Tuesday 31 January 2012

The Modular Electronic Drums of Nick Yulman

Nick Yulman, of NY Soundworks, recently debuted debuted his Index Boogie performance piece at PS1. The piece consists of various solenoid-powered noise makers, which Yulman calls either “Surface Poppers” or “Drum Beaters”. They’re designed to be modular music devices that can easily be mated to virtually any inanimate object.

Index Boogie uses these devices to play drums, books, and a glass beaker, allowing the user to quickly switch between various objects with different tonal characteristics. The devices are controlled by preset midi compositions that can be switched when Nick flips a book to different pages.

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The Modular Electronic Drums of Nick Yulman

Nick Yulman, of NY Soundworks, recently debuted debuted his Index Boogie performance piece at PS1. The piece consists of various solenoid-powered noise makers, which Yulman calls either “Surface Poppers” or “Drum Beaters”. They’re designed to be modular music devices that can easily be mated to virtually any inanimate object.

Index Boogie uses these devices to play drums, books, and a glass beaker, allowing the user to quickly switch between various objects with different tonal characteristics. The devices are controlled by preset midi compositions that can be switched when Nick flips a book to different pages.

More:



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Hot Deal: Sony NAC-SV10i Wi-Fi Speaker Dock: $109

January 20, 2012 | by EH Staff

Every iPod and/or iPhone needs a resting place. We’re not talking about the kitchen table or an underwear drawer. There are a lot of docking stations out there, which not only gives you a spot to put your portable, but can charge it for later use.

Adorama is currently selling Sony’s NAC-SV10I Wi-Fi Speaker Dock for $109. This price is 53 percent off the list price, and also includes free shipping. 

It’s a nice price for a nice product. Besides the charging, this docking station can also expand the use of that device—and a variety of other music. Plug your iPod or iPhone into the NAC-SV10i, and you blast music all over the house. For times when you don’t want to dock, the NAC-SV10i can wirelessly stream music from that device, as well as networked computers or the web. Sony also offers a free app that can transform that smartphone into a wireless remote.

Perfect for the kitchen, bedroom, office, or any other room in the house, the NAC-SV10i has DLNA support, BRAVIA Internet Music features, and PartyStream so you can sync with other compatible Sony products.

To get this discount on Adorama, log in and add the product into your shopping cart. That’s when you’ll see the discounted price. 



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GenAudio Launches New Surround Format

January 20, 2012 | by Rachel Cericola

Faux surround sound is nothing new. Soundbars and other smaller audio solutions typically have some type of technology that can provide the “illusion” of surround sound, without a 5.1 (or larger) speaker setup. GenAudio is hoping to be the next great surround sound solution, with AstoundSound for CE.

This newly launched technology promises to deliver surround sound without all of the speakers. Designed to work with headphones and two speaker devices, GenAudio says that the tech can deliver a realistic 5.1 and 7.1 surround sound experience.

AstoundSound for CE is software-based, which is what allows it to reproduce those 5.1 and 7.1 sounds. The company says that this has an advantage over competing spatial audio technology, because AstoundSound for CE has no tone colorization and remains in-phase.

The company also says that the tech will work in everything from digital TVs and set-top boxes to phones and gaming consoles, and much more.

“The introduction of our software based audio IP tech on small, low-cost processors coupled with our intuitive audio tuning tools provides manufacturers a way to quickly integrate spatialized audio playback capabilities into any new product where audio fidelity to the consumer is a critical component,” says Jerry Mahabub, founder and CEO of GenAudio. “Implementing AstoundSound in consumer devices will offer device manufacturers the opportunity to differentiate their multimedia products in a crowded consumer market!”

GenAudio is already incorporating AstoundSound audio IP software into devices, including the Analog Devices ADAU1761/1701 Sigma Studio DSP system-on-chip (SoC) audio processors as well as ADI’s SHARC processors and various other chip manufacturers. GenAudio says that the first products packing AstoundSound for CE launch will debut early this year.




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Electro Wire Stripper


As soon as I saw this, I thought, “why didn’t I think of that!?” Thingiverse user Brian Beebe designed an Electro Wire Stripper, a wire stripper that indicates when you’ve cut through the insulation. As soon as each blade comes into contact with the wire, it closes the circuit to turn on the LED, letting you know you’re ready to strip. The design files are available for download and 3D printing, you supply the plastic and components. How well does it work? According to Brian, it’s one of the best wire strippers he’s ever used. [via MakerBot]


Makers in this post:

,


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Monday 30 January 2012

Video Has 'largest Impact' on Business Networks

Video currently has the biggest impact on business networks, according to network solution providers.

This includes video in all its forms - including live, collaboration and streamed. Google recently announced that its video-sharing service YouTube had surpassed four billion video views worldwide every day.

