NEW NET Weekly List for 26 Mar 2013
Below is the final list of technology news and issues for the Tuesday, 26 March 2013, NEW NET (NorthEast Wisconsin Network for Entrepreneurism and Technology) 7:00 - 9:00 PM weekly gathering at Sergio's Restaurant, 2639 South Oneida Street, Appleton, Wisconsin, USA.
The ‘net
1.
The Rare Disease Search
Engine That Outperforms Google http://www.technologyreview.com/view/512606/the-rare-disease-search-engine-that-outperforms-google/ “…Rare diseases are inherently hard to
diagnose. According to the European Organisation for Rare Disease, 25 per cent
of diagnoses are delayed by between 5 and 30 years…The problem, of course, is
that common-or-garden search engines are
not optimised for this process. Google, for example, considers pages important
if they are linked to by other important pages, the basis of its famous
PageRank algorithm. However, rare diseases by definition are unlikely to have a
high profile on the web. What’s more, searches are likely to be plagued with
returns from all sorts of irrelevant sources…Radu Dragusin at the Technical
University of Denmark and a few pals…have set up a bespoke search engine
dedicated to the diagnosis of rare diseases called FindZebra, a name based on
the common medical slang for a rare disease. After comparing the results from
this engine against the same searches on Google, they show that it is
significantly better at returning relevant results. The magic sauce in FindZebra
is the index it uses to hunt for results. These guys have created this index by
crawling a specially selected set of curated
databases on rare diseases. These include the Online Mendelian
Inheritance in Man database, the Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center
and Orphanet. They then use the open source information retrieval tool
Indri to search this index via a website
with a conventional search engine interface. The result is FindZebra…”
2.
Disaster-Proof Your Data
with Online Backup http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2288745,00.asp “…While it's not a bad idea to simply back
your precious files up to an external hard drive, an online backup service
offers the advantage of securely store your files at off-site server locations,
so that your data stays intact and available even if your local disks are
stolen or your premises are struck by damage. And with more and more emphasis
on "cloud computing," it only makes sense that backup should take
advantage of this hot trend in technology. Below we take a close look at ten of
the most popular and innovative cloud backup services to help you choose the
one that's right for your needs and budget…”
3.
If You Want To Be Awesome
At Emails, Add Yesware To Your Gmail http://www.forbes.com/sites/alextaub/2013/01/17/if-you-want-to-be-awesome-at-emails-add-yesware-to-your-gmail-today/
“One of the biggest problems in business
development, partnerships, and sales is managing your pipeline. A close second
is managing, tracking, and keep up to date with your email inbox. I’ve tried
many tools to help both issues but each has had its shortcomings…a friend
tipped me off to a company called Yesware. With his endorsement I immediately
headed over and added it to my business and personal Gmail accounts. My inbox
was transformed into a hyper-aware entity. As my day commenced I started to
realize that I was getting smarter by the minute. That really important email I
sent in the morning to a team member was still sitting in their inbox,
unopened. I decided to head over to their desk to talk about the important
matter I had emailed them about. Efficient, smart, and useful. I’ve only been a
user for a week, but I’ve already upgraded to a paid account…” http://www.yesware.com/plans-and-pricing
4.
A new Google Docs
alternative: open source OX Documents http://www.pcworld.com/article/2031457/ready-for-a-new-google-docs-alternative-meet-open-source-ox-documents.html “As the free trial period for Microsoft
Office 2013 draws to a close, it's a pretty safe bet that more users than ever
are thinking long and hard about whether or not to buy or subscribe…soon there
will be yet another contender to consider…OX Documents will be a productivity
suite that's both open source and
browser-based, thus combining a bit of each of those leading alternatives. OX
Documents will eventually be a cloud-based office productivity suite, and it's
due to be fully complete and full-featured later this year. For now, though,
Open-Xchange is focusing first on OX Text, its in-browser word processing
component. OX Text offers direct editing capabilities for both Microsoft Word
.docx files and OpenOffice or LibreOffice .odt files, but there's also viewing
support for all major file formats…Multiple users can also view and edit the
same document in real time using OX Text, allowing for structured
collaboration…” http://gigaom.com/2013/03/20/meet-ox-text-a-collaborative-non-destructive-alternative-to-google-docs/
5.
Pheed: The Social Network
That's Winning Over Teens from Facebook and Twitter http://news.yahoo.com/pheed-social-network-thats-winning-over-teens-facebook-092032083--abc-news-tech.html “As Facebook slowly rolls out its updated
News Feed design, featuring content-sorted feeds dedicated to photos and music,
a popular social networking alternative has emerged. Pheed, a small start-up
out of Los Angeles, is not only capitalizing on dedicated photo and audio
streams, but it also offers feeds for text, video and live broadcasts, not to
mention an in-your-face homepage … tattooed hands interlaced behind a young
man's head boldly announce this is not your grandma's social network. In
February, Pheed became the No. 1 free social networking app in Apple's App
Store, ruling the charts ahead of competitors like Twitter and Facebook for
more than a week. The audience driving Pheed's spike in downloads? Young adults
in their late teens, a demographic often said to be losing interest in
Facebook. Eighty-four percent of Pheed's users are ranking in at between the
ages of 15 and 24…”
Security,
Privacy & Digital Controls
6.
Ex-Googlers Train Machine
Army to Sift Out Crooks http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2013/03/siftscience/ “Here’s a tidbit for the online retailers out
there: If a shopper on your website is using Firefox with Windows XP, the odds
of him being a fraudster go up sixfold. That’s a trend mined by the machine
learning geeks at Sift Science, a San Francisco startup that’s taking some of
the same techniques that Google uses to cut down on abuse on its ad network and
making them available to smaller websites…Machine learning lets you adapt to
the different fraud patterns you see on different websites.” Fraud is a big
problem for internet merchants, who often bear the financial cost of fraudulent
credit card charges. The problem is that many fraud detection services rely on
a small number of tried-and-true rules to spot scammers. The criminals quickly
figure them out, and it’s often tricky to stay on top of new techniques…Sift
Science uses Amazon’s cloud to spin up giant compute farms that, er, sift
though mountains of data and pull out the emerging fraud trends that other people
might miss. Here’s another example: if a web surfer that happens to have spent
$4 or less online in the past week, the odds of them being a fraudster go up
78-fold. Any website can sign up for Sift’s service in a few minutes, and start
getting a small number of fraud scores — 5,000 per month — for free…”
7.
Cyberattack
simultaneously crashes computer networks at South Korean banks and TV
broadcasters http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/03/20/south-korean-banks-and-media-report-computer-network-crash/ “A cyberattack caused computer networks at
major South Korean banks and top TV broadcasters to crash simultaneously
Wednesday, paralyzing bank machines across the country and prompting
speculation of North Korean involvement. Screens went blank at 2 p.m. (0500
GMT), the state-run Korea Information Security Agency said, and more than seven
hours later some systems were still down…some experts suspected a cyberattack
orchestrated by Pyongyang. The rivals have exchanged threats amid joint
U.S.-South Korean military drills and in the wake of U.N. sanctions meant to
punish North Korea over its nuclear test last month. The network paralysis took
place just days after North Korea accused South Korea and the U.S. of staging a
cyberattack that shut down its websites for two days last week…”
8.
Viruses, Trojans, and
worms, oh my: The basics on malware http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/02/viruses-trojans-and-worms-oh-my-the-basics-on-malware/ “Some say we're living in a
"post-PC" world, but malware on PCs is still a major problem for home
computer users and businesses. The examples are everywhere: In November, we
reported that malware was used to steal information about one of Japan's newest
rockets and upload it to computers controlled by hackers. Critical systems at
two US power plants were recently found infected with malware spread by USB
drives. Malware known as "Dexter" stole credit card data from
point-of-sale terminals at businesses. And espionage-motivated computer threats
are getting more sophisticated and versatile all the time. In this second
installment in the Ars Guide to Online Security, we'll cover the basics for
those who may not be familiar with the different types of malware that can
affect computers. Malware comes in a variety of types, including viruses,
worms, and Trojans…” http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/01/keep-it-secret-keep-it-safe-a-beginners-guide-to-web-safety/
9.
