Tuesday 31 July 2012

Math Monday: Linkages – An introduction

By , 2012/07/30 @ 12:01 pm

Math_Monday_banner02_600px.jpg
By Glen Whitney for the Museum of Mathematics

There is perhaps no topic that has brought the worlds of math and practical construction so close together as the study of linkages. These are mechanical systems of bars and joints (and sometimes plates and hinges and slides, but we’re going to stick with bars and joints for a while…) which are free to move in a plane (or in space, but again, two dimensions will keep us plenty busy) and whose motion accomplishes some purpose or creates some pattern or curve. We constantly benefit from linkages. They appear in engines, in your car’s suspension, the mechanism of a steam shovel, and in your knee, just to mention a few places.

Today, we’re proud to present the MoMath Linkage Kit so that you, too, can explore the wonderful world of mathematical linkages. You can download the PDF file of the pieces in the kit via this link. You then have a variety of ways to actually fabricate the pieces. You can print the diagram out on the largest, heaviest cardstock you can manage to print on, and then use brass paper fasteners to make the joints, or if your print is too small, staple the pieces so that one leg of the staple goes through the center of the holes and the other side of the staple is off the paper. Note that you then may have to break off the other leg of the staple to get full rotation of your linkage. Also, if you are making paper copies of the linkages, note that all of the small sticks and the washers to the right of the page can be safely ignored.


Or, if you have access to a laser cutter or other automatic cutting device (anyone want to water-jet these out of bronze for us?), you can cut these pieces from a layer of other material. Note the kit is sized for an 18″ x 32″ sheet, 0.23″ thick (that was the actual thickness of the nominal quarter-inch acrylic we were using here at MoMath Labs). If you cut out the pieces in a material (like acrylic) that has a bit of give, when you line up the holes in two of the bars, you can insert one of the small sticks from the top right of the diagram and it will push through the holes and thanks to the slight flares, lock in place and produce a smoothly rotating joint. There are also locking sticks for three- and four-layer joints, and spacers that you may need to keep each bar in a plane, when you are building some of the more complex linkages with a thick material. If you are using a sheet of a different thickness, you may need to adjust the length of the locking sticks, and quite possibly their width and the size of all of the pivot holes (since the thickness of the material becomes one of the cross-sectional dimensions of the locking sticks).

Oh… and instructions for making the linkages? You’ll find those right here in Math Mondays, as we give you a tour of (a small part of) what can be accomplished with linkages over the next few weeks. Ready to start building? Let’s begin with a very familiar linkage that you’re quite likely to have used at some point.

But first, some general instructions: Each bar is labeled with its length, from center to center of the holes near the ends, in consistent units relative to all the other bars (1 unit = 3/8 inch if you print the Kit to full scale, incidentally). Some bars have additional holes. When there is a need to refer to one of these additional holes, it will be labeled by the distance in units from one end of the bar. For example, it should not be hard to find in the Kit the 60-bar with four holes, a 0-hole, 30-hole, 45-hole, and 60-hole. When a bar has been identified with a letter, like C, the directions will just refer to its 45-hole (say) as C45. Sometimes the directions will instruct you to make a link with a pen. If you fabricate at full size, a commonplace felt-tip pen squeezes snugly into the linking holes. At other scales, you will have to experiment — maybe a gel pen, or the tip of a Sharpie, or a thick lead from a compass or other drawing tool, etc. Anyhow, anything that will make the mechanical linkage and leave a mark as it moves will do.

Here’s your first recipe:

Scissors Jack
Ingredients: Four 60-bars with 30-holes (A, B, C, and D); two 30-bars (E and F); six linking sticks; two pens

Directions: Link A30 and B30. Link A60 to C0, B60 to D0, and C30 to D30. Link C60 to E and D60 to F. Link the free ends of E and F with a pen.

When that’s done, you should have a linkage that looks like this:

You will note that you can move that pen quite a ways out by bringing the two free ends of the the bottom 60-bars together. That’s the mode in which this linkage is used, for example, as the mount of an extending mirror. But we are going to see what this linkage does as a drawing tool. So fix one of the free ends so it can pivot. (Slide it onto a fixed vertical rod, tape a spacer down and use a linking stick, or just have a friend hold it in place…) and put a pen in the hole at the other free end. Now as you draw with that pen (as seen in the opening image).

