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Comments: 228 +-   Simple, Cost-Effective, Multiroom Audio? on Saturday November 07, @06:00PM

Posted by timothy on Saturday November 07, @06:00PM
from the powered-monitors-and-long-cables dept.
music
jimicus writes "I'd like a multiroom audio system but I'm thoroughly confused by the options available — and the difference in prices is huge. For instance, Philips have a wireless system which starts at around £280 — and Russound have a product which comes in around £1,000. I've already got all my music as MP3s and it lives on a NAS box — I don't really want to repeat that process. I also have a perfectly capable amp and speakers in my living room, so I don't really need anything else there. Whatever I go for has to pass the wife test — so something which requires a separate amp, speakers and PC in each room and requires a keyboard to control is right out. I don't mind spending a little money but I don't really want to find that every little extra thing adds up to £thousands. Has anyone else dealt with a similar problem? How did you solve it?"
Read More... 228 comments story

Comments: 61 +-   Sony Demos Natal-Like Control System on Friday November 06, @08:03PM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday November 06, @08:03PM
from the wink-to-fire-the-cannon dept.
inputdev
An anonymous reader writes "It's not just Microsoft investigating full body, markerless motion capture. Sony has enlisted the help of Swiss firm Atracsys to develop similar technology. Sony has openly discussed the technology with New Scientist, and has realistic expectations for the new system — it can capture broad body gestures but not individual fingers. That's just one trade-off needed in order to develop a real-time system that anyone can use, according to a markerless motion-capture expert." It's still in the early stages of development, but the accompanying video shows the use of face-recognition software as well. The demo game has players moving their heads left or right to position their character, and then smiling to "catch" an object.
Read More... 61 comments story

Comments: 247 +-   Multi-Button OpenOfficeMouse At OOoCon 2009 on Friday November 06, @04:05PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday November 06, @04:05PM
from the flying-in-the-face-of-simple-design dept.
inputdev
An anonymous reader writes "WarMouse has announced their new multi-button OpenOfficeMouse for OpenOffice.org at the 2009 OOoCon in Orvieto, Italy. The mouse, which features 18 buttons, a scroll wheel, and an analog joystick, has double-click functionality on every button and stores up to 63 application and game profiles in its 512k of flash memory. The OpenOfficeMouse runs on Windows, Linux, and OS X; its customization software will be released as free and open source software." We couldn't decide if this was a protest against Apple's new magic mouse, an elaborate practical joke, or just plain insanity run amok. In any case, it is hard to imagine a world in which so many tiny buttons on a mouse make sense.
Read More... 247 comments story

Comments: 58 +-   Microsoft Research Shows Off New Projects On College Recruiting Tour on Friday November 06, @03:22PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday November 06, @03:22PM
from the why-do-they-want-computing-to-be-a-workout dept.
microsoft
In a recent college recruiting tour, Microsoft's Craig Mundie was able to showcase some of the experiments coming out of their Research division. Among some of the interesting projects were another pass at the Minority Report interface, eye-tracking, intelligent data sorting, a global carbon-climate model, and several other software and hardware experiments. A video and supporting slideshow are also available via Microsoft's press site. "Mundie also will discuss the kinds of computers students will soon be using – machines that will respond to gestures through new natural user interfaces; deploy the power of new microprocessors; migrate data to the cloud; and use live data to drive new simulations and visualizations. He’ll center on an environmental theme to show what it might be like to be a research scientist working on zero carbon energy in the future using new interactions with data and computers to increase insight."
Read More... 58 comments story