How I became a password
cracker http://arstechnica.com/security/2013/03/how-i-became-a-password-cracker/ “At the beginning of a sunny Monday morning
earlier this month, I had never cracked a password. By the end of the day, I
had cracked 8,000. Even though I knew password cracking was easy, I didn't know
it was ridiculously easy—well, ridiculously easy once I overcame the urge to
bash my laptop with a sledgehammer and finally figured out what I was doing. My
journey into the Dark-ish Side began during a chat with our security editor,
Dan Goodin, who remarked in an offhand fashion that cracking passwords was
approaching entry-level "script kiddie stuff." This got me thinking,
because—though I understand password cracking conceptually—I can't hack my way
out of the proverbial paper bag. I'm the very definition of a "script
kiddie," someone who needs the simplified and automated tools created by
others to mount attacks that he couldn't manage if left to his own devices…Could
I, using only free tools and the resources of the Internet, successfully…Find a
password cracker…Successfully crack at least one password…In less than a day of
work? I could. And I walked away from the experiment with a visceral sense of
password fragility. Watching your own password fall in less than a second is
the sort of online security lesson everyone should learn at least once—and it
provides a free education in how to build a better password…”
Mobile
Computing & Communicating
10.
Your Next Smartphone
Screen May Be Made of Sapphire http://www.technologyreview.com/news/512411/your-next-smartphone-screen-may-be-made-of-sapphire/ “Manufactured sapphire—a material that’s used
as transparent armor on military vehicles—could become cheap enough to replace
the glass display covers on mobile phones. That could mean smartphone screens
that don’t crack when you drop them and can’t be scratched with keys, or even
by a concrete sidewalk. Sapphire, a crystalline form of aluminum oxide,
probably won’t ever be as cheap as Gorilla Glass, the durable material from
Corning that’s used to make screens on iPhones and other smartphones. A Gorilla
Glass display costs less than $3, while a sapphire display would cost about
$30. But that could fall below $20 in a couple of years thanks to increased
competition and improving technology…And since sapphire performs better than
glass, that price could make it cheap enough to compete…” http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/09/ff-corning-gorilla-glass/all/
11.
T-Mobile gets rid of
contracts for cellphones http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/03/25/3305649/t-mobile-gets-rid-of-contracts.html “T-Mobile USA, the struggling No. 4 cellphone
company, is ditching plans centered on familiar two-year contracts in favor of
selling phones on installment plans. T-Mobile is the first major U.S. carrier
to break from the contract model. The company changed its website over the
weekend to begin selling the new plans. It plans to lay out the rationale for the
change on Tuesday at an event in New York, which could also reveal when
T-Mobile will start selling the iPhone. T-Mobile has been losing subscribers
from its contract-based plans for more than two years, chiefly to bigger
competitors Verizon Wireless and AT&T. T-Mobile has done better with
contract-less, prepaid plans, but those aren't as profitable for the company…”
12.
WifiSlam: How indoor
location could find its way into Apple services “The fate of an acquired startup is never
certain, and that’s especially true at secretive Apple. This question hangs
over its latest acquisition, a small Silicon Valley indoor location company
called WifiSlam. Apple may have simply wanted its Stanford-educated founders,
or — more likely — it wants to integrate WifiSlam’s technology into its mobile
products and develop the technology further. Here’s what WifiSlam says its
service does: Allow your smartphone to pinpoint its location (and the location
of your friends) in real-time to 2.5m accuracy using only ambient WiFi signals
that are already present in buildings. We are building the next generation of
location-based mobile apps that, for the first time, engage with users at the
scale that personal interaction actually takes place…WifiSlam uses a
combination of Wi-Fi hotspots, as well as a mobile device’s compass, GPS and
gyroscope to navigate indoors. (It’s not entirely unique — other companies,
like Wifarer — are working on similar indoor positioning technology.)…While
it’s not very likely to pop up in the next version of iOS, here are a couple of
ideas to give an example of how Apple some day could integrate WifiSlam’s
capabilities to augment or improve Apple services as they stand today…”
Apps
13.
Tablets Will Beat
Smartphones In App Revenues By 2018 http://www.android.gs/tablets-will-beat-smartphones-in-app-revenues-2018/ “We all have at least a smartphone or a
tablet, or in some case both of them, which we use in our everyday life…as expected,
the smartphone market is much bigger than the tablet market, as tablets are
quite new in this field…how do you make the same smartphone fit to two
different persons who are living in different parts of the world and who’s
passions are not the same. Well, the answer is trough apps. Applications are
those programs which makes your stock smartphone to best fit your needs…In 5
years more exactly, tablets are going to generate more revenue than
smartphones, which means that tablets are also going to be sold much better…tablet
app market generated $8.8 billion revenue in 2013, making it over a third of
total app revenue, while smartphones apps generated $16.4 billion, around 75%.
To sum up, in the first 2 and half months of the year, apps generated $25.2 billion,
35% from tablets and 75% from smartphones…And the power up is within the
low-cost tablets which are now a threat to smartphones, as they can be
accessible to anybody and will generate more profit from apps. It is estimated that in 2018 the tablet
market will generate more than 50% of total revenue from apps, and combined,
smartphones and tablets will reach over $92 billion…”
14.
Ten Middle and High
School Mobile App Design Teams Win National Competition http://thejournal.com/articles/2013/03/20/ten-middle-and-high-school-mobile-app-design-teams-win-national-competition.aspx “Ten teams of middle and high school students
have won a national mobile app design competition and will now work to refine
their creations with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab.
Winning teams and the MIT Media Lab will develop the apps to make them
available for download from the Google Play Store. The students will learn how
to use the MIT App Inventor tool and the basics of coding…The Verizon
Innovative App Challenge was created by the Verizon Foundation in partnership
with the Technology Student Association to encourage middle school and high
school students, working with a faculty advisor, to use their science,
technology, engineering, and math (STEM) knowledge, their ingenuity, and their
creativity to come up with an original mobile app concept that incorporates STEM
and addresses a need or problem in their school or community…”
15.
How to track lost Laptops
and Smartphones with Prey http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/how-to/laptop/3437205/how-track-lost-laptops-smartphones-with-prey/ “Few situations are quite as terrifying as
having to leave your laptop at a café table for a quick visit to the restroom –
and with good reason. Theft is a nasty, but ubiquitous risk. Luckily, by
installing Prey, you can track, control and find lost devices if should ever
come to that. Here's how…Prey is an open source security tool that can not only
locate your laptop and smartphone remotely via GPS, but is also able to subtly
control key functions and give you the option of locking them down completely.
In short, if the tool has been installed on a device that has gone missing, you
can head to Prey's website and report it as stolen. Once the thief connects to
the internet, Prey will regularly send you e-mails with data such as the
approximate location of your device, a screenshot of the current desktop
activity and several webcam or smartphone photos, if possible. Alternatively,
you can also activate Prey with an SMS (containing “GO PREY” by default) if you
are using it on a Smartphone and wish to get immediate results…”
16.