The other pen moves and draws in response:

And here are the original and resultant drawings side by side in their proper orientations, so you can see the relationship. Note the magnification, and the change in direction: the scissors jack moves perpendicular to the direction of input motion, a fact you can appreciate if you’ve ever changed a tire on the roadside.


(Also note the replica is not quite perfect, of course, as there is a bit of “slop” in the links constructed in this way.)

Next time, we’ll start to build a repertoire of linkages, from the simplest on up.

More:
See all of our Math Monday columns



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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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Monday 30 July 2012

Wooden Power Supply

By , 2012/07/30 @ 8:30 am

I understand the feeling of frustration with the look of stock power supplies for electronics projects. You can work so hard getting the aesthetics of your enclosure and interface components just right, but then there’s that DC power cable just looks wrong. The maker behind the blog Making Weird Stuff shows us how he created a wood enclosed DC power adapter and a root-like cable for one of his Arduino projects, an animatronic reading lamp. To give the root-like quality to the cable, he dipped it in liquid latex and covered it very fine sawdust. After three coats, he was pleased with the result. While it looks really cool, I can’t vouch for the safety of this, so exercise caution if you do it yourself.



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NBC Olympic Coverage Attacked on Twitter

NBC Olympic Coverage Attacked on TwitterMore television viewers than ever are parking their eyeballs on NBC's coverage of the 2012 Olympic Games, but the network is getting hammered online for everything from advertising placement to delayed coverage of events to lame commentary.

Over the weekend, NBC says it racked up record-breaking numbers for Olympic viewing. The U.S. audience for the opening ceremony, although delayed seven hours, garnered 40.7 million viewers, and Saturday's primetime audience reached 28.7 million, two million more than watched the 1996 games in Atlanta in that time slot.

The network, though, may be setting another record, one for tweets by disgruntled watchers. Among the hashtags where grousing about the network has been posted are #nbcfail, #nbcdelayed and #nbcsucks.

Tweets Mock NBC's Delayed Events

TwitterTwitterTape delays of events have spawned a stream of tweets mocking NBC's sense of timeliness in covering events. Those tweets are typically slugged with "BREAKING" followed by news such as "Orville and Wilbur Wright's machine flies," "Mark Spitz wins gold in 100m freestyle," and "Roman Emperor Theodosius bans Olympic Games, NBC delay to catch up shortly."

Other tweeters address the event delays more directly. "NBC—Not Broadcasting Coverage of the Olympics until 5 hours later," complained Tochi Notgunnatellya.

Another Twitter subscriber, Mark Jaquith, added: "BREAKING: USA wins gold medal in synchronized NBC bashing. Tune in to NBC tomorrow for coverage of the event."

Advertising has been a burr to many Olympic watchers on Twitter. "Is car advertising an Olympic sport?" asked Guy Adams, of the Independent. "There's been little else on NBC today."

"#NBCSUCKS with random commercials during live Internet feeds," complained Jill Harmon. "Right in the middle of a gymnastics routine!"

Commentary by the Peacock Network has also been a target of derision on Twitter. "NBC just described women Olympian gymnasts as emotional divas," Jodi Hicks reported. "Male athletes are determined and passionate."

Perceived athletic jingoism by the NBC team drew this left-handed jibe from Twitter subscriber T--W: "Another thing that's amazing: BBC's commentators aren't afraid to praise other countries who deserve it."

Complaints About NBC Live Streaming

While NBC is offering live streaming of Olympic events, its Internet presence hasn't been working smoothly for some of its Twitter critics. "It's just taken me an hour to log into NBC streaming Olympics coverage," reported Neva Renee GarcĂ­a.

Its app isn't faring much better for some. "NBC live app total fail," wrote Meoskop. "Ads load but not Olympics."

Twitter had its own problems leading up to the Olympic Games. The day before the opening ceremony, the site went down for about an hour and half.

According to a number of media watchers and IT professionals, the Olympics will have a significant impact on worldwide communications traffic so more disruptions may be in the cards for Twitter users. NBC, though, probably won't be complaining when such outages occur.

