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Kurt Laitner

IEEE Spectrum: A Fly-Eye Inspired Speed Sensor - 0 views

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    Very good for my democratic speed limit project
François Dongier

SkyDance - On TubeWatcher.tv - 0 views

  • Fly above the rest with high-quality video in HD as you experience aerial views of France from the passenger's seat.
Kurt Laitner

Woo+Table+v2.1.png880K (PNG Image, 1600×1250 pixels) - Scaled (77%) - 0 views

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    bwahhahaaah---psuedo-science concepts distilled into chemistry symbols. i want a building block set made with these for the next generation of budding scientists.
fishead ...*∞º˙

Beyond Realtime Search: The Dawning Of Ambient Streams - 0 views

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    "It was 1993 and I had just decided to drop out of college. I was a graphic design major in a great art school but decided I want to start my second company. Knowing this would mark the conclusion of my studies there I set out to create my final project. I would write a short story, design and produce it in print. I put out an edition of 300 and gave it to my friends and people who inspired me like author William Gibson. Cut to November, 2009, when I returned from sitting on a panel at the second Realtime CrunchUp. I had urged the audience and participants that when thinking about the realtime web we should not consider the challenge through the lens of how consumers behave today. I argued that the future potential of the realtime web is not in the misnomer "realtime search," as the consumption of this signal will predominantly be in what I call ambient streams. These are streams of information bubbling up in realtime, which seek us out, surround us, and inform us. They are like a fireplace bathing us in ambient infoheat. I believe that users will not go to a page and type in a search in a search box. Rather the information will appear to them in an ambient way on a range of devices and through different experiences. A few days after I got back from the CrunchUp, I was organizing some old documents when I stumbled on I Was Just Dead< , a cyberpunk short story I wrote 16 years ago. A story about a world of augmented reality. A world where at birth a chip is embedded in people's brains creating a reality where they no longer discern what is "real" and what is augmented in their surroundings (Hear the audio-book or download the free eBook below). It was strange to hear my former self calling out about the importance of augmented reality from across the span of almost two decades of experiences in the digital world, half of which were spent solving the problem of how to filter the massive realtime stream."
fishead ...*∞º˙

There's trouble brewing, guys « Bits and Pieces - 0 views

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    Barviarian Study that Proves Beer contains high amounts of female hormones and turns men into women.
fishead ...*∞º˙

Design and Meaning: An Interview with Nathan Shedroff - Core77 - 0 views

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    "Nathan Shedroff spoke to Vicky Teinaki about the difference between businesspeople and designers, his upcoming foray into sci-fi, and what designers wanting to get involved in sustainability can do. Shedroff is a leading author in experience design and the increasing value of design. His book subjects have included experience design (the 2001 experience-in-itself-book Experience Design 1), design thinking (Making Meaning, 2006) and sustainable design (Design is the Problem, 2009). He is currently the head of the Design MBA Strategy at the California Institute of Arts (CCA)."
fishead ...*∞º˙

Report: Programmer Conned CIA, Pentagon Into Buying Bogus Anti-Terror Code | Threat Lev... - 0 views

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    "A programmer who claims he produced software that detected hidden terrorist messages in Al Jazeera broadcasts was apparently responsible for a false alert in 2003 that grounded international flights. The 2003 incident raised the government's security level, according to a remarkable story published by Playboy. The developer also allegedly faked software demonstrations and conned the Pentagon into investing in a program that fellow workers suspect never existed or couldn't do what the developer claimed. In December 2003, DHS secretary Tom Ridge announced a terror alert based on intelligence from "credible sources" about imminent attacks that "could either rival or exceed what we experienced on September 11." Dozens of French, British and Mexican commercial "flights of interest" were canceled, and news agencies were reporting that the threats extended to "power plants, dams and even oil facilities in Alaska." Playboy says the source of the intelligence was never revealed publicly. But the evidence points to Dennis Montgomery, who had convinced the government that Al Jazeera - the Qatari-owned TV network - was unwittingly transmitting attack orders to Al Qaeda sleeper cells concealed in video it broadcast."
fishead ...*∞º˙