Sherpa, The Latest
Personal Assistant App, Focuses On Location http://www.forbes.com/sites/tomiogeron/2013/03/25/sherpa-the-latest-personal-assistant-app-focuses-on-location/
“Personal assistant apps are the latest
flavor of utopian vision from tech startups. The promise of these services is
to sift through people’s deluge of emails, documents and calendar events to
extract actionable insights, and provide that information exactly when they
need it…Sherpa gathers users’ location data, such as commuting routes over
time. Then the app can check traffic and notify users if there is bad traffic
on their routes and suggest alternatives. The app can also remind you when it’s
time to leave for your next meeting, based on the distance to the location and
the traffic. When users go to the airport, Sherpa will gather all relevant
information, such as airline tickets, hotel and rental car, for quick access.
It also tells you if a rain storm is coming…Where Sherpa gets really
interesting is its use of location without requiring any user input. Because
Sherpa focuses on location, it can identify locations and actions, even when
addresses are not entered into a calendar. For example, if you have a piano
lesson every week at a certain location (and you have marked it in your
calendar) Sherpa knows the general location of that lesson. Then it can remind
you to leave for your piano lesson without you having ever entered the address
in your calendar or in Sherpa…” http://www.technologyreview.com/news/512781/predictive-smartphone-assistant-gives-you-a-heads-up/
17.
5 Free Smartphone Apps
That Will Earn You Money http://money.usnews.com/money/blogs/my-money/2013/03/12/5-free-smartphone-apps-that-will-earn-you-money “Smartphone applications have the power to
make our lives easier and often more enjoyable. Many also facilitate you
earning money directly through your smartphone. Here are five free apps that
can lend a hand to your bank account: iBotta. Using iBotta…Receipt Hog…Saving
Star…iPinion…GigWalk…These five apps will take some time to set up and get
familiar with. However, once you get past the introductory stage, they have the
potential to put a little extra cash in your wallet each month…”
18.
Apps Outpacing Browsers
On Smartphones 7:2 http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/196317/apps-outpacing-browsers-on-smartphones-72.html “U.S. consumers now spend 1 in every 10
discretionary dollars online -- about $190 billion overall in 2012, but it
turns out that those dollars go more through apps than search engines and browsers…Mobile
browsing isn't dead, but it happens more on tablets, compared with smartphones.
App engagement is 7 times higher for consumers compared with browsing on
iPhones, but only 2 times more for iPad owners. Marketers must begin thinking
about innovative ways to increase search functions in apps. Consumers have
demonstrated a clear preference for engaging with content on smartphones via
apps, accounting for 4 out of 5 mobile minutes, rather than mobile browsers…”
SkyNet
19.
Is “Keep” a Google
version of Evernote? http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2013/03/google-keep/
“…Google Keep — a long-overdue app for
creating lists and reminders…is essentially Google’s answer to Evernote and the
Post-It…Keep is Google’s first mobile app focused on solving either of these
problems…Keep is integrated with Google Drive…You can type out a reminder or
list using the Keep Android app, which landed in Google Play on Wednesday…or on
the web at drive.google.com/keep. Aside from tapping out a note, you can also
store photos in the app, and you can record voice notes, which Keep then
transcribes into text, so you can read or listen to them later. If you snap a
photo in the app, you can then edit it using all of Android’s built-in camera
features (cropping, color balancing, photo filters and borders). Using
Android’s sharing features, you share a photo by e-mail, text messaging,
Picasa, Google+, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Path, Dropbox and even Amazon’s
Send to Kindle feature…there’s also a search function, so you can find the
Keeps you kept, and you can color code what you’ve got in a variety of hues.
The app sorts everything in a style that is reminiscent of Pinterest or Pocket.
It looks great and it’s super easy to use. Want to move a reminder to the top
of your mosaic? Just drag and drop, and tap to get in and edit. You can also
archive or delete any reminder once you’re done with it. It’s all pretty
painless and feels like something Google should have offered up years ago. Keep
is only compatible with phones and tablets running Android 4.0 Ice Cream
Sandwich or newer, and as of now, there are no Keep apps for iOS, Windows Phone
or any other mobile operating systems…” http://howto.cnet.com/8301-11310_39-57575465-285/get-started-with-google-keep/
20.
Sorry Google; you can
Keep it to yourself http://gigaom.com/2013/03/20/sorry-google-you-can-keep-it-to-yourself/ “Google today launched Keep, an app that
allows you to save things, clip stuff from the web, hoard notes and what not
and put them all onto your Google Drive. Yup, you guessed it — it is an
imitation to Evernote and many other such applications. It is a good thing that
Google has decided to compete with the likes of Evernote — it validates their
market. It might actually be good, or even better than Evernote. But I still
won’t use Keep. You know why? Google Reader. I spent about seven years of my
online life on that service. I sent feedback, used it to annotate information
and they killed it like a butcher slaughters a chicken. No conversation — dead.
The service that drives more traffic than Google+ was sacrificed because it
didn’t meet some vague corporate goals; users — many of them life long — be
damned. Looking from that perspective, it is hard to trust Google to keep an
app alive. What if I spend months using the app, and then Google decides it
doesn’t meet some arbitrary objective? Evernote has my data and frankly, I’m
glad to pay them to keep it because they are who they are…Evernote is focused
on making the service better. And it keeps that focus every year…”
21.
Google Summer of Code
applications due Mar 29 http://google-opensource.blogspot.de/2013/03/mentoring-organization-applications-now.html “Interested in finding bright, enthusiastic
new contributors to your open source project? Apply to be a mentoring
organization in the Google Summer of Code program! We are excited to announce
the organization application period is now open…Google Summer of Code is a
program designed to pair university students from around the world with mentors
at open source projects in such varied fields as academic research, language
translations, content management systems, games, and operating systems. Since
2005, over 6,000 students from 90 countries have completed the Google Summer of
Code program with the support of over 350 mentoring organizations. Students
gain exposure to real-world software development while earning a stipend for
their work and an opportunity to explore areas related to their academic
pursuits, thus “flipping bits, not burgers” during their school break. In
return, mentoring organizations have the opportunity to identify and attract
new developers to their projects as these students often continue their work
with the organizations after Google Summer of Code concludes…The deadline for
applying to be a mentoring organization for Google Summer of Code is Friday,
March 29th…”
22.
Open Letter to Google:
Google Alerts Broken http://venturebeat.com/2013/03/21/google-alerts-broken-useless-and-slowed-to-a-trickle/ “The Internet is a massive, tangled, churning
web of content, and for a long time , Google Alerts was a key navigational tool
that kept users on top of things that were relevant specifically to them.
However over recent months, a series of reports have surfaced that indicate
Google Alerts is no longer working as it should. People on online forums,
publications, and blogs say their Google Alerts have dwindled to the point of
uselessness. Trade publication The Financial Brand reported that its Google
Alerts have slowed to a “trickle,” with the volume decreasing by at least 80%
and dropping from 20-35 emails per day with 4- 12 results down to 4-8 emails
per day with 1-3 results each. Furthermore, “the results are crummier than
ever.”…“The Financial Brand has frequently encouraged bank and credit union
marketing executives around the world to use Google Alerts. This advice is now
fully retracted. Google Alerts was once a very important and efficient tool to
monitor mentions of your brand on the web. It is now so unreliable that it has
been rendered effectively useless…”
23.
YouTube reaches 1 billion
unique monthly users http://thenextweb.com/google/2013/03/21/youtube-reaches-1-billion-unique-monthly-users-almost-15-of-planet-earth/ “Google has announced that YouTube is now at
1 billion monthly users. Assuming Wolfram Alpha’s estimate of 6.79 billion
people on Earth, that means roughly 14.7% of the world watches something on
YouTube every month…Google says that the video site reaches almost one out of
every two people on the Internet. Its monthly viewership would make it the
planet’s third-largest country, behind China and India. These feats are all the
more interesting considering that Google was criticized for over-paying for the
site when it bought YouTube for $1.65 billion in 2006. It’s fair to say that
the acquisition has proven to be a shrewd one, with YouTube far and away the
Web’s most popular video site…”
24.
