SHUTOUT

I can’t jinx it now, Ryan Miller stopped 29 shots as the Buffalo Sabres blew past the Ovechkin-less Capitals 5-0.  Thomas Vanek stayed hot, scoring the first goal just over a minute into the game.  Vanek got a fantastic breakout pass from Andrej Sekera that sent him in behind Mike Green, and Jose Theodore was overmatched.  Tim Connolly played a solid first game back, picking up an assist and drawing a penalty to help put Buffalo on a 5 on 3 power play in the first period, leading to a Derek Roy goal off the back of Theodore.  It didn’t get any better for the Caps from there, as there were several shifts (including one from the Gaustad/Kaleta/Paille line) where it almost looked as if the Sabres were on the power play, despite no one occupying the box.  Pominville rounds out the scoring in the first, Clarke MacArthur gloved down a high ricochet and sent it over to Pominville, who deked Theodore down and out.  3-0 after one.

The second period saw a bit of a rally by the Capitals, getting some power play time (including a 5 on 3) but Miller was great.  His team (and the post) helped a bit, with guys like Pominville and Kaleta throwing their bodies in front of shots.  Those are situations when Buffalo would normally lose the shutout for Miller, but not this time.  Vanek stuck the dagger in with 3 seconds left in the second period, scoring his 11th goal of the year on a breakaway pass from Ales Kotalik (who had just missed doing the same thing for TV 30 seconds before).

The third period saw a sweet give-and-go between Paille and Kaleta for Key Lime’s second goal of the year.  What I loved:  Lindy Ruff told his team that for the last seven minutes of the game, they were playing for their goaltender.  They kept Miller’s shutout intact, and it ends 5-0.

Additional recognition goes to…Patrick Kaleta.  Not for his agitation, or the huge hits that sometimes take him out of the play, but he showed some offensive skill tonight.  He had that great play on Paille’s goal, but I also noticed some nice passes in the first.  Good job, kid.  That’s why you’re in the lineup and Peters is in street clothes.

Next game is Monday, 7pm against the Devils in New Jersey.  Brodeur left with an elbow injury tonight, so we’ll have to see who the goaltender will be.  Obviously a big dropoff from number one to number two there.

Nanosolar ‘Prints’ First Flexible Solar Panels

I first saw this tech at PopSci, and now Nanosolar has announced that they met their deadline and are shipping the first batch of the flexible, copper indium gallium selenide (CIGS) based cells.  It really seems like these guys are the real deal, and not one of the many ‘look at this cool tech!’ companies who gather interest (and investors) and disappear to the vaporware wastes with Duke Nukem 4ever and flying cars.

Wave Power

Pacific Gas & Electric with Finavera Renewables for 2 megawatts of power, provided by wave-powered turbines.  Here’s a snippet on how the tech works:

Finavera makes a device called the Aquabuoy, a buoy connected to a long underwater piston. As the buoy bobs up and down on the waves, it pushes the piston, which pressurizes a chamber filled with seawater. The pressure cranks a turbine and electricity is made.

It sounds like they have some obstacles yet to hurdle (the force behind waves and tides are pretty massive, it’s been hard design equipment to stand up to the stresses) but if successful it looks like technology that could provide a good amount of power at a lower environmental impact than fossil fuels.

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