Follow freelance technology writer John P. Mello Jr. and Today@PCWorld on Twitter.



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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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Sunday 29 July 2012

MAKE Flickr Pool Weekly Roundup



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Predictive Analytics Might Not have Predicted the Aurora Shooter

Could aggressive data mining by law enforcement prevent heinous crimes, such as the recent mass murder in Aurora, Colorado, by catching killers before they can act?

The Aurora shooter certainly left a long trail of transactions. In the two months leading up to the crime he bought more than 6,000 rounds of ammunition, several guns, head-to-toe ballistic protective gear and accelerants and other chemicals used to build homemade explosives. These purchases were made from both online ecommerce sites and brick and mortar stores, and more than 50 packages were sent to his apartment, according to news reports.

The tantalizing prospect of preventing such incidents by monitoring suspicious transactions lead Wall Street Journal columnist Holman Jenkins to ask if the government's ill-fated Total Information Awareness data mining project could have stopped the killing. Total Information AwarenessWe'll never know, he says, because "political blowback" from the ACLU and other privacy advocates squelched the public discussion before it could get started, even though the data mining process would have used anonymized data. Only when the models produced a "red flag" would a warrant be issued for personalized data, he says.

But would it even work?

Certainly any law enforcement officer who knew of the pattern of activity for this individual would have flagged it as suspicious and investigated. But data mining, also called machine learning, doesn't work the same way.

Dean Abbott, President, Abbott Analytics, Inc., is an expert in data mining and creating predictive models. He has worked on DoD projects, including the development of a mathematical model that identifies which Navy SEAL candidates will be most likely to succeed. Putting privacy matters aside for the moment, I asked him if data mining could identify potential mass murderers before they can commit a crime.

The technical issues of pulling daily transactional data for all 400 million-plus people in the US would not be a problem, he says. Rather, the challenge lies in determining whether there is any connection between volumes of purchases and criminal behavior.

"While it certainly was the case here that [the shooter] purchased a lot of stuff and that there didn't appear to be a good, law-abiding reason for him to purchase the gear, it is unclear if his pattern of purchases is unusual" when examined in the context of the purchases of hundreds of millions of other citizens, he says. For example, given the universe of more than 400 million people, it might very well be possible that 20,000 people made similar volumes of purchases in the same time period. But how many of those are exhibiting risky behavior?

Even if someone is one hundred times more likely to commit a crime when a specified type of purchase behavior is identified, Abbott asks, is it cost effective -- that is, does law enforcement have the resources -- to investigate all of the identified individuals to find the needle-in-a-haystack? Or are there more effective ways to use those resources?

"The best scenario I can imagine here is that a very very high-end, select group can be identified that should be scrutinized." But it's also possible that individuals, such as the perpetrator in this case, wouldn't fall into that top-tier, highest-scoring risk group.

Much as we'd like to think we can solve the problem with technology, it turns out that there is no magic bullet. "Something like this could be valuable," Abbott says. "I just don't think it's obvious that it would be fruitful."



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Saturday 28 July 2012

Detroit Hackerspaces #1: i3Detroit’s Mind Flame Contest

By , 2012/07/28 @ 9:39 am

Matt Oehrlein and Ed Platt from the i3Detroit hackerspace created the Mind Flame mind activated flamethrower; today they put to good use in a tournament that pits brain against brain. Two contestants compete to see who has the brain control to fire the flamethrower three times. Find them on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/MindFlameMakers.



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Music - CD and music reviews, news and clips - Boston.com

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Court Tells Apple, Samsung Most Documents in Patent Case Must Be Public

Apple and Samsung Electronics won't be able to keep certain pieces of information from the public during their high-profile jury trial that begins on Monday, a judge in California said Friday. But what will be public and what won't still isn't known.

The judge set several deadlines over the weekend for Apple's and Samsung's lawyers to submit arguments to the court so that decisions can be made before Monday morning.

The two companies had previously asked for chunks of information in documents to be redacted and for certain items of evidence to be sealed so they would only be seen by the jury, judge and lawyers involved in the case.

