Archive for August 12th, 2008

Filed under: Robots

No matter how much we do it, video conferencing is still one of the most awkward internet-related tasks we undertake on a regular basis. Nokia hopes to bring a more casual air to the event with its Jeppe video conferencing robot pet concept. Similar to most telepresence bots, Jeppe can be controlled remotely — through a Nokia interface, conveniently — and zips through the home with its digital compass and sound sensors seeking humans to bother. Unfortunately, the video is at a fixed angle and there’s no option wipe that creepy grin of its face, but obviously Nokia has some refining to do before it brings Jeppe to market, if ever. There’s video after the break of a couple Finnish engineers proving once and for all that there’s no solving the awkward video conferencing problem.

[Via Core77]

Continue reading Nokia’s Jeppe video “pet” concept

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Via [Engadget]

Self-Refrigerating Plastic Sheets Could Make Ultimate Heatsink [Cool Runnings]

Researchers at Penn State have cooked up a new plastic that can be cooled by simply running a current through it. It uses the electrocaloric effect to rearrange its individual atoms when charged, allowing for heat to more easily come and go. By wrapping up a chip in the stuff and zapping it with current, researchers hope they’ve found a way to make more efficient heatsinks for laptops and other gear with small, hot enclosures. Right now the process requires too much voltage to be feasible (120v, rather than the couple of volts your laptop battery could give it), but manufacturing improvements could make it ready for prime time, and Intel seems interested.

Says Rajiv Mongia, an Intel engineer:

“The fact that they’ve been able to develop a polymer-type material that can be used in a relatively thin film is worth a second look [compared with previous ceramic heatsinks that worked the same way],” Mongia says. “Also, it’s working in a temperature range that is of interest to us.”

[Technology Review]


Cuntblocker 5000, If Ron Popeil Were a Total Prude [Cuntblocker]

Thank goodness the brightest television inventors of our generation aren’t the prudish sorts who will pull words like “cunt” from our morning weather report. Because then even the sunniest days would be filled with the subfusc clouds of rain.

* If the repetition of the word “cunt” didn’t give it away, this video has an NSFW audio track. [via bbGadgets]


Microsoft’s “Unwrap Mosaics” Makes It Easy to Add Artifacts to Video [Virtual Mustaches]

Imagine being able to put a handlebar mustache on Grandma in a home video as easily as you could with Photoshop and a digital image. Microsoft showed off new technology called “Unwrap Mosaics” at the SIGGRAPH trade show in Los Angeles that could make this dream a reality without the need for fancy professional equipment.

By “unwrapping” or flattening a 3D image, the program simplifies the editing process, making it possible to add artifacts and other special effects with greater ease. The project is only in the research phase at the moment, but the long term goal would undoubtedly be to slap a UI on there and deliver it to a mustache hungry public. Hit the link for a videos and documentation on the Unwrap Mosaic technology. [Unwrap Mosaics]


Lenovo intros the monstrous ThinkPad W700, and we get our hands all over it

Filed under: Laptops

Like your laptops to be over-achievers? Like, the really annoyingly stacked variety of over-achiever? Enter Lenovo’s newest outrage — the ThinkPad W700. Containing enough computational artillery to level a small village, this for-creatives-only behemoth is designed for sheer pixel pushing… and little else. The system packs in two features aimed at graphic artists and photographers which are fairly unique to a laptop: a built in Wacom digitizer just to the right of the trackpad, and an on-board color calibrator. But what’s happening under the hood you ask? Well for starters the 17-incher sports the first ever Intel Quad Core Extreme CPU in a laptop (no word on speeds at this point) as well as the first showing of NVIDIA’s Quadro FX 3700 graphics chipset (with a hefty 1GB of memory on-board). The workstation also serves up dual hard drive bays configurable as RAID 0 or 1 (SSD or traditional disk, naturally), up to 8GB of DDR3 RAM, and an optional Blu-ray burner. Of course, that’s fully kitted out — the W700 starts at $2,978 and moves skyward from there. Take a look at our hands-on below and see the beast for yourself.

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More Meizu M8 images released, device itself still unreleased

Filed under: Cellphones


Say what you will about J. Wong and his band of merry imitators at Meizu, but they sure are sticklers for details, which has led to a number of delays and endless tweaks to their now infamous M8 phone. As you can see in this latest pic apparently let loose by none other than J. Wong himself, they now seem to be putting the finishing touches on the device’s web browser and, as you might have guessed, they aren’t exactly taking their inspiration from Nokia. Hit up the link below for a few more pics, just don’t expect to find any further word of an actual release date for the phone or anything like that.

