From Robert R. Taylor Wiki
Welcome
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[edit] ADIAS
Arc of Discovery, Innovation, Architecture and Science (ADIAS) - an integrated, content rich, network of services centered around a living archive of black cultural achievement in ASTEM. The open-source, multi-purpose platform includes:
- a public multimedia timeline (ADIAS Timeline),
- live media broadcast,
- electronic media journal,
- private communities,
- digital design studio,
- online mall (aStore),
- open course exchange (OCX),
- community node sites (RRTN.net),
- and real-time exchanges with popular social and business
networking sites.
[edit] The Objective of the RRTN ADIAS Wiki
[[1]] Objective Page
Categories
- People [2]
- Today's Featured Article [3]
- 'Black Inventions' [4]
- 'BEYA Awardees' [5]

- 'Books' [6]
[edit] Featured Articles
Dr. Mark Dean (March 2, 1957 - present) is an inventor and a computer scientist. He holds three of the nine original IBM patents upon which the IBM PC personal computers were based. He led the team that developed the ISA bus, and he led the design team responsible for creating the first one-gigahertz computer processor chip.
Copyright © blackhistory4ever.com 2006-2009
Donya Douglas on her love of the sciences
Article written by Marcia Wade Talbert.
Donya Douglas, an associate branch head at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, conducts research to help control temperature and avoid loss of performance on space equipment. (NASA) Over the next few days BlackEnterprise.com will introduce to you three digeratis who are reshaping the world. In the first of our three-part series, meet NASA’s Donya Douglas. As a thermal engineer at NASA, Donya Douglas’ research isn’t as far out as one might think. In fact, you might not have to reach any further than your lap to benefit from the technologies that she designs. Douglas, an instrument systems branch associate head at NASA, conducts heating and cooling research to help control temperature and avoid loss of performance on space crafts, such as the Hubble Space Telescope, and in laptop computers............
[edit] Featured Black Invention Photo
Philip Chukwurah Emeagwali used 65,536 processors to perform the world's fastest computation of 3.1 billion calculations per second on his Super Computer in 1989.
[edit] Featured Blacks in technology Video
[edit] Did you know?
July 1, 1870 James W. Smith of South Carolina entered West Point. Smith, the first Black student, did not graduate.













