Monday, November 22, 2010

Autonomous (NO Driver !) Audi TTS successfully ascends Pikes Peak




The autonomous Audi TTS built by Volkswagen Group Electronics Research Lab, Stanford University andAudi has taken an important first step toward its ultimate goal: participating in the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb. The self-driving TTS officially completed a test run – all the way to the 14,110 foot summit – earlier this year, clocking a time of 27 minutes, which is pretty good considering that race officials typically expect a human driver to do it in around 17 minutes.

Audi says that the car used a combination of brand-new software, algorithms and hardware to tackle one of the world's most challenging hill climbs. The 12.42 mile course is a gauntlet of tarmac and loose gravel that snakes upward with a number of instant switchbacks. According to Audi, the autonomous TTS managed to hit a top speed of 47 mph during one stretch.

Sources : Autoblog, Engadget

Sunday, November 21, 2010

This Crazy World of Bots !

The World of Bots is a crazy one ! 


...there you are chatting with a bot, for days...some people end up chatting with Bots for months, without realizing ! 


...it's weird how we see a user-name in this Virtual World & assume it to be a human on the other side. . .


I guess in some weird way it shows just how 'human' we all actually are !


I think we're all just lonely people inside...looking for ways to get noticed...FB..Twitter..Gtalk...Skype...Buzz...BBM..& god knows what's next....


but after that 'Like' does arrive...do we really care ?

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Nokia research lab builds touchscreen made of ice


IT BRINGS a whole new meaning to freeze frame. A team at Nokia in Finland has created one of the unlikeliest computer displays yet - the world's first ice touchscreen.
It is not a practical device, of course, but the screen is being seen as a step towards an era in which the surfaces around us gain computing capabilities.



"This was a playful experiment, but one that we think showed interactive computing interfaces can now be built anywhere," says Jyri Huopaniemi at Nokia's research lab in Tampere, whose team built the touchscreen, dubbed Ubice, or ubiquitous ice.
Finland has a tradition of building snow and ice sculptures during its long winter. It was these that inspired the device, says Antti Virolainen, a member of the Nokia team. "We decided to see if we could make an ice sculpture that was interactive."
The team commissioned a firm in nearby Oulu to retrieve a tonne of 25-centimetre-thick river ice, and used a chainsaw to cut it into 50-centimetre-square slabs. They used these to make a 2-metre by 1.5-metre ice wall and then blasted the surface with a heat gun - more typically used for stripping paint - to create a smooth surface.
The team made their wall an interactive one by using digital projection technology, rather than peppering the ice with sensors that would raise the cost of the installation, Virolainen told the Interactive Tabletops and Surfaces conference in Saarbrücken, Germany, last week. The icescreen uses rear-diffused illumination (RDI), a technique first used by Microsoft in its table-based interactive touchscreen, Surface, launched in 2008.
A near-infrared light source mounted behind the "screen" bathes it in invisible light, and an array of near-infrared cameras, also behind the wall, are focused on the front surface. A hand placed on the ice reflects the light towards the camera array and the signal each camera receives helps a nearby PC establish the hand's position, size and motion. The PC is also connected to a projector, which uses the data to project imagery - such as flames - beneath the user's hand.
"It was -15 °C out there so it was very interesting to show ice on fire," says Virolainen. "It wouldn't have been anywhere near as interesting with a plastic screen."
Patrick Baudisch of the University of Potsdam in Germany, who has turnedtoy building blocks and floors into interactive devices, says the touchscreen could be compared to Microsoft Surface, with flaws in the ice limiting the accuracy with which it can locate a user's hand. "But that would miss the point. This is a wonderful piece of work and a quirky idea."

Source : New Scientist

Friday, November 19, 2010

Taiwan To Build Tree-Like Skyscraper With Moving Exterior Observation Pods


This translucent tree of a building seems like something that might grace the cover of an old Popular Science as a concept for the very distant future. In fact, construction is set to begin in 2012. The design was selected out of 237 entries in the contest to design the Taiwan Tower, which, at 984 feet, will be the tallest structure in Taichung, Taiwan’s third-largest city.
Its pod-like leaves are mobile observation decks that glide up and down the trunk of the tower. The tree theme stems from the fact that Taiwan is shaped like a leaf, according to Romanian architect Stefan Dorin. He says the observation pods were also influenced by “sci-fi computer gaming culture,” and are made of lightweight materials “borrowed from the spacecraft industry.”




Dorin, of DSBA, in collaboration with upgrade.studio, received four million Taiwan dollars (approximately $130,000) in addition to the right to design the new landmark, financed by the Taichung government.
Not unlike a tree, the Taiwan Tower was designed to be eco-friendly. It has a small footprint at land-level, collects rainwater and purifies it for use as well as generating power from turbines and photovoltaic panels. It also uses a chimney-like system for natural ventilation, and has a geothermal power station in the basement for heating.
Upon completion, the tower will be the focal point for the Taichung Gateway Park, an area being developed after the relocation of the former Taichung Airport.



Source : DSBA

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Uses for that old laptop

Here are some ways you can extend the life of your old hardware



                 

    One of the constants in this world is the fact that technology will change, and it will change quickly. The average lifespan of a computer these days is between 2 to 5 years. Since technology is changing so quickly this equates to a lot of garbage from your old computers. Here are a few ideas of what you can do with your old computers instead of sending them to the garbage dump.

CREATE A SERVER 
If you’re into web development or gaming you could turn your old computer into a server. The easiest way to do this would be to install a server OS and possibly buy a few new parts to make it run a little quicker. After this connect it to the internet and away you go. Here are a few tips on setting up your own server.