Chrome OS and Android
will not merge http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-57575527-93/schmidt-chrome-android-to-stay-separate-but-may-overlap/ “Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt said
Android and Chrome will stay separate…Schmidt said that despite changes to the
mobile operating system's leadership, Android and Chrome will not be combined,
according to Reuters, which was in attendance. Schmidt did say, however, that
there might be more overlap between the operating systems…Android is the
world's most popular mobile operating system. Chrome OS is Google's cloud-based
answer to more traditional operating systems, like Windows and OS X. Talk of
the possibility of Chrome and Android coming together arose last week when
Sundar Pichai, Google's senior vice president of engineering in charge of
Chrome succeeded Andy Rubin as head of the search giant's mobile operating
system. Pichai will also remain in charge of Chrome…” http://ostatic.com/blog/why-google-wont-merge-chrome-os-and-android
25.
West Virginia lawmakers
seek to ban Google Glass on the road http://news.cnet.com/8301-17852_3-57575954-71/dont-glass-and-drive-lawmakers-seek-to-ban-google-glass-on-the-road/ “…I received a curious message last night
from Gary G. Howell, a Republican in the West Virginia Legislature. It read:
"Your article on Google Glass prompted this bill." The only bills I'd
ever previously inspired were $20 ones accompanied by the words: "Here's
money for a taxi. Get out of here." So I wondered what sort of bill this could
be. It transpires that West Virginia has decided to think proactively about
Google Glass. This bill seeks to make it illegal to drive while "using a
wearable computer with head mounted display."…”
26.
Google using ‘white
spaces’ spectrum to deliver Wi-Fi to South African schools http://news.yahoo.com/google-using-white-spaces-spectrum-deliver-wi-fi-024446644.html “We’ve already seen the potential to deploy
so-called “Super Wi-Fi” networks over white spaces spectrum in the United
States and now Google (GOOG) is working to use the same technology to deliver
Internet connectivity to ten schools in South Africa. The Verge reports that
“launching the test network is Google’s most direct effort yet to demonstrate
the potential of white spaces… as a means of delivering faster internet
connectivity to the developing world and other rural areas.” For those
unfamiliar with spectrum jargon, “white spaces” are bands of unused television
spectrum that let signals travel farther and penetrate more deeply into
buildings than the standard 2.4GHz and 5GHz Wi-Fi spectrum bands…”
General
Technology
27.
Best New
Device to Find Your Keys http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/upgrade-your-life/best-device-keys-161008580.html “Imagine a device that could find your keys
with the push of a button or track down your wallet in seconds when you’re
frantically searching for it. Those devices have arrived, but they are not all
equal. We test the competing technologies that want to help you find your lost
keys and wallet. For a few years, there have been home finders that let you
attach a tag to your keys or the remote and then use a base station to trigger
a beeping in the tag. Your ears lead you to the missing device. But these only
work when you have the base station near. They use watch-type batteries that
last between 3 and 12 months depending on how often you use the finders…Brookstone…Click
N’ Dig…BlueTooth Key Finders…Cobra Tag…The BIKN…THE WINNER: The Wallet TrackR…”
28.
Gadget Gets
Under the Hood to Bring Analytics to Driving http://www.technologyreview.com/news/512211/gadget-gets-under-the-hood-to-bring-analytics-to-driving/ “You probably have a rough idea of how much
you spend on gas each week, but chances are you don’t calculate the cost of each
trip down to the penny…Miljkovic is a cofounder of Automatic, an automotive
tech startup that offers a small gadget that connects to your car’s onboard
computer and wirelessly transmits the data it collects to your smartphone. This
can reveal how efficiently you’re driving, how much individual trips are
costing you, and tips for solving potential engine troubles. It can also
determine where you parked your car and, if its built-in accelerometer senses
you’ve been in an accident, call 911 for help. The device combines two
burgeoning trends—the “Internet of things,” where traditionally offline gadgets
are connected to the Internet to amplify their usefulness (see “50 Disruptive
Companies 2013: Nest’s Smarter Home”), and the mining of data that’s collected
by our devices for meaning (see “Every Step You Take, Tracked Automatically”).
By putting these two together, the company thinks it can get users to conserve
gas and spend less—and make a profit itself while doing so…”
29.
How to Create
Thermal Images for Millions of Homes
http://www.technologyreview.com/view/512611/how-to-create-thermal-images-for-millions-of-homes/ “One of the well-worn tools of home energy
auditors is thermal imaging cameras that show where buildings are poorly
insulated. But how do you bring these pictures to thousands or even millions of
homes? Two Boston-area startups think they have the answer. Sagewell and Essses
have effectively brought the idea of Google Street View, where a
camera-equipped car drives through neighborhoods, to thermal imaging. Both
companies have developed business models to provide consumers thermal images of
their homes and to make money on referrals. An infrared image displays warmer
and cooler areas of an object. Energy auditors use them to spot where drafts or
lack of insulation indicate a significant amount of heat is being lost to the
outdoors. On their own, they won’t tell a homeowner exactly how to make a home
more energy efficient, but they can quickly help locate problem areas…”
30.
The gel that
stops bleeding instantly http://www.humansinvent.com/#!/11409/the-gel-that-stops-bleeding-instantly/ “All-purpose healing gels familiar to fans of
futuristic video games and movies could be about to make the transition from
sci-fi fantasy to real-world medical tool thanks to a New York University
student…Veti-Gel, the name chosen by NYU student Joe Landolina uses plant
polymers to rapidly solidify when applied to open wounds, and by a bizarre
coincidence was initially being developed under the name Medi-Gel, the name of
a fictional healing gel from the Mass Effect video game series with almost
identical properties…“In all of our tests we found we were able to immediately
stop bleeding,” says Landolina. “Your skin has this thing called the
extracellular matrix,” he explains. “It’s kind of a mesh of molecules and sugars
and protein that holds your cells in place.” Landolina synthesises his own
extracellular matrix (ECM) using plant polymers, which can form a liquid when
broken up into pieces. He says, “So it goes into the wound and the pieces of
the synthetic ECM in the gel will recognise the pieces of the real ECM in the
wound and they’ll link together. It will re-assemble into something that looks
like, feels like and acts like skin…”
31.
8 Great
Large-Format Printers http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2362754,00.asp “…anyone who wants to print photos bigger
than letter size will need a wide-format photo printer. Fortunately, there are
excellent office and photo printers that let you print at tabloid (11 by 17
inches) and—in some cases—super-tabloid (13 by 19) size…Large-format office
printers and MFPs usually max out at tabloid-size paper. Large-format MFPs tend
to have rich feature sets. The Brother MFC-J6710DW comes with two paper trays,
so you can always keep tabloid-size paper loaded. It also scans, as well as prints,
at tabloid size. Whether you're an office manager, a graphic artist, a photo
enthusiast, or a casual photographer wanting to get the most out of your
megapixels, there's a wide-format printer out there that will meet your
printing needs…Brother MFC-J6710DW…Canon Pixma iX7000 Inkjet Business Printer…Canon
Pixma Pro9500 Mark II…Epson Stylus Pro 3880…Epson Stylus Photo R2000…Epson
Stylus Photo R3000…HP Officejet 7500A Wide Format e-All-in-One…Xerox Phaser
7500/DN…”
32.
Did They
Really Wash Their Hands? This Wristband Knows http://www.technologyreview.com/news/512471/are-your-doctors-hands-clean-this-wristband-knows/ “A startup called IntelligentM wants to make
hospitals healthier by encouraging workers to clean their hands properly. Its
solution is a bracelet that vibrates when the wearer has scrubbed sufficiently,
giving employees a way to check their habits and letting employers know who is
and isn’t doing things right. Some 100,000 people a year in the United States
alone die because of infections that arise from hospital visits, according to
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and a lot of these infections
occur because doctors, nurses, and technicians don’t wash well enough. The
problem has garnered more attention lately, in part because Medicare and other
payers have stopped reimbursing hospitals for expenses related to treating
hospital-acquired infections…”
33.