Due to the greater demand on the network, IBM said that it is seeing a trend among its customers for networking services to be integrated into projects.

"We are seeing a change in the scale and scope of projects. More and more customers are asking us to include network [services]...rather than as a standalone [requirement]," Daniel Rendell, enterprise services leader at IBM Global Technology Services, told a roundtable in London.

According to Rendell, IBM is seeing more investment in the network by organisations than 24 months ago. He said that the most successful business cases for investment in the network were those that were focussed on the business benefits, rather than on the IT.

However, Mark Urban, senior director of WAN optimisation solutions at network management company Blue Coat Systems, said that companies still need to have a good idea of the network impact so that they can justify the investment.

"The world on the network has become so complex that it makes it more difficult to understand what the allocation of the budgets are.

"A US federal customer was talking to us about the growth in bandwidth demand, and how he owned the WAN budget. He couldn't make a case for expanding the network service because he couldn't explain how the bandwidth was going to different mission-critical applications," he said.



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In the Maker Shed: ProtoShield for Ardweeny

I like using the Ardweeny for Arduino projects; it’s small, it’s easy to pug into a breadboard, and it’s inexpensive so you don’t mind permanently embedding it. But what if you want to make the Ardweeny compatible with shields? That’s where this ProtoShield for Ardweeny, available in the Maker Shed, comes in handy. It allows you use pretty much any Arduino shield with your Ardweeny. All the pins are broken out “Arduino style” for maximum compatibility and it features a large prototyping area to make a neat little development platform.

Features:

  • Let’s you stack standard Arduino headers onto your Ardweeny. That’s right! You can use your Ardweeny with standard shields
  • All pins on the Ardweeny are brought out to easy to access places
  • 2 on-board LEDs and a button.
  • Mount shields above or below – after all, you may want the protoboard on the top
  • Mini breadboard for project work
  • SOIC pad
  • Power rails down the middle of the prototyping area.
  • Note: Ardweeny not included.


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DIY Fractal Antenna for Digital TV

Spotted in the MAKE Flickr Pool, this homemade fractal antenna for digital television signals by Roy Jacobsen of Fargo, ND. Instructions for, and discussions of, similar designs are available in this Instructable from William Ruckman. Judging from the comments over there, folks who have built their own fractal antennae are quite pleased with how they perform. But if you read this, Roy, we’d love to hear it straight from you. Drop us a comment or send me an e-mail and let me know how the antenna is working out for you.



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Sunday 29 January 2012

Hot Deal: Sony NAC-SV10i Wi-Fi Speaker Dock: $109

January 20, 2012 | by EH Staff

Every iPod and/or iPhone needs a resting place. We’re not talking about the kitchen table or an underwear drawer. There are a lot of docking stations out there, which not only gives you a spot to put your portable, but can charge it for later use.

Adorama is currently selling Sony’s NAC-SV10I Wi-Fi Speaker Dock for $109. This price is 53 percent off the list price, and also includes free shipping. 

It’s a nice price for a nice product. Besides the charging, this docking station can also expand the use of that device—and a variety of other music. Plug your iPod or iPhone into the NAC-SV10i, and you blast music all over the house. For times when you don’t want to dock, the NAC-SV10i can wirelessly stream music from that device, as well as networked computers or the web. Sony also offers a free app that can transform that smartphone into a wireless remote.

Perfect for the kitchen, bedroom, office, or any other room in the house, the NAC-SV10i has DLNA support, BRAVIA Internet Music features, and PartyStream so you can sync with other compatible Sony products.

To get this discount on Adorama, log in and add the product into your shopping cart. That’s when you’ll see the discounted price. 



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Shrewbot, a Robot With Whiskers

When the whiskers touch an object this causes them to vibrate and the vibration pattern is picked up by sensitive cells in the hair follicle at the base of the whisker. These patterns are turned into an electrical signal which is sent to the brain, enabling the mammal to make instant decisions about its environment to help it move around or catch prey. The whiskers have another advantage over some other forms of tactile touch. Whiskers themselves are easily replaceable since the sensory cells are at the base of the whisker, not the top, unlike our fingers for example, which are more easily damaged and hard to replace.

[Shrew whiskers inspire ground-breaking robot design via core77]



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Hot Deal: Sony NAC-SV10i Wi-Fi Speaker Dock: $109

January 20, 2012 | by EH Staff

Every iPod and/or iPhone needs a resting place. We’re not talking about the kitchen table or an underwear drawer. There are a lot of docking stations out there, which not only gives you a spot to put your portable, but can charge it for later use.

Adorama is currently selling Sony’s NAC-SV10I Wi-Fi Speaker Dock for $109. This price is 53 percent off the list price, and also includes free shipping. 