Judge Lucy Koh, presiding over the case at the U.S. District Court in San Jose, said she will allow some source code, royalty rates and unreported financial data to be sealed. However, she said she would need to see and review the documents before accepting the requests. Most information will have to be public, she said.

Both Apple and Samsung had been liberally redacting documents and asking others be sealed before Reuters filed papers with the court objecting to the classifications being made.

For example, in one filing earlier this week, Apple redacted a key figure in its damages claim against Samsung, but went on to list additional damages of $500 million and $25 million and then noted the total was $2.525 billion. Simple subtraction showed the missing figure was $2 billion -- something subsequently confirmed in an unredacted filing.

Koh twice noted that some of the information that the companies claimed as confidential was found in public submissions to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

"You will not be able to seal your own financial information," she told lawyers for Apple and Samsung.

The court heard similar requests from several other companies that risk having some of their business dealings made public by the court.

Lawyers from Intel, Motorola Mobility, Philips, IBM, Research in Motion and InterDigital asked Koh to allow contracts and royalty rates to be kept private. Koh indicated she was more likely to accept such pleas from companies that had been brought unwillingly into the case.

On another issue, Koh said she won't approve a Samsung request for lawyers to switch seats when they are in the offensive and defensive parts of their case. The plaintiff in a court typically sits closest to the jury, and Samsung had asserted that sitting in the traditional defendant's place when fighting its case would put it at a disadvantage.

Presiding over a courtroom already packed with audiovisual equipment and extra chairs, Koh rejected the idea of having each side change seats. "We're so congested," she said.

However, after a request by Samsung, Koh did allow a change in the terms used to refer to each company.

Originally, Apple was the plaintiff in the case and Samsung was the defendant, but the case was expanded to include one in which the companies were in the reverse roles. The original labels have been used to date, but Samsung is worried that being constantly referred to as the defendant could harm the offensive portion of its case.

Koh suggested they switch the plaintiff and defendant titles during different portions of the case, but then quickly came up with an even simpler solution: to refer to the companies by their names during most of the case.

Jury selection is scheduled to begin at the federal courthouse in San Jose on Monday morning. The two sides must find 10 jurors out of an initial pool of about 70 people.

The case is 11-08146, Apple vs. Samsung Electronics, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

Martyn Williams covers mobile telecoms, Silicon Valley and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Martyn on Twitter at @martyn_williams. Martyn's e-mail address is martyn_williams@idg.com



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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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Friday 27 July 2012

Wall Street Beat: ERP, Mobile Devices Shine in Mixed Earnings

While earnings from marquee-name tech companies such as Apple and Facebook disappointed this week, sales of mobile devices and enterprise software showed signs of growth.

The deluge of earnings reports offered mixed news about sales but followed a pattern that has become familiar. While the PC and components markets continue to face economic headwinds, smartphones, tablets and corporate software appear to be weathering the storm.

Half of the 175 board directors polled in The Gartner-Forbes 2012 Board of Directors Survey, released this week, said IT is their highest priority for investment in 2012, tied with investments in sales, even though more than half of the corporate executives said they were preparing for a market recession.

"You can't cut your way to greatness," said Gartner Vice Analyst Jorge Lopez in an interview. "There is a sense that businesses are more forward-looking now, that after the recession they cut as much as they could. We've seen a move toward shared services around HR, procurement, legal and finance, which liberated 15 percent to 30 percent of overall IT costs for new investments in areas of IT where companies feel they can get a competitive advantage."

SAP, the biggest ERP (enterprise-resource-planning) vendor in the world, reported on Tuesday that revenue for the second quarter increased 18 percent over the same quarter last year to Ă‚¬3.9 billion (US$4.9 billion), buoyed by record software revenue of more than Ă‚¬1 billion. Net profit was Ă‚¬661 million, up 12 percent from a year earlier. Sales were lifted by Ă‚¬85 million in business from its in-memory platform HANA in the quarter. The HANA platform will work with the company's core Business Suite ERP application modules by the end of this year.

SAP shares rose by $1.51 on Friday to end the week at $65.11.