The 49ers’
plan to build the greatest stadium Wi-Fi network of all time http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2013/03/the-49ers-plan-to-build-the-greatest-stadium-wi-fi-network-of-all-time/ When the San Francisco 49ers' new stadium
opens for the 2014 NFL season, it is quite likely to have the best publicly
accessible Wi-Fi network a sports facility in this country has ever known…68,500
fans will inevitably walk into the stadium for each game. And every single one
of them will be able to connect to the wireless network, simultaneously,
without any limits on uploads or downloads. Smartphones and tablets will run
into the limits of their own hardware long before they hit the limits of the
49ers' wireless network. Until now, stadium executives have said it's pretty
much impossible to build a network that lets every single fan connect at once.
They've blamed this on limits in the amount of spectrum available to Wi-Fi,
despite their big budgets and the extremely sophisticated networking equipment
that largesse allows them to purchase. Even if you build the network perfectly,
it would choke if every fan tried to get on at once—at least according to
conventional wisdom. But the people building the 49ers' wireless network do not
have conventional sports technology backgrounds. Senior IT Director Dan
Williams and team CTO Kunal Malik hail from Facebook, where they spent five
years building one of the world's largest and most efficient networks for the
website…"We see the stadium as a large data center," Williams told
me…”
34.
New
Invisibility Cloak Demonstrates Better Cloaking Efficiency http://scitechdaily.com/a-new-kind-of-invisibility-cloak-demonstrates-better-cloaking-efficiency/ “Using a new kind of cloak that uses a very
thin multilayer dielectric coating made of natural material, not metamaterial,
researchers at Michigan Technological University demonstrated better cloaking
efficiency than a similarly sized metamaterial cloak designed by using the
transformation optics relations…last month, Elena Semouchkina, an associate
professor of electrical and computer engineering at Michigan Tech, and her
graduate student, Xiaohui Wang, reported successful experimental demonstration
of the use of non-conductive ceramic metamaterials to cloak cylindrical objects
from microwave-length electromagnetic waves…scarcely was the ink dry on their
report in the IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, a journal
published by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, when they
developed a different cloaking approach and published it in the American
Institute of Physics journal, Applied Physics Letters. This time, they used
ordinary dielectric materials such as ceramics having differing dielectric
permittivity—a measure of the response of a substance to an electrical field—
instead of metamaterials, which are artificial materials with properties not
found in nature. They found that they were able to cloak larger cylindrical
objects and cloak them more effectively than they had using metamaterials…”
35.
With new
Sparc systems, Oracle begins shift to single chip architecture http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/print/9237908/With_new_Sparc_systems_Oracle_begins_shift_to_single_chip_architecture “Oracle has announced a batch of servers
based on new Sparc processors and in the process has begun an expected shift
toward converging its two families of Unix servers onto a single chip
architecture. Oracle sells two lines of Unix servers, the T-series, based on
the Sparc processors it designs in-house, and the higher-end M-series, which
have traditionally been built by Fujitsu and resold by Oracle, and which run on
Fujitsu's Sparc64 chips…along with a clutch of new T-series boxes, Oracle
announced the first M-series server designed by Oracle and based on one of its
own Sparc processors, rather than Fujitsu's Sparc64 chip. "This is all
Oracle IP…”
Leisure &
Entertainment
36.
Lights, Cameras, and NBA
Tech Revolution http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/9068903/the-toronto-raptors-sportvu-cameras-nba-analytical-revolution “New technology and statistics will change
the way we understand basketball, even if they also create friction between
coaches and front-office personnel trying to integrate new concepts into
on-court play. The most important innovation in the NBA in recent years is a
camera-tracking system, known as SportVU, that records every movement on the
floor and spits it back at its front-office keepers as a byzantine series of
geometric coordinates. Fifteen NBA teams have purchased the cameras, which cost
about $100,000 per year, from STATS LLC…The future of the NBA…looks simple, but
the process of getting there took a bunch of people, including three Toronto
front-office employees, more than a half-decade of work. In simple terms: The
Raptors' analytics team wrote insanely complex code that turned all those X-Y
coordinates from every second of every recorded game into playable video files.
The code can recognize everything — when a pick-and-roll occurred, where it
occurred, whether the pick actually hit a defender, and the position of all 10
players on the floor as the play unfolded. The team also factored in the
individual skill set of every NBA player, so the program understands that Chris
Paul is much more dangerous from midrange than Rajon Rondo, and that Roy
Hibbert is taller than Al Horford.2 That last bit — the ability to recognize
individual player skills — is crucial for the juiciest bit of what the Raptors
have accomplished: those clear circles that sort of follow the Toronto players
around and have the same jersey numbers. Those are ghost players, and they are
doing what Toronto's coaching staff and analytics team believe the players
should have done on this play — and on every other Toronto play the cameras
have recorded…”
37.
Valve lets you pay for
the beta with Steam “Early Access” program http://arstechnica.com/gaming/2013/03/valve-lets-you-pay-for-the-beta-with-steam-early-access-program/ “…Wish you could play a game while it's still
a bug-riddled, in-development mess? Well, Valve has got you covered with its
new "Early Access" sales program…Early Access is being sold as a way
for players to purchase, um, early access to games they're excited about and
actively take part in the development process. For developers, it's a way to
raise additional money for a game that's not quite complete yet and get a bevy
of eager beta testers to help work out the bugs before a game is finally
released…Valve is launching the Early Access program with 12 games, ranging
from the alpha for massive shooter Arma III to super-indie efforts like Prison
Architect and Kerbal Space Program. Those who buy the Early Access editions of
the game will get regular updates from the developer and full access to the
final game when it is deemed "released." Valve is looking to slowly
expand the program with games from Steam Greenlight and other titles that are
already approved for Steam…”
38.
Stocksy aims to bring the
soul back into stock photography http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-57576184-93/stocksy-aims-to-bring-the-soul-back-into-stock-photography/ “Bruce Livingstone, founder of the
iStockphoto site that grew from a small stock-art community to a multimedia
juggernaut, is launching a competitor called Stocksy United today that he hopes
will bring the business back to its roots. Stocksy is a startup, but it won't
attract venture capital, won't be acquired by a larger rival, and doesn't have
an exit strategy. Instead, it's a cooperative run by its own photographers who
get paid a relatively high percentage of the royalties generated by each image
sale: 50 percent. On top of that, photographers split the profits left over at
the end of each year, Livingstone said in an interview. The idea, he said, is
to attract top-shelf photographers who are unhappy with expanding photographer
competition and shrinking payouts from the major sites. "It's foolish to
launch company with the big boys out there, but I think it's the time is right
for a soulful company like this to be created…”
39.
Gizmodo’s geek TV show is
here http://news.yahoo.com/from-blog-to-the-bbc--gizmodo%E2%80%99s-geek-tv-show-is-here-214052341.html “…blogs like Gizmodo have long since proven
that there’s a healthy appetite out there for news and reviews of all manner of
gadgetry. But it doesn’t immediately follow—or at least, not to me—that such
material would also make for good TV. So when I read that Gizmodo was going to
give this strategy a go, and that its impressive founding editor, Joel Johnson,
would be involved, I had to check it out. The first one-hour episode of
“Gizmodo: The Gadget Testers” aired Monday night on BBC America. “You are about
to see gadgets, gizmos, devices and appliances,” the opening announced, “tested
to the extreme!” How… exciting? Johnson has explained the show’s approach as
“Top Gear” for gadgets. And, in fact, the premiere followed a minimarathon of
that popular British reality show’s most recent episodes, which involved its
gearhead hosts grinding secondhand cars across a variety of absurdly rough
terrains in Africa. “Gizmodo: Gadget Testers” did seem to be channeling
something of that spirit as it introduced its scheme for testing three
minivideo cameras designed for action-sports use…”
Entrepreneurism
and Technology
40.
