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Contents contributed and discussions participated by yc c

yc c

Moniker - 1 views

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    We are an Amsterdam based interactive design studio researching the social effects of technology. With Moniker, which means nickname or pseudonym, we work on commissioned design projects while also investing in projects of an autonomous and experimental nature. The studio works across various media for a diverse range of clients ranging from those in the cultural field to commercial companies. With our projects, we explore the social effects of technology - how we use technology and how it influences our daily lives. Often, we ask the public to take part in the development of our projects. The resulting projects expand and grow like plants, displaying their inner organisational process. Moniker specialises in interactive, print, video, physical installation and performance work.
yc c

A.I. Experiments - 3 views

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    Explore machine learning by playing with pictures, language, music, code, and more.
yc c

Accelerated Mobile Pages Project - 0 views

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    For many, reading on the mobile web is a slow, clunky and frustrating experience - but it doesn't have to be that way. The Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) Project is an open source initiative that embodies the vision that publishers can create mobile optimized content once and have it load instantly everywhere.
yc c

MATTER - READ SOMETHING THAT MATTERS - 6 views

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    Unmissable journalism about the future - on your desktop, phone, tablet or e-reader Launching Spring 2012 MATTER will focus on doing one thing, and doing it exceptionally well. Every week, we will publish a single piece of top-tier long-form journalism about big issues in technology and science. That means no cheap reviews, no snarky opinion pieces, no top ten lists. Just one unmissable story. MATTER is about brilliant ideas from all around the world, whether they come from professors at MIT or the minds of mad people. But most of all, it's about getting amazing investigative reporters to tell compelling stories. We're building MATTER for readers, not advertisers. So however you access our stories - whether it's on our website, via the Kindle store, or on your Apple and Android devices - you will get a beautifully designed experience that puts you first.
yc c

TSUNAGARAI project | National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation (Miraikan) - 1 views

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    "Geo-Cosmos" is made up of 10,362 OLED panels that display continuously-updating satellite footage of our tiny blue marble, representing what our planet looks like from space in something close to realtime. It replaces an earlier model covered in LED panels, offering museum-goers a full 10 million pixels, a resolution 10 times greater than its predecessor.
yc c

AuthaGraph オーサグラフ 世界地図 - 0 views

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    This projection method transfers a 3-dimentional sphere into a 2-dimensional rectangle while maintaining areas proportions. Using this method, the "AuthaGraph world map" succeeds in transferring an image of the spherical Earth to a flat surface while evenly distributing distortion. An architect, Hajime Narukawa and his collaborators invented it in 1999. AuthaGraph world map can be tiled in any directions without visible seams. From this map-tiling, a new world map with triangular, rectangular or parallelogram's outline can be framed out with various regions at its center. This map provides a perspective on decentralized world views. Just as the center of global politics, economy and culture is shifted and decentralized, this map tries to reflect such new global vision in the 21st century.
yc c

UltraViolet - Future of Entertainment - 6 views

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    UltraViolet...Freedom of Entertainment. Nearly 60 leading entertainment and Technology companies from around the world are working together to create a revolutionary new approach to digital entertainment. UltraViolet is being designed so that UltraViolet-enabled content, devices and services can give consumers the freedom to experience movies and TV shows like never before.
yc c