Rolling fireplace puts danger on the move | DVICE - 0 views

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    "Related Sections: Household Rolling fireplace puts danger on the move Rolling fireplace puts danger on the move I love a good fireplace, but I hate having to move away from it to make myself a sandwich or use the bathroom. That's why I love this rolling fireplace: I can roll it around with me wherever I go. Sure, if it tips over or goes down some stair accidentally you might just burn your house down, but come on. You're not some sort of klutz. I think the possibility of imminent danger makes this thing even cooler, anyways."
fishead ...*∞º˙

The gravity of the solar system - 0 views

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    "The gravity of the solar system Today on xkcd, an illustration showing the gravity wells of our solar system's planets and some of their moons. Gravity wells Two of Mars' tiny moons barely have any gravity at all: You could escape Deimos with a bike and a ramp. A thrown baseball could escape Phobos. That's great, but you forgot Pluto!"
fishead ...*∞º˙

Clever folds in a globe give new perspectives on Earth - tech - 10 December 2009 - New ... - 0 views

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    "Video: A new way to unfold the Earth's surface produces a new kind of map A new technique for unpeeling the Earth's skin and displaying it on a flat surface provides a fresh perspective on geography, making it possible to create maps that string out the continents for easy comparison, or lump together the world's oceans into one huge mass of water surrounded by coastlines. See a gallery of the new maps "Myriahedral projection" was developed by Jack van Wijk, a computer scientist at the Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands. "The basic idea is surprisingly simple," says van Wijk. His algorithms divide the globe's surface into small polygons that are unfolded into a flat map, just as a cube can be unfolded into six squares. Cartographers have tried this trick before; van Wijk's innovation is to up the number of polygons from just a few to thousands. He has coined the word "myriahedral" to describe it, a combination of "myriad" with "polyhedron", the name for polygonal 3D shapes. Warping reality The mathematical impossibility of flattening the surface of a sphere has long troubled mapmakers. "Consider peeling an orange and trying to flatten it out," says van Wijk. "The surface has to distort or crack." Some solutions distort the size of the continents while roughly preserving their shape - the familiar Mercator projection, for instance, makes Europe and North America disproportionately large compared with Africa. Others, like the Peters projection, keep landmasses at the correct relative sizes, at the expense of warping their shapes. An ideal map would combine the best properties of both, but that is only possible by inserting gaps into the Earth's surface, resulting in a map with confusing interruptions. Van Wijk's method makes it possible to direct those cuts in a way that minimises such confusion. Maps of significance When generating a map he assigns a "weighting" to each edge on the polyhedron to signal its importance, influencing the pl
fishead ...*∞º˙

Babbage's 19th-century "difference engine" on display in Mountain View - 0 views

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    "Charles Babbage is cited as the father of modern computing - although perhaps "uncle" would be more accurate, since his designs never actually saw completion and computing is based on totally different principles. But his idea of a "difference engine," a hand-cranked device that could solve mathematical problems, is essentially the first instance of a computer in human history. numbersUnfortunately, the device, designed to tackle the huge amount of calculation involved in tracking the British navy, was never completed. After 10 years of tinkering, the project was aborted and the prototype melted down. But Babbage's plans and a few pieces of the Difference Engine remained, and just recently someone decided they'd finish what he started. Now there is a complete and working Difference Engine at the Computer History Museum down in Mountain View. It was put together by Doron Swade, a former curator at London's Science Museum, and a team he assembled over the last two decades. There is another working Difference Engine being kept at that museum, and this one will only remain in Mountain View for a year before it heads out to Seattle to enter a "private collection." I'm guessing Ballmer's (actually, Nathan Myhrvold, former MS CTO. Close, though). So go see it while you can, startup guys! There's more info at NPR, where you can, as always, have it narrated to you. I love that. I'm going to make some coffee and listen to it again. Update: A commenter at NPR notes that the Harvard Mark I was a functioning difference engine, but relied on electricity rather than clockwork. It was completed in 1944."
fishead ...*∞º˙

The Towns That Chocolate Built - 0 views

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    "IMAGE: Cadbury's Dairy Milk chocolate bar vs. Hershey's Milk Chocolate bar. When iconic American chocolate-makers Hershey announced an (ultimately unsuccessful) bid to take over the equally iconic British confectionery company, Cadbury, most discussion revolved around one of two things: business reporters focused on the stock price implications of any deal, while the food media conducted taste tests, and were joined by patriotic British journalists in their anxiety that Hershey might meddle with Cadbury's infinitely superior formula. "
fishead ...*∞º˙