Comments: 85 +-   Ubiquiti Announces RouterStation Challenge Winners on Thursday November 05, @09:29PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 05, @09:29PM
from the congratulations-to-you dept.
gui
Riskable writes "Remember that $200,000 Contest For a Better Open-WRT Wireless Router GUI? Today Ubiquiti posted the winning entries to their support wiki. The grand prize was a tie between PyCI (written by yours truly) and NETSHe with OpenNET as the runner up. Source code and firmware images for each entry are available for download on their respective wiki pages. I'll be setting up a project page for PyCI (and l2sh) soon to make it a participatory open source product. Even if you don't have a RouterStation, or don't care about OpenWRT, there are numerous Python modules and tools inside of PyCI that could prove useful to other open source projects (e.g. iptables.py can read/interpret over 400 permutations of the iptables command). I'll also be checking the comments if anyone has any questions for me about PyCI or the contest in general. BTW: I'd like to thank all the commenters in the original article that insinuated that the technical requirements were impossible and/or that making a GUI to configure such complex things is a waste of time. I read every one and I wouldn't have made it such an obsession otherwise!"
Read More... 85 comments story

Comments: 266 +-   Apple Not Disabling OS X Atom Support After All on Thursday November 05, @04:32PM

Posted by timothy on Thursday November 05, @04:32PM
from the If-you-like-that-sort-of-thing dept.
macosx
bonch writes "Contrary to previous reports, Atom chip support is working fine in the latest 10C535 build of OS X 10.6.2. Apple's EULA still states that OS X is licensed to run only on Apple hardware, but it looks like OSX86 hackers can breathe easy ... for now."
Read More... 266 comments story

Comments: 130 +-   On-Demand Video + CMS + Interactive Input For Museum? on Wednesday November 04, @05:55PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday November 04, @05:55PM
from the free-reign-in-spain dept.
displays
remolacha writes "I've been given the task of tech chief for a biggish art museum (1,300 m^2, or about 13,000 sq ft) in Spain. The museum's designers want 20 'terminals' that will offer on-demand video and interactive content. The terminals' content will change with the exhibits; many will have touchscreens. More interesting forms of input are planned as well (floor sensors, big buttons). It's all on one floor, and the floors are raised, so I can run cabling and set up floor ethernet jacks. Max cable run is 60m / 190ft. The museum may expand to 4 times its projected size once open, by comandeering other floors in the building. To give an idea of where the designers heads are, they were talking about a massive DVD changer in a closet somewhere. I am thinking an intranet running a web server with a CMS and Flash media server, terminals running Firefox in kiosk mode. I'd love to do everything on Linux. Does anyone have experience with a setup like this, better ideas, or advice?"
Read More... 130 comments story

Comments: 1162 +-   Plug vs. Plug — Which Nation's Socket Is Best? on Wednesday November 04, @02:04PM

Posted by timothy on Wednesday November 04, @02:04PM
from the one-vote-for-three-prong-american dept.
power
CNETNate writes "Is the American mains socket really so much worse than the Italian design? And does the Italian socket fail at rivaling the sockets in British homes? This feature explores, in a not-at-all-parodic-and-anecdotal fashion, the designs, strengths and weaknesses of Earth's mains adapters. There is only one conclusion, and you're likely not to agree if you live in France. Or Italy. Or in fact most places." (For more plug pics and details, check out Wikipedia's list of the ones in current use.)
Read More... 1162 comments story

Comments: 109 +-   The Story Behind a Failed HPC Startup on Tuesday November 03, @06:25PM

Posted by kdawson on Tuesday November 03, @06:25PM
from the build-it-and-they-will-come-if-you-don't-run-out-of-money-first dept.
supercomputing
jbrodkin writes "SiCortex had an idea that it thought would take the supercomputing world by storm — build the most energy-efficient HPC clusters on the planet. But the recession, and the difficulties of penetrating a market dominated by Intel-based machines, proved to be too much for the company to handle. SiCortex ended up folding earlier this year, and its story may be a cautionary tale for startups trying to bring innovation to the supercomputing industry."
Read More... 109 comments story

Comments: 223 +-   Dell Rugged Laptops Not Quite Tough Enough on Tuesday November 03, @10:40AM

Posted by timothy on Tuesday November 03, @10:40AM
from the one-good-hit dept.
portables
An anonymous reader writes "Trusted Reviews has put the new Dell XFR rugged laptop through the grinder and it hasn't fared as well as expected. Considering that these guys drove a car over a Panasonic Toughbook, they went pretty easy on the Dell, but it still couldn't take the punishment. It looks like Dell still has a way to go to steal the ball from Panasonic when it comes to all terrain computing."
Read More... 223 comments story