It’s a nice price for a nice product. Besides the charging, this docking station can also expand the use of that device—and a variety of other music. Plug your iPod or iPhone into the NAC-SV10i, and you blast music all over the house. For times when you don’t want to dock, the NAC-SV10i can wirelessly stream music from that device, as well as networked computers or the web. Sony also offers a free app that can transform that smartphone into a wireless remote.

Perfect for the kitchen, bedroom, office, or any other room in the house, the NAC-SV10i has DLNA support, BRAVIA Internet Music features, and PartyStream so you can sync with other compatible Sony products.

To get this discount on Adorama, log in and add the product into your shopping cart. That’s when you’ll see the discounted price. 



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A Ballet of Mechanical Movements

In 1934, New York’s Museum of Modern Art opened their famous Machine Art exhibition, featuring industrial objects like gears, bearings, and propellers displayed solely for their aesthetic value. The embedded video is excerpted from avant-garde U.S. filmmaker Ralph Steiner’s Mechanical Principles, which was released only a year earlier, and is very much in the same spirit. If Machine Art was about appreciating machines as sculpture, Mechanical Princples was about appreciating their movements as dance. It’s hypnotic to watch, and quite lovely. [via The Automata / Automaton Blog]

More:
Fascinating 1953 Navy Film Series on Mechanical Computers



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Apple iPad: Two Years Old, and Just Getting Started

The iPad turned two on Friday. Despite a persistent onslaught of would-be rivals, the Apple tablet still dominates the market, and it doesn’t show any signs of losing momentum any time soon.

On the one hand, two years seems too short. The iPad is so ubiquitous, and so entwined in mainstream culture already, that it is hard to imagine a time without it. For many--myself included--it has already become an indispensible tool in that short span, and it has evolved into a mobile computing platform capable of replacing a traditional laptop in many cases.

Apple iPad 2The Apple iPad continues to dominate the market it created out of thin air.On the other hand, the iPad--and the broader concept of the tablet PC--is really still just getting started. The changes that Apple has introduced in the past year—the new features of iOS 5, iCloud, iTunes Match, and the recently launched iBooks 2 all make the iPad a more capable device, and expand the possibilities for how it is used.

The pervasive presence of the iPad is amazing. You can go to virtually any airport, or coffee shop and you will find more than a few people using the Apple tablet. I’ve been surprised at the number of times I have seen someone at an event using an iPad to take pictures or capture video.

I am encountering more alternative tablets in the wild now as well. At the Houston Marathon, I saw someone using a 7-inch HTC Flyer tablet to take pictures, and at my daughter’s gymnastics class I saw a woman studying for a pharmacy class on a Motorola Xoom. They’re out there. The ones that get the most attention, though, are the duds and flops like the HP TouchPad, and BlackBerry PlayBook.

The sheer number of rival tablets is a testament to the success of the iPad. There is a long list of tablet devices that have already gone from launch, to fizzle, to the grave in the short amount of time that the iPad has been around. The Amazon Kindle Fire is the first competing device that has achieved any notable success, but the demand for tablets in general continues, and it is virtually inevitable that there will be other tablets that snag some market share as well.

At two years old, the tablet is still a nascent technology, and innovative minds both inside and outside of Apple are developing new ways to use it. It will be interesting to check back in a few years—like the fifth birthday of the iPad—and see what tablets have achieved, and whether or not the Apple iPad can still maintain its dominance.



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Saturday 28 January 2012

iPhone Repair Policy Helps Thieves, Report Claims

Apple's policy of replacing broken iPhones is playing into the hands of criminals who steal the handsets, damage them and take them to an Apple Store to be replaced, it has been claimed.

In an op-ed piece for the Reuters news agency, U.S.-based consumer rights journalist Mitch Lipka says that Apple's well-intentioned customer service plan, in which the owner of a broken handset doesn't have to be present in order for Apple to take it in for repairs, is being abused.

Lipka uses the example of a boss with a broken handset sending his or her assistant to the Apple Store to get their iPhone repaired, or someone who had bought it second-hand. But, he warns, as Apple's policy means that the warranty is tied to the iPhone itself and not the customer, "the ease of trading in stolen iPhones and selling their replacements makes them nearly as tempting as grabbing cash."

Criminals abusing the "honor system" on which Apple bases its policy can cause real problems for the legitimate owner, Lipka says. He cites the example of a student who had her phone snatched in a Boston railway station only to receive, a few days later, an automated e-mail telling her that her damaged phone was repaired at an Apple Store.

When she tried to get the iPhone back, though, the store wouldn't hand it over as she wasn't the person who brought it in. Happily, she found her network provider, Verizon, much more helpful when she called the company to have the handset disabled.

