Archive

Archive for September, 2008

Murata’s unicycling robot

September 30th, 2008 No comments

The CEATEC 2008 show in Japan kicks off with a look at Seiko, a robot that can balance on a single wheel. Developed by Murata, Seiko was developed to show off the company’s components.

Excerpted from:
Murata’s unicycling robot

Share/Save/Bookmark

iPhone app: WiFinder

September 30th, 2008 No comments

WiFinder provides an easy way to find available access points and how direct a connection to the Internet they provide.

Here is the original post:
iPhone app: WiFinder

Share/Save/Bookmark

Microsoft?s Mundie outlines the future of computing

September 29th, 2008 No comments

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.–Microsoft Chief Research and Strategy Officer Craig Mundie on Thursday offered a long-term view of where Microsoft and the world of computing are heading over the next few decades. Speaking at the MIT Emerging Technology Conference here, Mundie envisioned a 3D virtual world populated by virtual presences, using a combination of client and cloud services.

He called this next generation “spatial computing” and listed numerous attributes: many-core processors; parallel programming; seamlessly connected and fully productive; context-aware and model-based; personalized, humanistic, and adaptive; 3D and immersive; and utilizing speech, vision and gestures.

What comes next? Microsoft’s Craig Mundie says spatial computing.

(Credit: Dan Farber/CNET Networks)

Mundie gave a few examples from Microsoft Research to illustrate the concept of spatial computing. In a few months, the compay plans to test a new virtual reception assistant in some of its campus buildings. The assistant, which takes the form of an avatar, helps schedule shuttle reservations to get people to various locations across the 10-million-square-foot Redmond, Wash., campus.

The system includes array microphones and natural language processing by which the avatar listens to the subjects and then interacts with them in real time. The system has been programmed to differentiate people by their clothing. Someone in a suit, for instance, would more likely be a visitor and not a potential shuttle rider.

Microsoft’s prototype reception assistant system.

(Credit: Dan Farber/CNET Networks )

The prototype system is a resource hog, consuming 40 percent of its eight-core processor system even when idle. Eventually, Mundie said, such a system could be used for rural medical clinics.

“For a few thousand dollars you could put in an assistant who can guide robotic interaction,” he said. “There is a wealth of opportunity for this, and it will allow people to develop applications and change the way the bulk of the population interacts with computers.”

In another demo, Mundie offered a glimpse into the future of the live Web. He played out a scenario in which he was in an store, took a picture of a magazine cover on Northwest Indian art with his smartphone, and then placed the phone on a Microsoft Surface technology table when he got to his hotel. The pictures in the phone showed up on the surface table and he dragged them around. The system analyzed the image to determine how to use the photo as a way to pursue next steps in a virtual Web world. The system found the a digital version of the magazine and Mundie proceeded to explore magazine pages. From the magazine image of an art object, he went virtually to the store where the art object was on display.

The 3D store environment was stitched together with Photosynth technology and interactive. Mundie could “walk” through the store and have a text or voice conversation with a store representative or someone, such as his wife, via his buddy list. In addition, he could watch videos and examine 3D models of the art objects, spinning them around to look at all the different parts of a sculpture.

Then he showed how a smart handheld device could be used to navigate in a physical space. Pointing the device at a particular space would show local information, such as when buses were expected to arrive or what stores are having sales that would be of interest to the user based on their profile.

Mundie categorized this demo as an illustration of the power of the client and the cloud in spatial computing. “You have to have a to-and-fro between local and centralized data services,” he said.

Programming tools, which have been a strength of Microsoft, will play a crucial role in the emergence of spatial computing. To create a kind of parallel universe–a cyberspace version of the physical world–everyone has to contribute on a continuous basis, Mundie said. Sensors and users will be generating trillions of bits of data, which requires addressing concurrency and complexity in a more loosely coupled, distributed and asynchronous environment, he said.

“Our tools are not designed to address this level of system design,” Mundie explained. “We have to see a paradigm change in the way we write applications.”

(Credit: Microsoft)

Mundie also said that software development hasn’t graduated to become a formal engineering discipline. “The resilience of systems is not up to the task,” he said. “We have to master the transition to a parallel programming environment, with highly distributed, concurrent systems. It’s nascent at this point but it’s required to achieve these capabilities.”

In addition, creating a rich virtual environment that reflects the real world and is available to billions of people requires a lot of programmers. “If we want a million people to know how to do this, we have to mask complexity,” Mundie said. His goal is to program computers to have the equivalent of human senses that can operate well together. “That’s how we get to natural interfaces,” he said.

Mundie’s demos showed some progress in fulfilling Bill Gates’ dream of natural interfaces and seamless computing. The challenge for Microsoft will be turning lab demos into real products and services that can scale. With the Internet as the platform, and not Windows, Microsoft will have many more competitors, and partners, in its quest to realize the vision of spatial computing.