Comments: 68 +-   Negroponte Hints At Paper-Like Design For XO-3 on Tuesday November 03, @09:40AM

Posted by timothy on Tuesday November 03, @09:40AM
from the in-that-it-is-not-made-of-raspberries dept.
displays
waderoush writes "In May 2008, Nicholas Negroponte, chairman of the One Laptop Per Child Foundation, unveiled an e-book like design for the second-generation XO Laptop, consisting of a pair of facing touchscreens. In a new e-mail interview, Negroponte says that design has been thrown out, and that instead the foundation is working on version '1.75' of the existing green-and-white laptop with a more powerful processor, as well as a '3.0' version that would look 'more like a sheet of paper.' Negroponte also addressed a range of other questions about the OLPC project, including the significance of the project to make 1.6 million e-books readable on the XO laptop and the organization's push to reach more children in Latin America, Africa, Afghanistan, and Pakistan."
Read More... 68 comments story

Comments: 650 +-   Feds Bust Cable Modem Hacker on Monday November 02, @11:16PM

Posted by kdawson on Monday November 02, @11:16PM
from the grey-area dept.
hardhack
Several readers noted the indictment of hardware hacker Ryan Harris, known as DerEngel. Harris wrote the 2006 book Hacking the Cable Modem, explaining how to get upgraded speed or even free Internet service by bypassing the firmware locks on Motorola Surfboard modems. He has run a profitable business at tcniso.net since 2003, selling unlocked cable modems. (The site is now offline.) Harris has been charged with conspiracy, aiding and abetting computer intrusion, and wire fraud. Wired quotes Harris's reaction: "I read the indictment — it's complete bull****. I'll tell you right now I'm not going to plead guilty."
Read More... 650 comments story

Comments: 28 +-   Europe Launches Flood-Predicting Satellite and Test Probe on Monday November 02, @05:40PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday November 02, @05:40PM
from the now-build-one-that-controls-the-weather dept.
space
MikeChino writes to mention that the European Space Agency has launched a pair of satellites, one that will pinpoint accurately the future location and intensity of floods and droughts, and the other aimed at testing new tech. Launched on a Russian rocket launcher from the Plesestk cosmodrome, the SMOS probe will measure soil moisture, plant growth, and ocean salt levels across the globe. The measurements gathered by the SMOS probe can be used to track ocean circulation patterns and soil moisture — data that can be used to predict quickly drought and flood risk in certain areas, as well as the intricacies of the planet's climate cycle. The other satellite, a smaller demonstration probe dubbed Proba 2, will test 17 new technologies ranging from a new wide-angle view camera to a xenon-fed resistojet thruster.
Read More... 28 comments story

Comments: 123 +-   New XBMC Port Promises ARM-Powered HD In the Palm of Your Hand on Monday November 02, @11:48AM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday November 02, @11:48AM
from the melts-in-your-mouth dept.
software
Engadget has a recent teaser video promising HD content via XBMC running on a 600MHz Beagleboard. This could mean great things for home theater putterers, with the Beagleboard tipping the scales at a modest $150 and the ability to fit in the palm of your hand. Already running on everything from MIDs to AppleTVs and now moving to ARM-powered devices like the Beagleboard, it looks like XBMC needs to be renamed from "Xbox Media Center" to "ubiquitous media center."
Read More... 123 comments story

Comments: 144 +-   Appeal For Commuter GPS Logs To Aid Electric Cars on Sunday November 01, @03:42PM

Posted by timothy on Sunday November 01, @03:42PM
from the where-did-you-go-this-summer dept.
transportation
holy_calamity writes "A team at Carnegie Mellon University has begun a project seeking to design a kit to cheaply convert secondhand cars into cheap, electric ones suitable for commuting, if little else. They hope to rely heavily on smart management software to extract as much efficiency as possible from regenerative braking, and knowledge of terrain from GPS tracking. But they are hampered by a lack of public data on how commuters actually drive. Their solution is to appeal to GPS users to upload .gpx log files of their commute to the team's site. The data is plugged into a simulator that reveals how much cheaper an electric car could do your journey, and an anonymized public dataset will be created. A programming contest will award a production electric car to the coder who designs the best management algorithm using it."
Read More... 144 comments story