The problem of iPhone thefts is common from coast to coast in the U.S., Lipka says, with the New York Police Department reporting that 70 percent of all handsets stolen between January and October 2011 were iPhones, with mobile phone theft accounting for around half of the 16,000 robberies reported in the district in that period.



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In the Maker Shed: Arduino Ethernet Shield

Do you want to make a web-enabled on / off switch for that power hungry RAID array living in your closet? Or maybe you want to build your very own version of the Twittering Cat Toy? Then you should check out the Arduino Ethernet Shield from the Maker Shed! It’s the perfect solution for creating network enabled projects and it plugs right into your Arduino Uno, Mega, or compatible microcontroller. The on-board Wiznet W5100 Ethernet chip handles the heavy lifting and the completely open source Ethernet library makes it easy to write sketches that connect to the internet. This versatile shield even includes a micro-SD card reader that can be used to serve files over the network. Brilliant!



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In the Maker Shed: Arduino Ethernet Shield

Do you want to make a web-enabled on / off switch for that power hungry RAID array living in your closet? Or maybe you want to build your very own version of the Twittering Cat Toy? Then you should check out the Arduino Ethernet Shield from the Maker Shed! It’s the perfect solution for creating network enabled projects and it plugs right into your Arduino Uno, Mega, or compatible microcontroller. The on-board Wiznet W5100 Ethernet chip handles the heavy lifting and the completely open source Ethernet library makes it easy to write sketches that connect to the internet. This versatile shield even includes a micro-SD card reader that can be used to serve files over the network. Brilliant!



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In the Maker Shed: Arduino Ethernet Shield

Do you want to make a web-enabled on / off switch for that power hungry RAID array living in your closet? Or maybe you want to build your very own version of the Twittering Cat Toy? Then you should check out the Arduino Ethernet Shield from the Maker Shed! It’s the perfect solution for creating network enabled projects and it plugs right into your Arduino Uno, Mega, or compatible microcontroller. The on-board Wiznet W5100 Ethernet chip handles the heavy lifting and the completely open source Ethernet library makes it easy to write sketches that connect to the internet. This versatile shield even includes a micro-SD card reader that can be used to serve files over the network. Brilliant!



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Shrewbot, a Robot With Whiskers

When the whiskers touch an object this causes them to vibrate and the vibration pattern is picked up by sensitive cells in the hair follicle at the base of the whisker. These patterns are turned into an electrical signal which is sent to the brain, enabling the mammal to make instant decisions about its environment to help it move around or catch prey. The whiskers have another advantage over some other forms of tactile touch. Whiskers themselves are easily replaceable since the sensory cells are at the base of the whisker, not the top, unlike our fingers for example, which are more easily damaged and hard to replace.

[Shrew whiskers inspire ground-breaking robot design via core77]



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Friday 27 January 2012

Apple Shatters Records, New Facebook App, and EU Data Protection Rules

On World Tech Update this week, the EU proposes new online data-protection rules, Apple shatters sales records under CEO Tim Cook, and a new Facebook app is to die for.



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Google Slammed for Tainting Search to Hype Google+ Social Networking

Google Slammed for Tainting Search to Hype Google+Google's attempt to force its social network, Google+, upon search users is backfiring, as tech pundits and tech companies slam the search giant for neglecting its core mission.

Most complaints stem from Search Plus Your World, a new feature that shows Google+ data alongside generic search results. So for example, if you search for "restaurant," you might see pictures of food and status updates about dining out from people in your Google+ circles.

The new feature has angered other social networks, who feel like they should be represented in search results alongside Google+. Earlier this week, engineers from Facebook and Twitter--in conjunction with other social networks--released a tool called "Don't Be Evil." The tool inserts results from other networks into Search Plus Your World.

It's Good to Make Google Look Bad?

Of course, Facebook and Twitter have competitive reasons for making Google look bad. The bigger problem, as MG Siegler argues, is that Google is sacrificing its own search relevance by putting Google+ on a pedestal. "If you search for Hugh Jackman, you may be looking for a lot of things, but you’re almost certainly not looking for his Google+ profile page," Siegler writes. "And yet, that’s exactly what’s shoved in your face."

PandoDaily's Sarah Lacy takes this idea a step further, arguing that Google's core mission of providing the best possible search results has changed. As evidence, she points to an interview with Google co-founder and current CEO Larry Page, published in Playboy before the company went public:

"Most portals show their own content above content elsewhere on the web. We feel that’s a conflict of interest, analogous to taking money for search results," Page said. "Their search engine doesn’t necessarily provide the best results; it provides the portal’s results."

As Lacy points out, Google has become the kind portal Page once spoke out against, by promoting its own social network results above all others.