1913 Lincoln movie found in barn cleanup - All Salon - Salon.com - 0 views

  • A contractor cleaning out an old New Hampshire barn he was about to demolish has found the only known copy of a 1913 silent film about Abraham Lincoln.
fishead ...*∞º˙

Evil Clown hired for stalking, threats and a pie in the face | Metro.co.uk - 0 views

  • ‘The clown’s one and only aim is to smash a cake into the face of his victim, when they least expect it, during the course of seven days.’If the boy or girl manages to avoid the ‘hit’, they are given the cake as a birthday present. Well, that’s alright then. The frightening fun can be stopped at any time, which is handy for parents who have second thoughts and don’t fancy the cost of child therapy.
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    coulrophobia--I has it.
fishead ...*∞º˙

Mindblower of the Day: Every Black Hole Contains Another Universe? - 0 views

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    "Every Black Hole Contains Another Universe? And our universe may sit in another universe's black hole, equations predict. Main Content A supermassive black hole. A supermassive black hole sits inside the galaxy Centaurus A, seen in an artist's conception."
fishead ...*∞º˙

Popped Culture: Up, Up And Away! - 0 views

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    Friday, January 01, 2010 Up, Up And Away! Posted by Jeremy Barker | Labels: balloons, Pogo, Up Upular Remix artist POGO has done it again, taking the chords, bass notes and vocal samples and clips from the Disney Pixar film Up to create an original song called Upular. Having finally seen Up over Christmas I'm enjoying it all the more and it seemed an inspiring way to kick off 2010. Happy New Year everybody, let's see what we can do this year!
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    it would be nice if diigo would embed thumbnails and videos like some of the other services...
fishead ...*∞º˙

Gibberish rock song written by Italian composer to sound like English Boing Boing - 0 views

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    "In this remarkable and fully rockin' video, an Italian singer performs a rock piece whose lyrics are gibberish intended to sound like English. Entitled "What English Sounds Like to Foreigners," the video is meant to illustrate which English phonemes and syllables carry into the foreign ear, but I tell you what, it sounded like English to me, too, though like English as sung in such a way as to make it hard to decipher. What English Sounds Like to Foreigners (via Making Light) Update Thanks to commenter LukeWhite for this intelligence: "It's actually titled Prisencolinensinainciusol, written by Adriano Celentano wrote it in 1972.""
fishead ...*∞º˙

Haptic Technology Merges with 3D Modelling for Protoypes - 0 views

  • Industrial design modelling, used to make prototypes of home appliances or mock-ups of car parts, could soon make the leap from the world of plaster, plastic and sticky tape into the digital domain thanks to an augmented reality design system developed in Europe. function google_ad_request_done(google_ads) { if (google_ads.length < 1 ) return; document.write("< google_ads.length; ++i) { document.write(" google_ad_client = "pub-8430344808469242"; google_alternate_ad_url = "http://www.azom.com/images/spacer.gif"; google_ad_channel = "8293186506"; google_ad_output = "js"; google_max_num_ads = 6; google_ad_type = "text_image"; google_color_line = "330000"; google_feedback = 'on'; The system, developed by a team of researchers from six EU countries, merges touch-sensitive haptic technology with 3D digital modelling and computer-aided design (CAD) to allow professional designers to feel and shape their creations physically and virtually. Implemented commercially, the system promises to save companies time and money, raise designers' productivity and improve the quality of new products.
  • "Haptics is far from a mature technology, and this project was one of the first to build a haptic system for industrial designers," Bordegoni notes. The multimodal and multisensory SATIN system consists of two FCS-HapticMASTER devices, in essence robotic arms more commonly used for remote welding or dental surgery, which position and rotate a robotic spline, an electronic version of the flexible strip of material, typically wood or metal, long used by designers to draw curves. Fitted with actuators and sensors, the spline automatically twists and bends to the shape of a digital representation of the product uploaded by the designer into the system.
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    @Frank---this looks COOOL!!!
fishead ...*∞º˙

The LOST Blog: Images of the Future that Never Was - 0 views

  • Images of the Future that Never Was The website Paleofuture.com offers a fascinating look at what past eras predicted for our future --and how wrong it was. There are plenty of charming images of flying machines, lunar colonies, and refrigerators of the future:
fishead ...*∞º˙

infographic:facts about bottled water - 0 views

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    you gotta see this to believe it
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