Comments: 128 +-   A Clever New Approach To Desalination on Saturday October 31, @02:46PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday October 31, @02:46PM
from the pass-the-salt dept.
earth
jbeaupre writes "The Economist reports on progress by a company called Saltworks on using saline gradients to do the heavy lifting of desalination. In essence, Saltworks uses solar energy or waste heat to concentrate sea water. They then use the ionic gradient between the concentrated brine and two sea-water streams to pull ions from from a 3rd sea-water stream. It appears to work with entropy by trading the reduced entropy of the desalinated water against the increased entropy of 'mixing' the brine and the other sea-water streams. The article only discusses Na and Cl, but even just removing these ions is a step in the right direction."
Read More... 128 comments story

Comments: 47 +-   Controlling Games and Apps Through Muscle Sensors on Saturday October 31, @11:24AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday October 31, @11:24AM
from the quick-somebody-patent-air-guitar-hero dept.
hardhack
A team with members from Microsoft, the University of Toronto, and the University of Washington have developed an interface that uses electrodes to monitor muscle signals and translate those into commands or button presses, allowing a user to bypass a physical input device and even control a game or application while their hands are full. The video demonstration shows somebody playing Guitar Hero by making strumming motions and tapping his fingers together, a jogger changing his music without having to touch the device, and a man flexing a muscle to open the trunk of his car while he carries objects in both hands. The academic paper (PDF) is available online.
Read More... 47 comments story

Comments: 61 +-   Moon-Excavation Robots Face Off on Saturday October 31, @10:23AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday October 31, @10:23AM
from the can-you-dig-it dept.
robot
avishere writes "Student teams designed and built robotic power-lifters to excavate simulated lunar soil (a.k.a. 'regolith') earlier this month, with $750,000 in prizes up for grabs. Excavating regolith, according to NASA, will be an important part of any construction projects or processing of natural resources on the Moon. Interestingly, regolith is especially difficult to dig because its dust particles want to stick together. The whole robotic system has to be sturdy enough to scoop moon dirt and powerful enough to move through the dust while still meeting the weight requirements. The winning excavator, from Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts, lifted 1,103 pounds within the allotted time, and got its creators a sweet $500,000 for their troubles."
Read More... 61 comments story

Comments: 100 +-   Contest To Hack Brazilian Voting Machines on Friday October 30, @11:09PM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday October 30, @11:09PM
from the hack-the-vote dept.
hardhack
An anonymous reader writes "Brazilian elections went electronic many years ago, with very fast results but a few complaints from losers, of course. Next month, 10 teams that accepted the challenge will have access to hardware and software (Google translation; original in Portuguese) for the amount of time they requested (from one hour to four days). Some will try to break the vote's secrecy and some will try to throw in malicious code to change the entered votes without leaving traces."
Read More... 100 comments story

Comments: 444 +-   Chinese To Supply 600 MW Wind Farm In Texas on Friday October 30, @08:44AM

Posted by kdawson on Friday October 30, @08:44AM
from the stimulus-dollars-at-work dept.
earth
Hugh Pickens sends in a Wall Street Journal report that Chinese banks will provide $1.5B to a consortium of Chinese and American companies to build a 600-megawatt wind farm in West Texas, using turbines made in China. The wind farm will be built on 36,000 acres, and will use 240 2.5-megawatt turbines, providing enough power to meet the electrical needs of around 150,000 American homes. The project will be the first instance of a Chinese manufacturer exporting wind turbines to the United States. China aims to be the front-runner in wind- and solar-power generation "The Obama administration is hoping a shift to renewable energy will inject new life into the US manufacturing base and provide high-paying jobs, making up for losses in other sectors. But while the US has poured money into renewable energy through tax credits and other subsidies, China has positioned itself to reap many of the benefits by ramping up its export machine."
Read More... 444 comments story

 
Is this going to involve RAW human ecstasy?