Meanwhile, Slate's Farhad Manjoo argues that Google shouldn't be combining social network data with generic search results in the first place. "While my friends are thoughtful and knowledgeable people, their views on the tens of thousands of large and small inquiries that I bring to Google every year are almost always irrelevant," Manjoo wrote. Again, Google's relevance is being questioned.

Fortunately for users like Manjoo, you can disable Google's Search Plus Your World results by clicking the globe icon near the top-right corner of the screen. (It says "Hide personal results" when you float the cursor over it.)

Google Losing Sight of Core Job: Search Results?

Danny SullivanDanny SullivanStill, Google's relentless focus on Google+ may be distracting the company from improving core search results, SearchEngineLand's Danny Sullivan argues. Sullivan points out how a recent search for "Santorum" includes a spammy YouTube video as Google's top video pick, appearing on the first page of search results. This is despite the existence of much more relevant videos about presidential hopeful Rick Santorum elsewhere on the Web.

Although this bad result has nothing to do with Google+, "this type of relevancy screw-up feels like another bit of evidence that Google’s original core mission, delivering awesome search results, is being forgotten," Sullivan writes.

Strangely, Google has met these attacks only with silence. That's quite a difference from a year ago, when pundits were attacking "content farms," and Google promised to work on the issue. It's easy to address search relevance issues when they're being caused by outside sources. But when Google itself is under fire for sabotaging its own search relevance, the company is short on answers.

Follow Jared on Twitter, Facebook or Google+ for even more tech news and commentary.



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Samsung Loses Again in German Patent Suit Against Apple

The district court in Mannheim, Germany, has again sided with Apple in a patent suit brought by Samsung Electronics, saying on Friday that the company had not infringed on a second patent asserted by Samsung against the iPhone and iPad.

Last week the court decided that Apple hadn't infringed on the first in a series of mobile patents Samsung has said Apple is using without paying royalties.

Samsung now reiterates what it said after the first loss. The company is disappointed, and will analyze the verdict and decide if an appeal is in order, a spokesman said via email. Samsung still hopes the court will take its side on the remaining patents, and more verdicts will come in the next several weeks, he said.

The patent in question is EP 1,114,528, describing an "apparatus and method for controlling a demultiplexer and a multiplexer used for rate matching in a mobile communication system".

Apple didn't comment on its latest victory.

The two companies are battling in the stores as well as the courts. Apple won during the fourth quarter, selling 37 million iPhones to Samsung's 36.5 million smartphones, according to data from Strategy Analytics.

The data also shows that the smartphone market is turning into a two-horse race.

Together Apple and Samsung had almost 50 percent of the smartphone market during the last three months of 2011, compared to about 40 percent during the third quarter and the whole year.

Send news tips and comments to mikael_ricknas@idg.com

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A Ballet of Mechanical Movements

In 1934, New York’s Museum of Modern Art opened their famous Machine Art exhibition, featuring industrial objects like gears, bearings, and propellers displayed solely for their aesthetic value. The embedded video is excerpted from avant-garde U.S. filmmaker Ralph Steiner’s Mechanical Principles, which was released only a year earlier, and is very much in the same spirit. If Machine Art was about appreciating machines as sculpture, Mechanical Princples was about appreciating their movements as dance. It’s hypnotic to watch, and quite lovely. [via The Automata / Automaton Blog]

More:
Fascinating 1953 Navy Film Series on Mechanical Computers



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Thursday 26 January 2012

2 Nights at an Automated Hotel with Control4

January 20, 2012 | by Lisa Montgomery

After a long day pounding the show floor pavement at the Consumer Electronic Show, it feels oh so nice to get back to the hotel room—even more so when that room is automated. I use the term “automated” loosely, as the only part of my two-night stay at the Aria that was truly automated was the first minute or so. As I entered the room for the first time, the drapes and sheers opened, music started playing the lights gradually brightened. Was I impressed? Yes. More than that, though, the welcome scenario made that smallish space seem a lot friendlier, and well, welcoming.

In typical Control4 style, wall-mounted keypads let me set groups of lights for reading, sleeping and waking up by just tapping a button. My favorite was the keypad by the door. Here, I could press a button to request that my room be serviced or that I not be disturbed. The appropriate icon by my door in the hallway illuminated to alert the Aria staff—kind of like hanging out a modern-day, electronic “Do Not Disturb” sign.

No Control4 system is complete without a touchpanel, and my room had one, as well as a hard-buttoned handheld remote. The touchpanel—the far sexier of the controls—happened to be on the nightstand by my side of the bed. Nice. My hubby got the remote. Both eager to test drive the controls, we started pushing buttons—in my case, icons. We toyed around with the window treatments, parting the shades half-way, leaving the drape open, closing both—any arrangement we could think of. The controls worked flawlessly. We played around with the lights, again, success. At times, the system got confused and devices failed to respond—we chalked it up to too many commands being thrown at it at the same time. Obviously, we needed to take turns.