NetSuite, an up-and-coming challenger to Salesforce.com in the cloud-based ERP software market, also offered an upbeat earnings report, announcing on Thursday that revenue for the second quarter was $74.7 million, up 29 percent year over year. Subscription and support revenue was $61.0 million, a 27 percent year-over-year increase. Excluding one-time charges, net income for the second quarter was $4.8 million, compared with net income of $1.6 million a year earlier.

NetSuite shares jumped $7.53 on Friday to close at $56.75.

On the smartphone front, Samsung Electronics reported on Friday that thanks in large part to its mobile phone business, quarterly profit skyrocketed 48 percent year over year to 5.19 trillion won (US$4.5 billion), while revenue was up 21 percent to 47.6 trillion won.

Samsung shipped 50.5 million smartphones in the quarter, more than double from a year earlier, compared with 26 million by Apple, according to a Strategy Analytics report Friday.

Apple itself on Tuesday reported that iPhone sales for the quarter ending in June increased by 28 percent year over year to 26 million units. IPad sales increased 84 percent year over year to 17 million units. Sales of Macs, however, increased only 2 percent year over year to 4 million. The results are in line with reports from other vendors this quarter that show tablets and mobile Internet-connected devices booming while PC sales stay flat.

Apple, however, is burdened with heavy expectations. Even though revenue for the quarter was $35 billion, up from $28.6 billion a year earlier, it fell short of the $37.2 billion consensus forecast from analysts polled by Thomson Reuters. Net profit for the quarter was $8.8 billion, up from $7.3 billion last year. Though sales of iPhones were strong, they may have been curbed by users who postponed purchases until the debut of the new iPhone, expected later this year. After dipping in the wake of the earnings report, Apple shares rose by $10.28 Friday to $585.16.

Evidence that the PC and components market remains soft came from Texas Instruments, which reported Monday that second-quarter revenue was $3.3 billion, down from $3.5 billion a year earlier, and profit was $4.46 million, down from $672 million.

Company officials blamed economic turbulence.

"Although we believe customers and distributors have low inventory levels, the global economic environment is causing both to become increasingly cautious in placing new orders," said TI CEO Rich Templeton in a statement.

Facebook's earnings report Thursday created the most turbulence among tech-oriented stocks. In its first quarterly report as a public company, the social networking giant reported 32 percent year-over-year growth in revenue, to $1.18 billion, and a net loss, due mainly to share-based compensation in the wake of its initial public offering. Adjusted for one-time expenses, earnings per share were in line with analysts' expectations at $0.12. Revenue was slightly above expectations.

However, analysts noted that the revenue growth rate had slowed from prior quarters. Company officials also noted that while the number of mobile Facebook users increased, the company faces challenges in monetizing its user traffic. One big issue is that Facebook must be careful not to crowd mobile screens with too much advertising. The company declined to give guidance on results for future quarters. Company shares dropped by $3.14 to $23.70 Friday, down from the $45 high the company reached on its IPO day in May.

Elsewhere Friday, tech shares did well in what ended up being a strong day on the markets. With the tech-heavy Nasdaq leading the way, all major markets in the U.S. rose on hopes that central bankers in Europe and the U.S. will take further steps to jump-start the economy. On Thursday, for example, European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi was reported saying that he would take any steps necessary to save the euro, which has been pummeled by fears that sovereign debt in Greece and Spain would pull apart the euro zone. Tech stocks on the Nasdaq, not including telecom companies, rose in aggregate by 2.4 percent.



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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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Shipping Delays Mount for Google's Nexus 7 16GB Tablet

Delays are plaguing Google's Nexus 7 tablet with 16GB of storage as some stores have stopped taking orders or delayed shipments of the product.

The tablet has been unavailable on Google's website since the middle of this week after running out of stock, and was still not available for order on the Google Play store as of Friday. Availability of the tablet is becoming even tougher as retailers like Staples and Office Depot have stopped taking online orders, while GameStop and Adorama have delayed the shipping dates for the tablet to the middle or end of August.

The 16GB Nexus 7 tablet will come back "soon" on Google's Play store, said Gina Weakley Johnson, a Google spokeswoman, in an e-mail on Friday.