 
PLAY MULTI-PLAYER GAMES 

Get a family member or friend playing along with you on your favourite multiplayer games. Make sure that your old computer can handle whatever games you’re wanting to play before getting the other person. Most webbased games should work fine on your old system.
 
INSTALL A DIFFERENT OPERATING SYSTEM

Here’s your chance to get to know a different OS. If you’re a Windows person you could install a version of Linux on your old machine. Linux supports a wide range of older hardware. Debian Linux is well suited to slower machines, and it is also friendly and well documented enough for beginners. If you’re a Mac person you could try out Windows XP, or maybe even Windows 98 (old school).
 
CREATE A MEDIA CENTRE 

Turn your old computer into a media centre. Large hard drives are becoming cheaper and cheaper. If you want to upgrade to a new computer but don’t want to leave your old computer in the dust you could just slap in a few large hard drives and turn it into a repository for all of your media. You can hook up your TV to your old computer and watch all of the movies you’ve ‘bought legally’ and all of the music files that you have.
 
TAKE IT APART 

If you really want to know how a computer works you could take it apart. I’ve taken apart five or six old computers and it really helps you understand how a computer works. Did you ever wonder how a CPU is connected to a motherboard? Are you not sure how to remove a hard drive? Do you want to practice inserting and removing RAM modules? An older computer is an excellent practice PC for maintenance and upgrades.


Source : ToI

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Diamonds could store millions of times more information than current storage devices


Precious stones have potential to process information dozens of times faster than current silicon-based systems




Diamond sheets filled with holes could be the key to the next generation of supercomputers.
Scientists in California have used commercially available technology to pattern large sheets of diamonds with tiny, nitrogen-filled holes. The nitrogen-vacancy diamonds, as the sheets are called by scientists, could store millions of times more information than current silicon-based systems and process that information dozens of times faster.
Exactly how diamond-based computing would be used has yet to be determined, but applications could range from designing more efficient silicon-based computers to drug development and cryptography.
Nitrogen has been in diamonds for as long as there have been diamonds; it's why some diamonds have a yellow hue. For years scientists have used these natural, nitrogen-infused diamonds to study various aspects of quantum mechanics.
"We've used well-known techniques to create atomic-size defects in otherwise perfect diamonds," said David Awschalom, a scientist at the University of California, Santa Barbara and co-author of a new article in the journal ACS Nano Letters.
A supercomputer based on quantum mechanics requires more precision than nature can provide, so scientists have searched for a way to artificially implant arrays of precisely patterned nitrogen holes inside sheets of diamond.
Scientists from the University of California, Santa Barbara, along with colleagues from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, created such an array by using an ion beam to first knock out two carbon atoms, and then replace them with one nitrogen atom. In one second, the scientists could inject about 4,000 glowing nitrogen atoms. In about one minute, the scientists had patterned several inches of flat diamond.
The scientists didn't use any overly complicated techniques to accomplish this. "You can buy it online, send it to another company for the patterning, and then explore it yourself," said Awschalom, whose students did exactly that to demonstrate the ease of the technology.
The key to a diamond-based quantum mechanical computer is an extra electron in the hole. In a traditional computer, information is encoded as either a "0" or a "1." In a diamond-based quantum computer, information could be stored in the spin of that electron. This means information could be stored as not only a "0" or "1," but also the direction the electron is spinning.
An exact number is hard to come by, but scientists say this would dramatically increase the computing power compared with existing silicon computers.
Diamonds likely wouldn't replace the silicon used in today's consumer computers, said Ray Beausoleil, a fellow in Information and Quantum Systems at HP. "A quantum computer won't help you add two numbers faster," said Beausoleil.
However, that doesn't mean consumers won't benefit from a diamond-based quantum computer. What it will do is help model certain extremely complex problems, says Beausoleil and David DiVincenzo, a scientist at IBM who is also familiar with the Nano Letters article.
"This points to the fruitful end of a very long search of all the things that you could put in diamond to make it electronically active," said DiVincenzo.
Diamonds aren't a sure bet for a quantum computer, said DiVincenzo, but they're certainly in the running because of this research.
Source : Eric Bland,  Discovery News

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

BOXEE :D ...Media Player / Software for HTPC :D

Introducing Boxee.

A lot of your favorite shows and movies are already available on the Internet.

Boxee is a device that finds them and puts them on your TV. It’s easy to use and even better, there’s no monthly fee.




  • Boxee Box Features
  • Double-sided remote control
  • HDMI out (HDCP, cable included)
  • Ethernet Port
  • 802.11n Wireless
  • 2 USB 2.0 ports
  • Optical Digital Audio (S/PDIF)
  • Composite Audio Connectors
  • AC Power Connector



Buy the Boxee Box for $ 199.99 (Amazon) or Get the Software for FREE :D & hook it up on your HTPC ;)



Which video formats can Boxee play?

Boxee supports Adobe Flash 10.1, FLV/On2 VP6 (FLV/FV4/M4V), H.264 AVC (TS/AVI/MKV/MOV/M2TS/MP4), VC-1 (TS/AVI/MKV/WMV), MPEG-1 (DAT/MPG/MPEG), MPEG-2 (MPG/MPEG/VOB/TS/TP/ISO/IFO), MPEG-4 (MP4/AVI/MOV), DivX 3/4/5/6 (AVI/MKV), Xvid (AVI/MKV), and WMV9 (WMV/ASF/DVR-MS).

Which audio formats can Boxee play?

Boxee supports MP3, WAV/PCM/LPCM, WMA, AIF/AIFF, AC3/AAC, OGG, FLAC, DTS, and Dolby Digital/Dolby True HD

Which image formats can Boxee display?

Boxee supports JPEG, PNG, GIF, BMP, TIFF.


More Info >  http://www.boxee.tv