Wealthfront, The
Investing Service That Has Made Me Money http://techcrunch.com/2013/03/20/wealthfront-the-investing-service-that-has-made-me-money-raises-20m-from-index-greylock-and-socialcapital-partnership/ “Wealthfront is one of my favorite startups
out there today — because it has actually made me money. I’m not alone. The
automated investments company has been growing its user base by 20 percent
every month, because it cuts out traditional mutual funds and investment
advisors and charges its users a very low fee for returns that have been
beating the Street…My personal story is pretty typical of why the company has
been doing so well…I’d seen Wealthfront launch at the end of 2011 and was
curious (it was promising to solve my exact problem), but I only got around to
trying it last November after it added an online wire transfer option that
didn’t require me to spend hours filling out transfer papers at my bank…I went
through its onboarding flow by directing its software to follow a conservative
investment strategy fitting to my situation. Wealthfront picked mostly
exchange-traded funds (ETFs) for U.S., foreign and emerging market stocks,
along with bonds, real estate and natural resources. I began making money from
it immediately, no doubt benefiting from the particularly positive mood that
many markets have been in since late last year…”
41.
65-Year-Old Android
Engineer Gives Startup Advice http://www.fastcolabs.com/3007250/open-company/boxs-65-year-old-android-engineer-gives-your-startup-some-unsentimental-advice# “David Maynard is a 65-year-old Android
engineering manager at Box who still codes every day. ”It's not always
easy," he says. "Sometimes I have to leave a company when I get
promoted to the stage when I can't code anymore.” The software industry tends
to venerate precocity, which makes the genial, white-haired Maynard an
interesting counterpoint to the company CEO Aaron Levie, who is 28. Maynard has
worked his way through 28 programming languages at some of the Valley's most
legendary companies like Lockheed, Xerox-PARC, SRI International, Electronic
Arts, Google, and now Box…There are precious few people who have seen and comprehended
enough of the rise of computing (and now mobile computing) to have some
perspective on the industry's mind-bending velocity. "The tools have just
gotten so much better," he says. "When I was working on the game for
Electronic Arts, I did the entire development on the Atari 800 and it took me
45 minutes to do one compile off of a floppy disk which held a grand total of
380 kilobytes. Today I have a device in my pocket with can give me access to
the world's knowledge," he says. "That is unbelievable--but I think
we have lost the idea of the software artist. When the machines were much
smaller, I did my game essentially as a one-man team. I did all the art. I did
all the programming. I had one other engineer help me with some of the music. I
have a friend working with EA today and he is probably working in a team of 120
engineers.” Maynard became part of the founding team at Electronic Arts after
writing a game in his spare time in the late 1970s. Xerox-PARC was really the
first place that provided personal computers, and like every programmer,
Maynard had an Alto--about a $20,000 piece of hardware at the time. He says the
engineers used the computers largely to write games. "Maze Wars was the
first real 3-D shooter," he says. "As soon as that was released, work
stopped. Management was powerless to do anything about it. All the programmers
were playing. Then they started hacking the game to cheat…He started to work on
his own game for the Atari 800 and Commodore 64 in 1983, and dubbed it
Worms?--not to be confused with the 1994 game by the same name. “It took me
about six months to write, and then six months to convince Xerox-PARC that they
didn't own it," he says…Maynard is also a veteran of a failed startup, in
his case, game console company 3DO, which launched in 1993. The idea was to
create a high-end game machine and sell software for it, much like the Xbox and
the Sony Playstation, which came later. "It was a visionary idea but the
business model turned out to not quite work," says Maynard. "We
invented the hardware and the development system and then we licensed the
hardware to various manufacturers--but the manufacturers sold it at $699
retail, too high for a gaming machine.” Maynard says the current generation of
startups should be more patient than he was…”
42.
Rokk3r Labs, a Hybrid
Investor-Accelerator http://news.terra.com/not-your-traditional-incubator-rokk3r-labs-a-hybrid-investor-accelerator,311b936a1b98d310VgnCLD2000000dc6eb0aRCRD.html “…Here's how Rokk3r Labs' business model
works: A developer, designer and business team calculate the cost and time for
strategy development, product design, staffing up and technology tweaks, plus
market size and price values. If things add up and a management team passes
muster, Rokk3r Labs accepts work through sliding scale fees and equity stakes.
The company also earns licensing fees from sales linked to work it does for ad
agency DDB, as its innovation lab – a wise move for recurring revenue.
"They don't take on pipedream products," Diaz Cala says. "They
test the market at minimal cost and move on." Like most new ventures,
Rokk3r Labs has faced its share of challenges. Although it's starting to
change, Miami lacks a startup ecosystem. It was also challenging to find talent
and keep a fun-but-fast execution culture as Rokk3r grew from five to 25
employees. And as projects scale up, the company may face funding obstacles in
Miami…”
Design / DEMO
43.
Hyper-Realistic
CGI Is Killing Photographers, Thrilling Product Designers http://www.wired.com/design/2013/03/luxion-keyshot/ “Computer-generated images are moving out of
theaters and onto store shelves and catalog pages, thanks to software that
makes it nearly impossible to distinguish the real from the photorealistic. Encroaching
upon what was once the domain of sci-fi filmmakers, product designers have
started employing CGI and utilizing a program called KeyShot to give their
digital models lighting effects that makes them appear to be actual items
photographed in a studio or out in the wild…That ultra-perfect computer image,
with dead-on lighting that highlights all its critical features? The sweatsuit
with the fabric that clings together where the seams stretch? The uber-clean
Jeep deep in the hills on a gravely trail? All done in KeyShot, a program that
enhances CAD creations to the point that they become indistinguishable from the
real thing…Dave Vogt, an industrial designer who uses KeyShot in his work for
Skullcandy, says that the speed that the software creates its output is a huge
advantage. “Being able to pull in 3-D and have a juicy render sub 5 minutes is
pretty impressive…”
44.
i.Dummy: New
breakthrough in mannequin technology
http://phys.org/news/2013-03-idummy-breakthrough-mannequin-technology.html “At its first glance, the mannequin 'i.Dummy'
developed by researchers of The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) looks
no different from an ordinary dummy but it is no plain stuff - this
sophisticated mannequin can change its body shape and size or even elongate at
the point of a fingertip on computer. This revolutionary breakthrough, coined
'i.Dummy' for intelligent dummy, is expected to streamline the operations of
the apparel and garment industry, which rely strongly on the use of dummies for
designing and fitting different sizes of apparel products before mass production
takes place…one single 'i.Dummy' will transform itself to fit various sizes and
dimension, be it Asian or Western, etc. Customised measurements can also be
inputted…Dr Allan Chan and his team members have collected massive
anthropometric data and information from the literatures of the American,
European, Japanese and Chinese population; together with the data collected
from ITC's 3D Body Scanner, plus the clever application of mechatronics on the
platform of mannequin development. "This robotic mannequin 'i.Dummy' is
unique in the sense that all changes are three-dimensional, varying in width,
thickness and length all at once automatically. It can also rotate
automatically for viewing in 360 degrees, so that every angle of clothes
fitting can be assessed…”
45.