SOURCE

Read the original:
Microsoft?s Mundie outlines the future of computing

Share/Save/Bookmark

CONE FINDS THAT AMERICANS EXPECT COMPANIES TO HAVE A PRESENCE IN SOCIAL MEDIA

September 29th, 2008 No comments

CONE FINDS THAT AMERICANS EXPECT COMPANIES TO HAVE A PRESENCE IN SOCIAL MEDIA

Originally posted here:
CONE FINDS THAT AMERICANS EXPECT COMPANIES TO HAVE A PRESENCE IN SOCIAL MEDIA

Share/Save/Bookmark

Is Google Spreading Itself Too Thin?

September 26th, 2008 No comments

Is Google Spreading Itself Too Thin?

More here:
Is Google Spreading Itself Too Thin?

Share/Save/Bookmark

http://www.myspace.com/straightlinestitch

September 26th, 2008 No comments

Continued here:
http://www.myspace.com/straightlinestitch

Share/Save/Bookmark

Dreamtheater : Constant Motion

September 26th, 2008 No comments

Excerpt from:
Dreamtheater : Constant Motion

Share/Save/Bookmark

Next-Gen E-Readers Arrive

September 26th, 2008 No comments

Andy Greenberg, 09.18.08, 6:04 PM ET

.headirexreader { background-color: #336699; color: #ffffff; font-weight: bold; padding:2px;}.borderirexreader{ border:1px solid #003366;}.bordercolorirexreader { background-color: #336699;}.rowirexreader { background-color: #ffffff;}.row1irexreader { background-color: #ffffff;}.row2irexreader{ background-color: #efefef;}.ruleirexreader { background-color: #cccccc;}.spaceirexreader { background-color: #ffffff;}

iRex Reader 1000
pic


.headplasticlogic { background-color: #336699; color: #ffffff; font-weight: bold; padding:2px;}.borderplasticlogic{ border:1px solid #003366;}.bordercolorplasticlogic { background-color: #336699;}.rowplasticlogic { background-color: #ffffff;}.row1plasticlogic { background-color: #ffffff;}.row2plasticlogic{ background-color: #efefef;}.ruleplasticlogic { background-color: #cccccc;}.spaceplasticlogic { background-color: #ffffff;}

Plastic Logic Reader
pic


.head1203ebooks { background-color: #336699; color: #ffffff; font-weight: bold; padding:2px;}.border1203ebooks{ border:1px solid #003366;}.bordercolor1203ebooks { background-color: #336699;}.row1203ebooks { background-color: #ffffff;}.row11203ebooks { background-color: #ffffff;}.row21203ebooks{ background-color: #efefef;}.rule1203ebooks { background-color: #cccccc;}.space1203ebooks { background-color: #ffffff;}

pic
In Pictures: The Future Of E-Books


var fdcAuthorQuery = “?famname=Greenberg&givname=Andy&url=2008/09/18/ereader-kindle-irex-tech-egang08-cx_ag_0918irex”;
.headpopvideos { background-color: #336699; color: #ffffff; font-weight: bold; padding:2px;}.borderpopvideos{ border:1px solid #336699;}.bordercolorpopvideos { background-color: #336699;}.rowpopvideos { background-color: #ffffff;}.row1popvideos { background-color: #ffffff;}.row2popvideos{ background-color: #efefef;}.rulepopvideos { background-color: #ffffff;}.spacepopvideos { background-color: #ffffff;}

Popular Videos
Ironman COO
Salad Days Of Gates And Zuckerberg
Short-Term Skeptic, Long-Term Optimist
Telework Wherever
Collecting Currency In Crisis

.headpopstories { background-color: #003399; color: #ffffff; font-weight: bold; padding:2px;}.borderpopstories{ border:1px solid #003399;}.bordercolorpopstories { background-color: #003399;}.rowpopstories { background-color: #ffffff;}.row1popstories { background-color: #ffffff;}.row2popstories{ background-color: #efefef;}.rulepopstories { background-color: #cccccc;}.spacepopstories { background-color: #ffffff;}

Most Popular Stories
Video Piracy–Without The Piracy
Spore’s Piracy Problem
Filtering Viruses Through The Cloud
Five Ways To Cut Energy Bills
Young Workers, Virtual Problems

Amazon’s Kindle was fun. Now it’s time for electronic readers to get to work.

On Monday, Netherlands-based iRex Technologies is slated to unveil the iRex Reader 1000, the first in a wave of e-reader devices that promise bigger screens and improved interfaces and functionality. And unlike Kindle or Sony’s Reader, this second generation of e-readers aims to bring innovative E-ink display technology to the more demanding, and possibly more lucrative, world of business.

The iRex Reader 1000 offers a 10.2-inch diagonal E-Inkscreen, far larger than Kindle’s 6-inch screen or even iRex’s own 8.1-inch diagonal iLiad, its last e-book model. That stretched display is designed to work with any file format, be it an e-book, a full-sized PDF, a Word document or HTML. Like earlier iRex devices, it sports a stylus and touch screen for taking notes and marking documents.
[See "The Future Of E-Books."]

