Skip to main content

Home/ The Order of the Spork/ Group items tagged control

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Iam me

Android-Controlled Robots? Build Them Now With An Arduino-Based Development Kit - 0 views

  •  
    At Google IO today, Google announced the availability of the Android Open Accessory Development Kit, a new way to extend the Android platform so that other devices can be controlled via phones or tablets. Similar to the SDK, the ADK will allow hardware developers to take advantage of Android so that the OS can control or monitor external devices.
Adam Roades

1500 people show up for 16-year-old's birthday party after she forgets to set Facebook ... - 1 views

  •  
    Hilarious (and mostly benign) prank/lesson on accurately setting your Facebook privacy controls.
Raq Winchester

Localizing Language In the Brain - Slashdot - 0 views

  •  
    "A new study by MIT scientists pinpoints areas of the brain used exclusively for language (PDF), providing a partial answer to a longstanding debate in cognitive science. According to the study, there are parts of our brain dedicated to language and only language. After having their subjects perform the initial language task, which they call a 'functional localizer,' they had each one do a subset of seven other experiments: one on exact arithmetic, two on working memory, three on cognitive control, and one on music; since these are the functions 'most commonly argued to share neural machinery with language.' The authors say the results don't imply that every cognitive function has its own dedicated piece of cortex; after all, we're able to learn new skills, so there must be some parts of the brain that are both high-level and functionally flexible."
Iam me

Festo Launches SmartBird Robotic Seagull - IEEE Spectrum - 0 views

  •  
    Awesome videos - "Unlike many of Festo's flying robots, SmartBird doesn't appear to rely on lifting gas at all. It weighs less than half a kilo, and is capable of autonomous take-off, flight, and landing using just its two meter-long wings. SmartBird is modeled very closely on the herring gull, and controls itself the same way birds do, by twisting its body, wings, and tail. For example, if you look closely in the video, you can see SmartBird turning its head to steer."
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page