"We haven't shared a timeline," she said. An 8GB version of the Nexus 7 tablet is still available for $199 in the Google Play store.

The 16GB tablet, which is priced at US$249, started shipping on July 13, but issues mounted almost immediately with retailers like Staples, GameStop and Adorama struggling to meet shipping commitments after receiving limited stocks of tablets.

Staples has now stopped taking orders for the 16GB tablet, putting it on "special order" and asking buyers to check in-store for availability. Staples earlier delayed shipments by a few days after the tablet started shipping, but was still taking orders. Staples has also put the 8GB Nexus 7 on special order.

GameStop, which is one of the retail stores Google partnered with for Nexus 7, is taking orders for the 16GB Nexus 7, but is promising shipping dates after three or four weeks. Earlier this month the company stopped taking orders for the 16GB Nexus 7 tablet.

The 16GB Nexus 7 is also out of stock on Office Depot's website, and the retailer is not taking orders, asking buyers to "check back soon."

GameStop and Office Depot are not yet selling the 8GB Nexus 7.

Retailer Adorama, which has retail stores in New York City, is taking orders for the 16GB Nexus 7, and is providing a tentative ship date of mid-August.

But small stocks of tablets are trickling into some stores. HMV earlier on Friday announced via Twitter that 10 units of the tablet were available in its Blackpool, UK store. Some Canadian stores also announced through Twitter that the Nexus 7 tablet was in stock.

The highly anticipated tablet has already started reaching buyers who ordered the tablet as soon as it was announced in late June. The price and features attracted many buyers, and enthusiasts also ordered the tablet to get a taste of Android 4.1. At prices starting at $199, the tablet was an impulse purchase for iPad owners who want to try out Android, which has largely been unsuccessful in tablets.

The Nexus 7 has been made by Google in collaboration with Asus. The tablet weighs around 340 grams and offers battery life of up to nine hours on video playback and 300 hours on standby. The screen can display images at a 1280 by 800-pixel resolution. Additional features include a 1.2-megapixel front-facing camera, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and NFC (near-field communication).

Agam Shah covers PCs, tablets, servers, chips and semiconductors for IDG News Service. Follow Agam on Twitter at @agamsh. Agam's e-mail address is agam_shah@idg.com



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MAKE Contributor Abe Connally Launches the Food Web Campaign

By , 2012/07/26 @ 3:30 pm

Abe Connally has written a number of excellent how-to pieces for MAKE on sustainable living. He and his family have been living off-grid for years, and he knows what he’s talking about. His website, Vela Creations, is a great resource for projects covering gardening, animal husbandry, energy generation and conservation, waste management, and more. Yesterday Abe launched a campaign called Food Web, a crowd-funded effort to support an upcoming book and sustainable farming model. Learn more at Vela Creations.


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Thursday 26 July 2012

The Rygo, the Largest 3D Print in North America, Has Landed in Vancouver, BC



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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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Wednesday 25 July 2012

Submarine Simulator

By , 2012/07/25 @ 12:30 pm

Team 1.21 Jigawatts of the Red Bull Creation contest built a submarine simulator! How cool is that?

The structure of the submarine was drawn up in Sketchup, and cut out on a Shopbot CNC machine. We then salvaged nearly everything you see on the submarine, from the LCD display, to the pipes, and the metal grating on the floor. The whole submarine rocks back and forth with an old hospital bed actuator. We even have a built in vibration motor that shakes the submarine when you get hit by a torpedo.

On the electronics side, we have the whole thing powered by three Arduinos. We chose to use three Arduinos instead of something like an Arduino Mega, because we have each Arduino running a specific task on their own, and then communicate with each other to trigger events. One of the events is if enough people tweet #firetorpedo while the game is in play, red lights start flashing and warning sounds go off letting you know a torpedo has been launched (you can even see the torpedo incoming on the LCD radar screen). You get a voice command telling you what you need to do to evade (press buttons in a certain order, pull handles, or crank valves). If you are too slow, you will get hit, the whole sub will rock, and a bunch of valves will break. You will then have to close them manually. We use an Arduino Ethernet to communicate with Twitter, and an Adafruit Wave Shield to take care of the sound effects.

[via Adafruit]



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