come back and said that in some of the other instances where (conference) networks have started, they lost considerable amounts of money in the first couple of years,” Sugiura quoted Peterson as telling the board. “What they’d like to do is delay the start for a couple years and do the necessary preparation.”
After reading Sugiura’s story I reached out to the ACC, which provided a statement from Swofford:
“Anything said surrounding our ongoing television discussions is premature and speculative,” he said. “If, or when, we reach a point where our television agreements have been altered, we will make an announcement at the appropriate time.”
Some observations:
# Peterson’s comments sound like the parties have decided to pursue a channel. That in of itself is good news for the ACC, whose schools need a revenue infusion – full details here-- to remain remotely close to SEC and Big Ten rivals financially.
The SEC projected it would distribute $31.2 million to each of its schools in 2014-15. The Big Ten expects its per-school share to mushroom to $44.5 million by 2017-18. The ACC’s has not publicly shared its future projections.
For 2013-14, the ACC's average distribution was $19.3 million, the Big Ten's $26.4 million, the SEC's $20.9 million, the Pacific 12's $21 million and the Big 12's $19.8 million.
# Citing the SEC Network as an example, Swofford has often said an ACC channel would require years of preparation. Officials at ACC schools were hoping the channel would launch for the 2017 football season, and how any delay would affect that target is unknown.
# Also unknown is how much ESPN might increase the rights fees it pays the ACC in the interim before a channel. Swofford alluded to such a possibility during an interview in July at the ACC’s football kickoff in Pinehurst, N.C.
“If we’re going to do this,” Swofford told me then, “we need to do it in the right way from the beginning that gives us the opportunity to have long-term success, and that’s what we’re trying to do and time it in a way so the distribution can be good, if not great, coming out, if we go this route. The other alternative is larger rights fees (from ESPN).”
They will need to be significantly larger.
# The ACC’s most recent tax return, for fiscal 2013-14, showed that television monies accounted for $197.2 million, 65.2 percent, of the conference’s $302.3 million in revenue. That $197.2 million represents a 149-percent bump from three years earlier.
ESPN and the ACC are contracted through 2026-27, and the deal was amended after Notre Dame joined the conference for sports other in football in 2013, and the league’s presidents signed a grant of media rights to stabilize membership.
# These are curious times for cable television as more consumers opt to purchase channels a la carte rather than in bundles and/or view programming online. ESPN earlier this month announced layoffs of approximately 300 employees, about four percent of its workforce.
Back in July, when reports surfaced of ESPN losing 7.2 million subscribers over the last four years and looking to slash costs, Swofford told me he did not believe those developments endangered a potential ACC channel.
“ESPN is our partner, and obviously you’re interested in anything going on with them,” he said. “What they would do with us, in theory, it’s a growth opportunity for them. It’s a revenue-generating opportunity, the channels that they do.
“They’re business people. When they go in that direction, they go in that direction because they think that they can make money. It’s an investment. I don’t think companies like that look at investments falling into the belt-tightening, cost-cutting area. It’s really sort of two different things. …
“I’m very pleased. We’re where I expected us to be when we started jumping into this a year ago. Right on target.”
# During his news conference Wednesday, Swofford was asked about future television revenues and conferences’ dependence on them.
“I’ve been hearing forever that rights fees and television dollars are going to level out or go backwards,” he said, “and I’ve been doing this for almost 40 years now. It’s never happened. It doesn’t mean it won’t happen, but there’s not much history to suggest that it will happen. …
“The market fluctuates just like anything else. Sometimes you’re out for bid at a really good time, and sometimes your contract is up at a time that you wish it wasn’t. That happens to every conference somewhere along the way, and I don’t know that the increases will necessarily continue to be what they have been at times in the past, and I’m sure we’ll have times where it levels some and times where it jumps considerably.
“In today’s world, you have to pay attention and learn about the new technology and what it means, and we’ve got good partners to do that with that know a lot more about it than we do.”
# Peterson’s comments to his board may startle some school administrators – the inner circle on the channel project is limited -- and the sooner Swofford can ease those concerns with definitive information, the better."