[Thanks, Kevin]

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OMG! Air Traffic Controller Helps Land Plane With SMS [SMS]

In light of this thrilling aviation story out of Ireland today, let’s rethink this whole banning of the in-flight cell phone conversations, shall we? Sure, allowing for calls during that 6-hour red eye from San Francisco to Boston will bring out the jerkoff in a lot of people, but then again one of those jackasses could save your life! This was the case during a flight from Kerry to Jersey last Thursday, when a pilot lost all electrical power, radio and radar, and had to be guided in to land with nothing more than SMS and a quick-thinking air traffic controller. The plane landed safely, and the ATC is being heralded a hero, but cellphones on planes still sucks, albeit slightly less so than before. [Irish Times via Slashdot]


Steve Jobs: 60 million iPhone apps downloaded, confirms kill switch

Filed under: Cellphones, Portable Audio, Portable Video

Steve Jobs, presumably speaking from a hyperbaric chamber where he’s being nourished with an infusion of liquefied developers-souls before his next public appearance, had a few interesting tidbits about the AppStore for the Wall Street Journal this morning. Namely, users have downloaded some 60 million programs for the iPhone representing sales of about $30 million since the launch last month — a 30/70 revenue split between Apple and developers, respectively. “The thing’s going to crest a half billion soon,” Jobs added, “I’ve never seen anything like this in my career for software.” He went on to say that phone differentiation is no longer about radios and antennas (or uh, battery life) but about software. Steve also confirmed the controversial iPhone application kill switch in the event that Apple inadvertently approves a malicious program for distribution. Jobs said, “hopefully we never have to pull that lever, but we would be irresponsible not to have a lever like that to pull.” As to the $999.99 I Am Rich application, the dubious download that displayed nothing but a glowing red gem, pulling that from the store was a “judgment” call. Sure, but that doesn’t explain how it made it through the vetting process to begin with.

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Filed under: Robots, Transportation


Autonomous seafaring vehicles may not be quite as common as unmanned land or air vehicles, but Harbor Wing Technologies looks to be doing its small part to change that, with it now apparently pretty far along in the development of its self-named Autonomous Unmanned Surface Vehicle (or AUSV). Among other things, it employs a specially-designed “WingSail” that can rotate a full 360 degrees to let the vessel maneuver efficiently upwind or downwind, and it uses a custom-made guidance system that can relay vital navigational and situational data to a “semi-portable” command station, which can apparently also be used to pilot the vessel in a pinch. Be sure to head on past the break for an interview with Harbor Wing’s Ken Childress courtesy of Engineering TV, which also includes a glimpse of the current prototype in action.

[Via Engineering TV]

Continue reading Harbor Wing AUSV can sail into the sunset all by itself

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Via [Engadget]

Olympics Watching: Ultimate PC/HDTV Strategy Guide [Olympics]

The 2008 Olympics have begun, and now that we’ve had a few days to digest the coverage, we’ve found the best (and worst) things about watching the games online and on your TV. Those of us stuck here in America and not lucky enough to own Vista must deal with NBC’s often delayed event broadcasts. Sure, if it’s American basketball or track you’re looking for, you can find everything you need without stepping away from your HDTV set. But if you’ve waited four years to watch table tennis or want to see how that Latvia-Angola rivalry plays out, you’ll definitely have to use NBC’s streaming online player. Here’s a rundown of the tradeoffs between HDTV and NBC’s online viewer, and some helpful tips to keep you from getting too mired in the programming.

Viewing Experience
The Silverlight-based player runs well—even on a Mac—but its interface has a few rough spots. When it comes to content, there is no comparison—the web player will stream 2,200 hours of live video, where for most sports, only glorified clip roundups will appear on the actual TV. Quality is a different story, as you’d expect. The streamed video is blurry no matter what size you watch it in, even though its at 720×480—a far cry from full HD your TV can get. Also, while it’s understandable that NBC wouldn’t provide announcers on their streaming player for a North Korea vs. Nigeria soccer game, they don’t have announcers for any USA sports online, even big ones like basketball. Watching games without commentary can be painful, believe me. One more complaint: PowerPC Mac users are left out of the experience altogether, as Silverlight only supports Intel machines. [Thanks, downbythetracks!]Advantage: HDTV - Watch as much as you can on TV itself, but be aware of the delays.

