Filed under: Robots
Continue reading Capuchin robot climbs its way into your nightmares
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Archive for March 21st, 2008
Filed under: Robots
As if there weren’t enough creepy crawly robots out there already, a team of researchers from Stanford University have now let loose this little number, which they hope will one day be showing off its rock-climbing skills on Mars. Dubbed Capuchin, the bot is a follow-up to the Lemur robot built by the same team, and promises to climb walls some 40 times faster than that earlier model. To do that, the researchers apparently didn’t make any major mechanical changes, but rather employed a more advanced computer program that guides the bot’s every move. More specifically, as NewScientist reports, the software uses a sophisticated load-balancing system, which distributes the bot’s weight equally to its arms and legs and improves its stability when climbing. As you can see for yourself in the video after the break, that appears to work remarkably well, although we still wouldn’t trust it to be a partner on your next rock-climbing expedition.
Continue reading Capuchin robot climbs its way into your nightmares
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments HP launches the 13.3-inch dv3000 laptop in Asia Filed under: Laptops It’s been a while since the HP dv2000 laptop made its original appearance, and it looks like HP’s giving the newest version a new model number as well as a slight redesign — say bonjour to the dv3000. Based around an oh-so-hip 13.3-inch display, the overall look of the machine is basically the same as the older model, but it’s slightly smaller. Inside, you’re looking at a 2.5GHz T9300 Penryn Core 2 Duo, GeForce Go 8400M graphics with HDMI out, 2GB of RAM, a 160GB disk, VGA webcam, a dual-layer burner, and an unusual combo USB / eSATA port that we’d like to take a closer look at. Not a bad piece of kit for $1,399 — too bad it’s only coming out in Asia around May. Gallery: HP launches dv3000
Dell handset rumors continue to swirl Filed under: Cellphones
Averatec pushes out 2575 12.1-inch AMD-powered laptop Filed under: Laptops
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21
03
2008
Amazon Kindle and Sony Reader Locked Up: Why Your Books Are No Longer Yours [Legalese]Posted by: admin in Technology NewsAmazon Kindle and Sony Reader Locked Up: Why Your Books Are No Longer Yours [Legalese]
In the fine print that you “agree” to, Amazon and Sony say you just get a license to the e-books—you’re not paying to own ‘em, in spite of the use of the term “buy.” Digital retailers say that the first sale doctrine—which would let you hawk your old Harry Potter hardcovers on eBay—no longer applies. Your license to read the book is unlimited, though—so even if Amazon or Sony changed technologies, dropped the biz or just got mad at you, they legally couldn’t take away your purchases. Still, it’s a license you can’t sell. But is this claim legal? Our Columbia friends suggest that just because Sony or Amazon call it a license, that doesn’t make it so. “That’s a factual question determined by courts,” say our legal brainiacs. “Even if a publisher calls it a license, if the transaction actually looks more like a sale, users will retain their right to resell the copy.” Score one for the home team. There’s a kicker, though: If a court ruled with you on that front, you still can’t sell reproductions of your copy, an illegal act tantamount to Xeroxing your Harry Potters. You’d have to sell the physical media where the “original” download is stored—a hard drive or the actual Kindle or Sony Reader. Our guess is that it only gets more complicated from here. What happens when the file itself resides only on some $20-per-month Google storage locker? For more details, have a look at the original, surprisingly readable legal summary:
[Columbia Science and Technology Law Review]
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