If you need a little instruction in the use of the control system, Aria provides an online .PDF so you can study up before you arrive.

A nice feature of the Control4 system that came in particularly handy for my remote-wielding husband was the on-screen display. Using the buttons of the remote he could navigate the same interface that I could on the touchpanel. The only difference was that his interface showed up on the screen of the room’s ample-size flat-panel TV.

The main menu of this interface presented icons for controlling the motorized draperies, the lights, the thermostat, the audio and the video. The A/V should have been fun, but it ended up being quite frustrating. There were an awful lot of choices; scrolling through them was quite a chore, considering the “slow” response time of the Control4 system. I’d press a button; when I didn’t hear or see anything I’d naturally press the button again, which brought up a song I really didn’t want to hear or a show I really didn’t want to watch. Eventually, I learned to be patient—to let the system catch up with my commands. The same punch-and-wait exercise had to be applied when setting up a wakeup routine, which was one of the coolest high-tech features of my room. Using the touchpanel, I told the Control4 system to wake me up at 6 by opening the sheers and drapes, gradually bringing up the lights and playing music from a soft-rock station. It’s a much better way to wake up than to the sound of a blaring alarm.

All said and done—my stay was a hit. The automation system enhanced the luxurious design and atmosphere of the room. Once I was in that room, I never wanted to leave.

 




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Sony's New Backlit CMOS Camera Phone Sensor Can Shoot HDR Movies

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Shrewbot, a Robot With Whiskers

When the whiskers touch an object this causes them to vibrate and the vibration pattern is picked up by sensitive cells in the hair follicle at the base of the whisker. These patterns are turned into an electrical signal which is sent to the brain, enabling the mammal to make instant decisions about its environment to help it move around or catch prey. The whiskers have another advantage over some other forms of tactile touch. Whiskers themselves are easily replaceable since the sensory cells are at the base of the whisker, not the top, unlike our fingers for example, which are more easily damaged and hard to replace.

[Shrew whiskers inspire ground-breaking robot design via core77]



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Nintendo Slashes Annual Targets for 3DS Despite Price Cuts, Software Bonanza

Nintendo on Thursday slashed its annual sales target for the flagship 3DS handheld, conceding that price cuts and a barrage of software titles were not enough to recover from a weak launch last year.

The Japanese game maker now expects to sell 14 million 3DS handhelds in the fiscal year through March, down from its earlier target of 16 million, which it maintained three months ago. In its earnings report for the nine-month period through December released Thursday, the company also cut its target for the Wii home console, and said it now projects a far deeper annual loss than it did three months ago.

Nintendo had hoped its latest dual-screen handheld, which launched in February of last year, would maintain the success of the DS, one of the best-selling video game consoles of all time. But the newer device stumbled after its launch, weighed down by a scarcity of software titles and tepid consumer interest in its glasses-free 3D feature.

The company suddenly slashed the price of the 3DS worldwide less than six months after sales began, then launched an aggressive push for new software titles, with Nintendo President Satoru Iwata promising in September to rekindle interest in the flagship device. The 3DS is facing increasing competition from the bevy of inexpensive but popular games now available on mobile phones and tablets, as well as Sony's Vita handheld, which went on sale in Japan last month and is due out globally early this year.

On Thursday, Nintendo also cut its sales target for the aging Wii, which was first released in 2006. It now aims to sell 10 million consoles this fiscal year through March, 17 percent lower than its October target.

The iconic firm said it now expects to book a ¥65 billion ($833 million) loss for the current fiscal year through March, much worse than the ¥20 billion loss it forecast in October.

Nintendo generates nearly 80 percent of revenues abroad and has been battered by the strength of the yen, which cuts into profits derived outside Japan. Earlier in 2011, the company said it targeted a profit for the current fiscal year.

For the nine-month period through December, Nintendo said it had a loss of ¥48.3 billion, compared to a profit of ¥49.6 billion in the year-earlier period.

Nintendo differs from its main competitors in video game hardware, Sony and Microsoft, in that it is almost completely reliant on consoles and software titles for its income. The company is striving to make the 3DS a success even as it gears up for the launch of its next-generation home console, the Wii U, due out later this year.



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Kinect Controlled Android 4.0 Projection

It’s not quite as dramatic as Minority Report, but this ad hoc presentation by Kinect hacker DDRBoxman of Recursive Penguin seems to have recreated something strikingly similar to the gestural interface from the 2002 blockbuster running on a Galaxy Nexus handset. [via Phandroid]



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Wednesday 25 January 2012

Kinect Controlled Android 4.0 Projection

It’s not quite as dramatic as Minority Report, but this ad hoc presentation by Kinect hacker DDRBoxman of Recursive Penguin seems to have recreated something strikingly similar to the gestural interface from the 2002 blockbuster running on a Galaxy Nexus handset. [via Phandroid]



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Quantum Dots Could Protect Spacecraft From Missiles

There’s not a ton of oxygen in space. Because of this, we have to rethink how we go about doing the things that we take for granted here on Earth, like defense against an incoming missile. Back in 2007, China tested the first ASAT (Anti-Satellite missile) against one of it’s own dead satellites; it was a resounding success.