3-D printing
is revolutionizing product development
http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2013/03/20/3d-printing-apple-samsung-jabil-ford-maker-autodesk/1973753/ “When Ford Motor shows off the latest version
of its hybrid car at an Atlanta auto show this month, its drive train and other
key parts will be products of a new development process that's taken hold
across Corporate America and the world. Rather than using custom machine tools
to build early prototypes of new parts, Ford is now using 3-D printing
technology to design and test its engineers' latest ideas.The new method allows
product developers to have a prototype in their hands in as little as a week
after they create a new design — compared with a previous wait time of three to
four months…Ford's new hybrid transmission was developed on a 3-D printer that
costs about $300,000 and which can turn a pile of aluminum powder into a working
prototype in a day or two. "For any engineer using (prototype) models to
develop, this is the way to do it," says Sears. "Most large companies
are now doing things this way…”
DHMN Technology
46.
Using a
Raspberry Pi as an information radiator
http://pivotallabs.com/using-a-raspberry-pi-as-an-information-radiator/ “We have found the Raspberry Pi to be a
cost-effective replacement for the Mac minis that we use in our office to drive
TVs that are information radiators. We
use these radiators to display the build status of our ci (continuous
integration) projects. At ~$60
(Raspberry Pi, USB WiFi, enclosure), it’s 90% cheaper than using a $600 Mac
mini…Once the operating system was installed I booted the Pi with an HDMI
monitor connected. You will be presented
with a screen as seen here from Adafruit.
This is named, appropriately enough, the Raspi – config screen…”
47.
If You Want
24”x24”x24” Gigabot Large Scale 3D Printer, Act Fast http://www.core77.com/blog/digital_fabrication/if_you_want_a_gigabot_the_successfully_kickstarted_large_scale_3d_printer_youd_better_act_fast_24592.asp “…it looks like 3D printing is about to get a
lot bigger, literally, for consumers. In January a company called re:3D debuted
their Gigabot, a large-scale 3D printer with an enormous 24" x 24" x
24" build area. The larger capacity was designed to print out the things
re:3D wanted to make, namely, rainwater collecting devices and composting toilets
for the developing world…With prices starting at $2,500 for a kit and up to
$4,950 for a flatpack requiring some assembly, buy-in was not cheap; despite
that, the interest was real, as they've topped their $40,000 target with
$105,000 at press time. While there's nearly 48 days left to pledge, those
looking to get in on this had better hurry—there are just a handful of machines
available starting at the $3,250 price bracket…”
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/re3d/gigabot-3d-printing-this-is-huge
48.
Arduino for
Absolute Beginners http://opensourcehardwarejunkies.com/how-to-work-through-this-course/ “This course is designed around extremely
quick and simple-to-set-up circuits using an Arduino board…Creating the circuit
should take you a whole of 1 to 4 minutes depending on the lesson. The steps are listed at the beginning of
each lesson in the “Step-by-Step Instructions” section. The written description
is accompanied by a breadboard rendition of the circuit. You might find it easier to use the picture
to set up the circuit…The circuit won’t do much until you have the brains of
the Arduino programmed to execute the sketch (A sketch is simply the
instructions written for the micro-controller).
Each program you will use comes pre-installed with the Arduino
development software. These pre-installed sketches cover all the basics and
many advanced examples of using your Arduino…”
49.
The life of
Pi - clever ideas with a tiny computer
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-21882845 “…They had all come up with clever ideas to
use the Raspberry Pi, the ultra-cheap computer developed in Cambridge, and they
were the finalists in a competition held by the technology advisors PA
Consulting…There was the London primary school with a plan to recycle old
computer components to turn the Raspberry Pi into a communications device for
schools in developing countries. Their only problem - they couldn't figure out
how to make Skype work on the little device…there was the North Yorkshire
community school which had turned the Pi into an RFID (radio-frequency
identification) reader to measure lap times in their cross-country races, and
the London independent school whose pupils had come up with Teacher's Pet, a
way of delivering homework via USB sticks plugged into the tiny computer…A team
from a Cheltenham primary school came up with a system to help elderly or
disabled people answer the door with a wireless keypad, using the Piface
attachment for the Raspberry Pi…two sixth-formers from Westminster School had
the most polished and commercially attractive idea of them all, the AirPi. It
combined various sensors with some clever programming to turn the Pi into an
air quality and weather station…”
Open Source
Hardware
50.
Workshop video: building
6 RepRap open source 3D printers http://www.kdenlive.org/forum/workshop-video-building-6-reprap-open-source-3d-printers “I filmed this 2-day workshop at Fab Lab
Berlin a couple of weeks ago - there's the whole process from basic assembly,
through calibration and testing, to finally the printing stage…I switched to
free software 7 months ago and having tried out Cinelerra, OpenShot, Novacut
and PiTiVi I concluded there's nothing close to Kdenlive's capability…A few
features that would be a great improvement for this style of video, where
you're trying to get across a lot of information and story in a short priod of
time: Accurate motion tracking…Speed ramping…Friendlier titling functionality
overall…”
51.
Two New Open 3D Printers
that Are Not Based on Deposition Methods http://3dprintingindustry.com/2013/03/11/two-new-open-3d-printers-that-are-not-based-on-deposition-methods/ “The stereolithography (SL) and DLP
processes, which use photosensitive resins and a laser or other light source to
cure them, are typically more complicated 3D printing processes, particularly
when it comes to handling. Among the raft of entry-level 3D printers that have
come on to the market the vast majority have been plastic deposition processes
with only a couple of notable exceptions — namely the B9creator and the Form 1,
which both employ DLP and SL respectively…in the last week two new
developmental 3D printers have emerged that are open source in nature — one
using the SL process and the other DLP. The first is Open SL, from a team at
Pryntech headed by Justin Hawkins, which is sourcing modest funding on
Indiegogo. With only a couple of days left to pledge, the project is just shy
of 200% of its $5000 goal. The Open SL project goal, as the name suggests, is
to open up the SL process by offering “a build-it-yourself, high resolution SL
3D printer that can be easily sourced and assembled at home.” The aim is to use
easily accessible components and software AND keep the costs well under a $1000
and design files of the 3D printer will be openly shared…the print bed is
estimated at being in the region of 80mm x 80mm x 100mm with configurable layer
thicknesses between 0.001mm to 0.2mm…The other interesting 3D printer
development comes from The Rochester Institute of Technology and the really
compelling elements here are that it is a student project, led by teacher
Rachel Levine, and that the ongoing developmental system is using an ordinary
overhead light projector as the light source with which to selectively cure the
resin by virtue of black and white images…”
52.
RoboBrrd 3D Printed
Pieces – open source hardware http://robobrrd.com/blog/2013/03/robobrrd-3d-printed-pieces-open-source-hardware/ “…These are all the 3D printing files for
creating your own RoboBrrd! You can download the .stl files and get printing
right away and also view the dimensional drawings. Check out the webpage! The
dream of having RoboBrrd as a widespread toy all around the world is what is
really motivating us. OSHW combined with availability of 3D printers, it can be
possible! One day, there will be more RoboBrrds in the world than Furbys, and
everyone will make it themselves. It seems odd that we go to a store to
purchase a toy when we can create one ourselves. So let’s do it, and make a
positive impact! Manufacture our own toys, customize them, learn about them,
build them into robots, make them better…”
Open Source
53.
Documenting Your Work
With Liferay http://ostatic.com/blog/documenting-your-work-with-liferay “…Liferay is an open source portal that
actually makes sense. My coworkers have been pushing me to adopt the new
Liferay Wiki for documentation and collaboration. I resisted, of course,
because I prefer keeping most everything in plain text files on my desktop. My
hands are hardwired at this point to plug in Vim keyboard commands, and using
command line search with ZSH and grep always finds me what I’m looking for…The
Liferay administrator was actually a bit sneaky about it, enticing me with
dropbox like folder syncing between machines that would automatically upload my
documentation to the server, where it would be indexed by the Lucine search
engine and made available to the rest of the team. After switching over to
Linux, it became necessary to start putting the new documentation on the wiki
proper, and I’ve not looked back since…The wiki component of the Liferay Portal
is a very small part of the entire package. Liferay includes a fully featured
CMS, a unified document repository, message boards, forums, blogs, instant
messaging, and a host of other features. After using Liferay for a few days, it
is easy to see how it could replace many features of desktop office
applications…”
54.