Finding Content
When it comes to searching for live broadcasts, neither the streaming player nor HDTV are helpful at all. The TiVo guide says which sports will be shown, but doesn’t say if they are tape-delayed. To find that out, you’ll have to sort through NBC’s schedule, which displays “(LIVE ET/CT)” next to anything broadcast in real time. And sorry west-coasters; you’re totally SOL when it comes to live HDTV—everything is shown for you on a 3-hour tape delay.Then again, seeing the streaming player for the first time may tempt you to bust out the Rosetta Stone. It’s actually three players in one, starting with the standard player which is stuffed with ads, tabs, lists, menus and more. For this one, you’re best off browsing by channel (#1 in the pic up top), clicking the sport you’re interested in and seeing what videos are offered. A button in the corner of the video section (#2) directs you to the enhanced player, which is the best way to watch—it’s got a bigger video screen and is so frill and distraction-free even Frank Costanza would approve.

In the enhanced player, you can watch highlights (#3) and live content with picture-in-picture (#4), and swap between the two seamlessly. You can’t search for content in the enhanced player, so you must find it elsewhere and switch over. Finally, a button on the left (#5) takes you to the “Live Video Control Room” which offers the most hyped way to watch the sports you crave—four-channel multicasting. Advantage: Streaming player - It’s very convoluted, but you can’t argue with the amount of content on demand.
The Multi-Cast Experience
Gambling junkies and cubicle drones alike will love the streaming player’s multi-cast, which allows you to watch up to four events at once. For people trying to actually enjoy sports, the largest video is still too small to see a score, and the other three are barely the size of postage stamps. Swapping between games is easy, but if you expand one to the full-sized player, you lose your other streams, and have to to add them all over again when you return to the multi-cast. Also, sifting through content is unbearable; you can scroll through six videos at a time, but there are almost 200 up there right now, and there’s almost two weeks of competition left. Furthermore, you really need to make sure what you’re watching is actually live—even though the player looks like it is telling you what’s live, the schedule sometimes contradicts this.

HDTV has a multi-cast of its own, and it’s called “jumping from event to event”. Kudos to NBC’s Olympic editors—they seem to have an uncanny idea of when I get sick of gymnastics and want to switch over to volleyball. It’s not perfect, but it’s effortless and they do a good job with it. Advantage: Even - The streaming multi-cast is great in theory, but execution is pretty weak, though the ability to pick what you want to watch trumps HDTV.

Live Action
Figuring out what is live on TV is harder than figuring out what is live online. You generally have to read the fine print of NBC’s listings to find out what TV programs will be aired live. Helpful hint: If it doesn’t say live, then it’s probably not live. However, one advantage to HDTV is that you may have access to dedicated live basketball and soccer channels, depending on where you live. I just saw it for myself, and it’s not airing anything right now, but I have 12 hours of basketball to wake up to tomorrow and I haven’t been this excited in weeks.

You can sign up for alerts of both online and TV events via text message or e-mail. Those alerts don’t tell you which TV event is live. (On the flipside, alerts for online broadcast are mostly live, because otherwise they would already be available on demand.) The system sadly won’t allow you to set a repeating event by team or sport, but if there are games you MUST see—like USA and Spain basketball for me—this is the safest way to make sure you catch it all.

As seen with the USA-China basketball debacle, NBC has no business delaying broadcasts for Pacific time. Thanks to the internet, this old broadcasting habit looks increasingly lame. After all, even those of us without the dedicated HD channels have TiVos and alarm clocks, right? Those who were shut out are not totally out of luck though—if you tell the online service that you have an East Coast cable carrier, it will stream broadcasts in real time to you at the appropriate Eastern Time. (If you are confused, just remember to say your zipcode is 10001, and your carrier is Time Warner Cable.) Advantage: Streaming player - In some cases, the only way half the country can see things live is through the online system.

The Final Word
NBC’s done a fair job with their streaming player and satisfied years of pent-up frustration by serving such an unprecedented amount of Olympic coverage. But by trying to make things easier, the network seems to have made our lives harder. Diehards of weird sports like fencing or those who need their content more live than Bill O’Reilly can get something from online that they could never get from the tube. But the quality isn’t great and using it feels obtuse.

On the other hand, HDTV looks great and has announcers, which is crucial despite its lack of coverage and antiquated tape delay. While the streaming player is a revolutionary leap forward in terms of content, I can’t help feeling that it isn’t 100% ready for these Olympics, and that the games are still built around your TV set. To get the most complete experience you need to use both, but if you have a DVR and don’t mind delay then stick to your HDTV as much as possible. [NBC Olympic