Because of that, companies like the Raytheon Company has been working to give US space assets a figurative barrel roll defense.

One of the most common defenses against an incoming missile is a flare. Common aircraft use stuff like Magnesium-Viton-Teflon (MVT) flares to create a giant ball of light, heat and radiation that distracts incoming missiles and causes them to hit the flare and not the original target. The trick is to make the missile think it’s hitting the target and not a decoy.

That’s not so easy in space, where the raw material required to create an exothermic reaction are sparse. As is usually the case, science has the answer, and that answer is quantum dots.

What's a Quantum Dot, Anyway?

A quantum dot is a tiny little nanoparticle made of zinc, cadmium or some other semiconductor material. At such a small size, the quantum dots have some pretty unique electrical properties that you wouldn’t see in a more sizable mass of their material; they give off light that the human eye can detect, for instance.

If that wasn’t cool enough, the color of light they display depends on the size of the particle, making them tunable to whatever color the scientist wants. This is called the “size quantization effect”. The dots can be tuned to give off infrared or ultraviolet light as well--light outside the visible spectrum.

Quantum Dots in Space

This brings us back to the defense aspect of this equation. Quantum dots can, based on this, be fine tuned to mimic the exact radiation signature of the space object they’re trying to serve as a decoy for, making them incredibly effective as a flare.

The theory is to eject a cloud of quantum dots into space, via a spray from a storage tank or exploding a pack of dots suspended in inert gas. Those dots are fine-tuned to the spectral signature of the spacecraft they’re protecting, and the missile hits the cloud instead of the craft.

That’s the theory, anyway. You can see more at the Raytheon Company’s patent application, which includes the full explanation including utilization of a ground-based tracking system to warn of a launched missile.

The idea of quantum physics being used in space defense and strategy is one that may seem to sully the very idea of scientific achievement. You have to remember, though, that military application of such technological advancements are generally the way it goes. The Manhattan Project, anyone?

What do you think is next for space defense? I’m holding out for orbital lasers, myself.

[via Nanowerk]

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2 Nights at an Automated Hotel with Control4

January 20, 2012 | by Lisa Montgomery

After a long day pounding the show floor pavement at the Consumer Electronic Show, it feels oh so nice to get back to the hotel room—even more so when that room is automated. I use the term “automated” loosely, as the only part of my two-night stay at the Aria that was truly automated was the first minute or so. As I entered the room for the first time, the drapes and sheers opened, music started playing the lights gradually brightened. Was I impressed? Yes. More than that, though, the welcome scenario made that smallish space seem a lot friendlier, and well, welcoming.

In typical Control4 style, wall-mounted keypads let me set groups of lights for reading, sleeping and waking up by just tapping a button. My favorite was the keypad by the door. Here, I could press a button to request that my room be serviced or that I not be disturbed. The appropriate icon by my door in the hallway illuminated to alert the Aria staff—kind of like hanging out a modern-day, electronic “Do Not Disturb” sign.

No Control4 system is complete without a touchpanel, and my room had one, as well as a hard-buttoned handheld remote. The touchpanel—the far sexier of the controls—happened to be on the nightstand by my side of the bed. Nice. My hubby got the remote. Both eager to test drive the controls, we started pushing buttons—in my case, icons. We toyed around with the window treatments, parting the shades half-way, leaving the drape open, closing both—any arrangement we could think of. The controls worked flawlessly. We played around with the lights, again, success. At times, the system got confused and devices failed to respond—we chalked it up to too many commands being thrown at it at the same time. Obviously, we needed to take turns.

If you need a little instruction in the use of the control system, Aria provides an online .PDF so you can study up before you arrive.

A nice feature of the Control4 system that came in particularly handy for my remote-wielding husband was the on-screen display. Using the buttons of the remote he could navigate the same interface that I could on the touchpanel. The only difference was that his interface showed up on the screen of the room’s ample-size flat-panel TV.

The main menu of this interface presented icons for controlling the motorized draperies, the lights, the thermostat, the audio and the video. The A/V should have been fun, but it ended up being quite frustrating. There were an awful lot of choices; scrolling through them was quite a chore, considering the “slow” response time of the Control4 system. I’d press a button; when I didn’t hear or see anything I’d naturally press the button again, which brought up a song I really didn’t want to hear or a show I really didn’t want to watch. Eventually, I learned to be patient—to let the system catch up with my commands. The same punch-and-wait exercise had to be applied when setting up a wakeup routine, which was one of the coolest high-tech features of my room. Using the touchpanel, I told the Control4 system to wake me up at 6 by opening the sheers and drapes, gradually bringing up the lights and playing music from a soft-rock station. It’s a much better way to wake up than to the sound of a blaring alarm.