The new reader shares the Kindle’s passive E-ink display technology, which uses real pigment rather than a filtered liquid crystal display to produce black and white tones that make it easily visible in bright sunlight. It also significantly reduces eyestrain even after hours of reading. The E-ink technology also uses just a fraction of the energy typically needed for comparably sized screens, extending the device’s battery life to between 60 and 80 hours.

At the mid-September gadget conference, DEMO, Mountain View, Calif.-based start-up Plastic Logic announced its own business e-reader prototype–an 8.5-by-11-inch E-ink touchscreen that weighs just ounces. The device is no thicker than a legal pad and can run for up to two weeks without a charge.

Although Plastic Logic has yet to name its new reader, which won’t go on sale until the second quarter of 2009, the company’s chief marketing officer, Joe Eschbach, touts it as a small and sturdy replacement for an entire briefcase.

The focus on business users, argues Eschbach, could mean a far larger market than the 380,000 or so Kindles that Citigroup estimates Amazon will sell this year. “The opportunity on the business side is much larger than on the leisure reading side,” Eschbach says. “The average person only reads two or three books a year. But the same person probably reads several thousand pages of Word, Excel and Powerpoint files at work.”

Business-targeted readers also come with business-sized price tags. Though Plastic Logic won’t yet reveal the price for its device, iRex says its basic reader will start at $650. (By contrast, Kindle sells for $360.) Adding a writable screen to the iRex reader will cost another $100, and equipping it with wi-fi, Bluetooth and a 3G cell connection for downloading documents will raise the price to $850.

But nonbusiness consumers, take heart: Cheaper, book-focused e-readers are also likely to be revamped soon. Sony has all but confirmed that it will announce a new version of its Reader in early October, though it won’t share any details. Amazon is rumored to be working on a next-generation Kindle, though the company says it won’t be released before the end of the year.

Even with its outsized price, the new iRex reader won’t offer two features also missing from other electronic books: color and video capability. In fact, the 16 graytone screen takes about eight-tenths of a second to refresh when loading a new page. Plastic Logic’s device has similar limitations. E-Ink enthusiasts will likely have to wait until 2009 for color E-ink and as late as 2012 for video, says Russ Wilcox, the chief executive of Cambridge, Mass.-based E-Ink, which developed the black and white pigment now used in every paper-like reader. [See "The Future Of E-Books."]

But Plastic Logic’s and iRex’s devices push e-paper development beyond simply reading letter-sized PDFs, says Wilcox. He argues that the two readers signal E-ink’s transition to larger-format digital media that include magazines and newspapers.

“First we had a wave of e-books. Now we have a wave of something closer to e-newspapers,” Wilcox says. “E-ink is the only way to create that size of display that’s thin, rugged and has a long battery life. As the capabilities and features go up and up and up, the applications will keep growing.”

SOURCE

More:
Next-Gen E-Readers Arrive

Share/Save/Bookmark

Week in Review – 9/26

September 26th, 2008 No comments

T-Mobile introduces the first Android phone, a prototype bus steers without a driver, WiMAX sets to launch and gadgets are on display in New York.

Go here to see the original:
Week in Review – 9/26

Share/Save/Bookmark

Touring the hacker underground

September 25th, 2008 No comments

Tom Rusin of Affinion Security Center dives into the chat rooms used by thieves to trade credit card and other stolen personal information.

View post:
Touring the hacker underground

Share/Save/Bookmark

T-Mobile introduces G1, first phone to use Android

September 23rd, 2008 No comments

At a press conference in New York, T-Mobile and Google introduced the G1, the first mobile phone to use Google’s Android software platform. It will be available in the U.S. in October and in other markets beginning in November.

Original post:
T-Mobile introduces G1, first phone to use Android

Share/Save/Bookmark

Enterprise knowledge sharing in a Web 2.0 world

September 23rd, 2008 No comments

How blogs, Del.icio.us, RSS feeds, e-mail, intranets and other Web 2.0 assets can be tied together to share corporate knowledge.

Read the original:
Enterprise knowledge sharing in a Web 2.0 world

Share/Save/Bookmark

Interop, Mobile Buisness and Web 2.0 shows

September 22nd, 2008 No comments

New York’s Jacob Javits center played host to three conferences at once this week: Interop, a network focused enterprise technology show; the Mobile Business conference, and the Web 2.0 conference. Security and reliability was a key theme for vendor

Read the original post:
Interop, Mobile Buisness and Web 2.0 shows

Share/Save/Bookmark

VMware CEO Paul Maritz on the new Virtual Data Center OS

September 19th, 2008 No comments

Facing new competition from Microsoft, VMware unveiled a sweeping initiative called the Virtual Data Center Operating System.

See the rest here:
VMware CEO Paul Maritz on the new Virtual Data Center OS

Share/Save/Bookmark

Week in Review – 9/19

September 18th, 2008 No comments

HP prepares to lay off workers, NYC hosts 3 tech conferences, 2 new digital cameras come out of Japan, VMworld is on in Las Vegas, American Airlines may need to filter in-flight WiFi and PDAs prove to be very addictive.

Originally posted here:
Week in Review – 9/19

Share/Save/Bookmark