The Latest Resources for
Mastering Blender for 3D Animation http://ostatic.com/blog/the-latest-resources-for-mastering-blender-for-3d-animation “In the graphics and animation software
arena, you can find plenty of expensive, proprietary applications, but few are
as powerful as the Blender 3D animation application. We regularly compile
collections of free and inexpensive resources for mastering Blender here on
OStatic, and some good new resources have emerged recently. Here are details on
some very valuable tools you can take advantage of to get started with Blender,
and some free movies created with it that you can dive into. Blender Master
Class is a new book by Ben Simonds that
outlines specific tasks and projects in Blender that can help you move from
being a beginner to a master. For example, you'll learn to create the robotic
spider seen on the book's cover, and
create your own 3D gargoyle. This particular Blender resource isn't free--it's
$49.95--but it will make you a skilled Blender artist…”
55.
Google's Open Source
YouTube Channel -- Worth a Look http://ostatic.com/blog/googles-open-source-youtube-channel-worth-a-look “…Google…has donated many open source
projects and leverages a lot of open source code internally. But did you know
that the company has a dedicated video channel for information on open source
topics? If you haven't explored it, it's worth visiting, found here. Here is
more on what's available there, and other good open source resources from
Google. Google's open source channel features videos events like Google Code-in
and Google Developer Days, and it also frequently features video updates from
open source pundits at the company, such as Chris DiBona. The YouTube landing
page links to related channels like its Open Source Student Programs and
Developers pages. You can create playlists of favorite videos and get instant
notification when new content is posted through a single click…”
Civilian
Aerospace
56.
Mojave Gets
Busy http://www.parabolicarc.com/2013/03/20/mojave-gets-busy/ “It was a busy day here with multiple
activities at different locations at the Mojave Air and Space Port. WhiteKnightTwo
with SpaceShipTwo attached was out on the ramp in front of the Scaled hangar.
Engineers were doing pressurization tests using helium before they rolled the
ships back into the hanger in the afternoon. SpaceShipTwo has not flown since a
Dec. 19 glide test that features an engine for the first time. Officials have
said they want to do three glide tests with this configuration before beginning
powered flights. SpaceShipTwo appeared to feature the same engine nozzle with a
pipe in the middle that was seen three months ago. Masten Space Systems
conducted two successful tether flights at their test facility on the north
side today. The second one lasted about 1 minute and 10 seconds. It’s not known
which vehicle the company was flying, but it’s possible it was the recently
unveiled Xaero-B…”
57.
New SpaceX
Falcon 9 Rocket To Debut In June
http://www.aviationweek.com/Article.aspx?id=/article-xml/asd_03_20_2013_p02-01-560870.xml “Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) will
launch the first flight of its new Falcon 9 v1.1 rocket in June from the
company’s new launch pad at Vandenberg AFB, Calif. The upgraded Falcon 9
launcher will feature more powerful Merlin 1D engines, extended fuel tanks and
a wider payload fairing. The June mission will loft a small Canadian
solar-weather satellite, Cassiope, to a polar low Earth orbit, a demonstration
flight that could pave the way for the company’s first mission to geostationary
orbit in early July with the launch of the SES-8 commercial communications
satellite for Luxembourg-based fleet operator SES…”
58.
SpaceX Dragon
cargo ship splashes down in Pacific
http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-spacex-nasa-dragon-splashdown-20130326,0,152912.story “Less than 250 miles west of Baja California,
SpaceX's Dragon capsule successfully splashed down Tuesday after spending more
than three weeks in outer space on a NASA mission…The crew of the space station
sent the capsule back in the pre-dawn hours for a trip that lasted about five
hours…The Dragon capsule returned with about 2,668 pounds of science samples
from human research, biology and biotechnology studies, physical science
investigations and education activities for NASA, the space agency said. The
cargo will be delivered to NASA. SpaceX’s mission began March 1 with a launch
of its Falcon 9 rocket, carrying the Dragon capsule, from Cape Canaveral, Fla.
The capsule was packed with more than 1,200 pounds of food, scientific
experiments and other cargo for delivery to the six crew members aboard the
space station…”
Supercomputing
& GPUs
59.
NVIDIA CEO races toward
GPU Computing “tipping point” at GTC 2013 http://www.slashgear.com/nvidia-ceo-races-toward-gpu-computing-tipping-point-at-gtc-2013-19274623/ “This week at NVIDIA’s GPU Technology
Conference, CEO Jen-Hsun Huang spoke about the ever-growing GPU-utilizing
universe, in both the mobile and desktop computer global environments…“This is
the Mecca for scientific discovery…Nothing’s more important than the research
being done on GPU computers.” Huang ran through massive amounts of GPU-friendly
happenings and upcoming events, including bits and pieces like the following…50
Gigapixel Camera being developed at the U of Arizona…GPU-accelerated diamond
cutting…CUDA utilization for dating site matching compatibility…Oak Ridge’s
Titan Supercomputing using 40 million CUDA processors together for 10 petaflops
of power… “If we’re not at the tipping point for GPU Computing, we’re racing at
it. There’s a huge spike in GPU-based computers being built for real work –
about 20 percent of total Top500 horsepower is GPU…”
60.
Penguin Unveils
Ultra-Dense GPU Supercomputing Server Relion 2808GT http://www.hpcwire.com/hpcwire/2013-03-19/penguin_unveils_ultra-dense_supercomputing_server_relion_2808gt.html
“Penguin Computing, experts in high
performance computing (HPC) solutions, today announced the availability of the
Relion 2808GT. The Relion 2808GT supports eight GPUs or coprocessors in two
rack units and provides a higher compute density than any other server on the
market. The system's eight GPUs or coprocessors are supported by a dual socket
platform based on Intel's Xeon E5-2600 product family. The Relion 2808GT also
features an on board Dual 10GbE BASE-T controller and up to 512GB of ECC memory…Fully
configured with eight NVidia K20 GPUs, for example, a single Relion 2808GT can
achieve 28TFLOPs of single precision floating point performance…”
Trends &
Emerging Tech
61.
Top 12
Technology Trends for 2013 http://www.marketwatch.com/story/top-12-technology-trends-for-2013-highlighted-in-new-technology-outlook-from-sogeti-2013-03-20 “…The SogetiLabs Technology Outlook 2013 has
defined 12 top trends showing off what is on the minds of customers, and what
is expected to be important for 2013 and beyond…Mobile BYOD…Augmented Reality…Smart
TV…Big Data…Cloud Services…Jericho Style Security…Privacy Enhancing
Technologies…Quality Assurance Across the Application Lifecycle…Agile Methods…Model
Driven Engineering…3D Printing…Internet of Things…”
62.
SXSW 2013:
Five tech trends we can't wait to see
http://popwatch.ew.com/2013/03/07/sxsw-2013-preview-interactive/ “Just a brief look at the South By Southwest
interactive schedule can boggle even the most experienced festival-goer’s mind.
There are panels and conversations and films and workshops and even a daily
7:30 am run (in cowboy costume!) in case you weren’t getting enough exercise
dancing your pants off at one of the many parties. But for everyone not going
to the festival, which marks 19 years of interactive and film coverage this
year, we have started to make sense of some already-emerging trends and news to
look out for…3-D printing…Social TV…Twitter’s new integrated video app, Vine…Wearable
tech…Indie Games…”
*****
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