Ride Like the Wind (only faster) - 3 views

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    Rick Cavallaro and John Borton have built a cart that moves 2.86 times the speed of the wind, moving straight downwind. That may seem impossible, but after a year of tinkering and some financial assistance from Google and Joby Energy, they did it. Don't believe me? Check out the video. Keep a weather eye out for the green flag at 0:35. Notice how it's blowing the exact opposite direction of the orange wind socks on the cart? That's because the cart is going faster than the wind.
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    The cart is quite aerodynamic, so it makes a crappy sail, but it's still a sail. The wind gives it a push, and the car starts to roll, however slowly. As it moves along the ground, the wheels turn. At 0 kph the cart has an air speed (relative to the 10 kph wind) of -10 kph. As it gets rolling, it will catch up to the wind in velocity: at 5 kph ground speed, it has a -5 kph relative air speed, and at 10 kph ground speed, it has a relative air speed of 0 kph. At 10 kph ground speed, the cart is just like the balloon, and would not beat the balloon in a race. But unlike the balloon, the cart has a 17-foot propeller linked by a complicated drive train to the wheels. And it's the wheels that provide the work to turn the propeller. Remember that: The wheels turn the prop. Not the wind. Not magic pixie dust. The wheels turn the propeller. That's important. At 0 kph air speed, the propeller, sections of which have already been pulling on the car, really begins to bite on the air. It pulls the car forward exactly as a propeller pulls an airplane forward. The ground speed of the car increases, turning the wheels faster, which turn the propeller even faster, adding yet more acceleration. And now the whole project seems ridiculous,because everyone knows a perpetual motion machine is impossible. But the wind never stops adding power to the system. Come back to the difference between the relative air speed and the ground speed. In the example, the cart reaches a ground speed of 10 kph, and relative air speed of 0 kph. The propeller kicks in and the cart accelerates: Ground speed rises to 20 kph, with relative air speed of 10 kph; then 30 kph ground speed with relative air speed of 20 kph, then it finally reaches a top speed of 28.6 kph, with a relative air speed of 18.6 kph (meaning, going 18.6 kph faster than the wind). There's some loss to friction and to the drive train, but generally the wheels are always doing 10 kph-worth more work then the propeller, because the
yc c

yellowBird | See the world like never before - 360°videos - 0 views

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    Click and drag your mouse in all directions
yc c

copenhagen wheel project - 1 views

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    THE COPHENHAGEN WHEEL  Smart, responsive and elegant, the Copenhagen Wheel is a new emblemfor urban mobility. It transforms ordinary bicycles quickly into hybrid e-bikes that alsofunction as mobile sensing units. The Copenhagen Wheel allows you to capturethe energy dissipated while cycling and braking and save it for when you need a bit of a boost. It also maps pollution levels, traffic congestion,and road conditions in real-time.  The Copenhagen Wheel will be unveiled on December 15 at the COP15United Nations Climate Conference. 
yc c

Transistor merges man and machine - Innovation - 1 views

  • Man and machine can now be linked more intimately than ever, according to a new article in the journal ACS Nano Letters. Scientists have embedded a nano-sized transistor inside a cell-like membrane and powered it using the cell's own fuel.
  • The research could lead to new types of human-machine interactions where embedded devices could relay information about the inner workings of disease-related proteins inside the cell membrane, and eventually lead to new ways to read, and even influence, brain or nerve cells.
yc c

The train that never stops at a station - YouTube - 3 views

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    All that time and energy saved! Why haven't we thought of it before?
yc c

2020 Shaping Ideas - Sony Ecrisson - 2 views

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    Life in 2020 reflects Ericsson's view of what the world of communications might look like in the future. We hereby invite you to life in 2020.
yc c

nsf.gov - Nanoscience - Discoveries - US National Science Foundation (NSF) - 2 views

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    Read here about the Internet, microbursts, Web browsers, extrasolar planets, and more... a panoply of discoveries and innovations that began with NSF support.
yc c

stanfordluminaryarchives - Self Archiving Legacy Toolkit - 0 views

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    SALT will enable digital archives to present comprehensive luminary collections -- regardless of original format -- online in a consistent, accessible format that enriches the user experience for both luminaries and researchers.
yc c

Robonaut - 2 views

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    NASA and General Motors are working together to accelerate development of the next generation of robots and related technologies for use in the automotive and aerospace industries.
yc c

NANOPOOL - 4 views

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    "SiO2- ultra thin layering" is the technical term for Liquid Glass. Apart from a select group of professionals, few people in the UK know about this stunning technology. If you walk around Ataturk's Mausoleum in Ankara you are walking on it; if you visit certain hospitals in the UK you are touching it. If you see an unusually clean train you are probably looking at it, and if you wonder how your white settee looks so clean, you may be sitting on it. All of these surfaces have been coated with invisible glass.
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