All said and done—my stay was a hit. The automation system enhanced the luxurious design and atmosphere of the room. Once I was in that room, I never wanted to leave.

 




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Tuesday 24 January 2012

Open MAKE at the Exploratorium

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Those of us lucky enough to grow up in the Bay Area are probably familiar with the Exploratorium, the dream destination for science field trips. The museum’s hands-on exhibits invite kids of all ages to learn through play, which makes the Exploratorium a perfect partner for an Open MAKE events.

This past Saturday, the Exploratorium’s Tinkering Studio once again partnered with MAKE magazine to host 2012′s first Open MAKE session, Toys, which featured “hands-on activities, demonstrations, and guest artists and makers, many of whom are interviewed live by MAKE editor and publisher Dale Dougherty. Open MAKE highlights the tools, techniques, and ingenuity of local makers, and encourages visitors to engage their inner maker too.” (from the news release)

The Young Makers Program also held their regional meeting at the event, making plans for exhibiting their projects at this year’s Maker Faire.

Click here to watch the Meet The Makers session in full. The above slideshow gives a quick taste of the day’s fun.

Missed the event? Don’t fret. You have three more chances this season. Sessions run from 10am to 2pm the third Saturday of February (Time), March (Tools), and April (Trash), but check online for updates and more information.

More:
This Saturday, Jan 21: Young Makers/Open MAKE at the Exploratorium



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GenAudio Launches New Surround Format

January 20, 2012 | by Rachel Cericola

Faux surround sound is nothing new. Soundbars and other smaller audio solutions typically have some type of technology that can provide the “illusion” of surround sound, without a 5.1 (or larger) speaker setup. GenAudio is hoping to be the next great surround sound solution, with AstoundSound for CE.

This newly launched technology promises to deliver surround sound without all of the speakers. Designed to work with headphones and two speaker devices, GenAudio says that the tech can deliver a realistic 5.1 and 7.1 surround sound experience.

AstoundSound for CE is software-based, which is what allows it to reproduce those 5.1 and 7.1 sounds. The company says that this has an advantage over competing spatial audio technology, because AstoundSound for CE has no tone colorization and remains in-phase.

The company also says that the tech will work in everything from digital TVs and set-top boxes to phones and gaming consoles, and much more.

“The introduction of our software based audio IP tech on small, low-cost processors coupled with our intuitive audio tuning tools provides manufacturers a way to quickly integrate spatialized audio playback capabilities into any new product where audio fidelity to the consumer is a critical component,” says Jerry Mahabub, founder and CEO of GenAudio. “Implementing AstoundSound in consumer devices will offer device manufacturers the opportunity to differentiate their multimedia products in a crowded consumer market!”

GenAudio is already incorporating AstoundSound audio IP software into devices, including the Analog Devices ADAU1761/1701 Sigma Studio DSP system-on-chip (SoC) audio processors as well as ADI’s SHARC processors and various other chip manufacturers. GenAudio says that the first products packing AstoundSound for CE launch will debut early this year.




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Kinect Controlled Android 4.0 Projection

It’s not quite as dramatic as Minority Report, but this ad hoc presentation by Kinect hacker DDRBoxman of Recursive Penguin seems to have recreated something strikingly similar to the gestural interface from the 2002 blockbuster running on a Galaxy Nexus handset. [via Phandroid]



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Kinect Controlled Android 4.0 Projection

It’s not quite as dramatic as Minority Report, but this ad hoc presentation by Kinect hacker DDRBoxman of Recursive Penguin seems to have recreated something strikingly similar to the gestural interface from the 2002 blockbuster running on a Galaxy Nexus handset. [via Phandroid]



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OpenROV to Perform Preliminary Dives

As you may already know, David Lang, our Zero to Maker columnist, is involved in the OpenROV project, an open source camera-equipped R/C submersible, designed to look for water-buried treasure. They’re taking the ROV prototypes up to Hall City Cave in Northern, CA tomorrow for some preliminary dives. How exciting!

Eric and I and a few others are up near the Trinity Alps, planning to go to the Hall City Cave tomorrow with a couple OpenROV prototypes. As you can see from the photo, we’ve hacked a GoPro 3D camera onto the OpenROV.

Biggest challenge now is the weather.

More to come soon!

OpenROV

More:
Search for buried treasure with your very own OpenROV (Remotely Operated Vehicle)


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