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November, 2011

  1. De Beers in De Valley

    November 20, 2011 by sshadmand

    Better late than never. De Beers diamonds is getting in on silicon valley action and investing in the next generation of semiconductors which will be made out of synthetic diamonds.

     

    Read more at PopSci here: http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2011-10/diamond-industry-invests-lab-created-knockoffs-semiconductors


  2. What startup babies did Yahoo, Google and Facebook give birth to?

    November 17, 2011 by sshadmand

    Here is an info-graphic my friend turned me onto (click the image to get the full view.)

    It shows the exodus from some of the biggest tech companies (facebook, yahoo, google…) that supplied the man power, and brain power, to feul various startups such as: Zoosk, Hunch, Tapjoy, Color, Foursquare, Quara and more.

    Want more?

    Here is an article outlining the biggest winners and losers involved:

     

    http://blog.topprospect.com/2011/06/the-biggest-talent-losers-and-winners/


  3. The Quintessential Optical Illusions

    November 14, 2011 by sshadmand


    Check out this Quara post (http://goo.gl/YjQYI) for some new and old optical illusions. What caught my eye was the optical illiso on the left I haven’t seen before. Can you tell the difference between the male and female pictured? Well you shouldn’t, they are the exact same image. The illusion here takes advantage of how our perception of gender is based on hues and tones as much as the facial features themselves.


  4. The hardware won’t stop changing

    November 13, 2011 by sshadmand

    When the iPhone first came about there were plenty of neh-sayers that rebeled against the native functionality on the phone and how it was destined to be doomed by more standard tech already in place on the web.

    The problem when attempting to prophesize the future of new technologies is that many people forget that the technology they are predicting against is not a controlled variable. Not only will the technolgy advance that they forsee, but the technology they are basing their predictions on will change as well. That every changing system means you can never be too sure what the life time of a new product will be and how it will develop. The only good bet is: all parts of technology are ever advancing.

    The mobie device epitomizes that fact. A fragmented distribution of lightweight, fairly inexpensive, devices that are constantly in use by its users and is getting completely revamped and bought up every year and by eager customers ready to upgrade. The manufactures will keep pumping more features into the device that go beyond  weight, and better screen resolution. And with form factor constraints relativley out the door, compared to their laptop and PC predecessors, native device functionality will always trump what the generic standard products will pump out. Of course RF functionalities ar making their way into our everyday life, and now Andoroids may be getting a barometer: http://gizmodo.com/5851288/why-the-barometer-is-androids-new-trump-card.

    As these products evolve native apps will keep going strong.


  5. That is a pretty freakin’ cool sphere!

    November 11, 2011 by sshadmand

    This is pretty awesome… A real hovering ball that seems to defy gravity and do some other neat tricks too. Yeah, we have seen some cool hovering toys these last few years, but this little doozy goes well past just hovering. Not only does it hover, but it is able to jet  of in any direction lickity split, and its gyroscopes (along with its auto pilot mode) give it the ability to stay in hover state no matter how hard you try to push it down. Just when you think you got your bearing with this thing it shows off a few more tricks as it dives to the floor, rolls over better than your dog skip, andtake right back off again. It seems to master land and air, and is made by the Japan’s ministry of defense.


  6. Easter Egg-ish Feature in Google Image Search

    November 9, 2011 by sshadmand

    You have probably searched for images on google image search before, but what you probably missed was the drag and drop image search feature. After hovering over an image from the image search results (ex: http://goo.gl/hwiJ0) drag the image over to the search text box. Once the image overlaps the search box, the search box extends allowing you to “drop the image” there.

    What seems to happen next is google uses meta data about the image selected to generate a text search that display results of web sites that are related to the picture.

    There was a google labs project a while back that gamified the manual tagging of images, mechanical turk style. Maybe this is one of the bi-products of that project.


  7. Has the iPhone camera quality really improved?

    November 6, 2011 by sshadmand

    Check out the picture below made by Lisa Bettany and featured on Gizmodo that demonstrates the differences in picture quality over the many iPhone generations. From the original, all the way to the 4S. The simple answer to the titles question – you bet you a$$ it has!


  8. Are you seeing things? Instant super-imposed 3d objects on 2d pictures

    November 5, 2011 by sshadmand

    See that picture to the left. It is a picture taken of a room with a billards table, can you tell what part of the picture is fake? We have all hard of super imposed by now (even the talking goat from Adam Sandler’s comedy cd in the 90s is now aware of the power of superimposing.) What makes this a breakthrough is that fact that the 3d objects (by the way, the balls on the table are the fake objects) were super imposed onto a flat, 2D picture. Even more interesting is that fact that those 3D objects can interact with the 2D objects in the picture, as if they were 3D them selves. Check the demo by Kevin Karsch (below) where you can see what I mean. Basically, you can take picture of a hall with stairs, and later add a 3D virtual ball to the picture, and in seconds watch the 3D ball bounce its way down the stairs case. Pretty B.A.


  9. Prove It! Would you bet your life on your wifi connect-ability?

    November 4, 2011 by sshadmand

    It’s fine and dandy when you say you can get three nines of service uptime, but would you be willing to have your server control your car’s brake system? Well if you did I woud guarantee you that your servers would find a way to be up more often – one way or another. That is what Computer scientists at Saarland University were thinking when he used their wifi as the communication channel is their bikes. They wanted to demonstrate how certain they were that their wifi can get up to thirteen-nines of accuracy. I really love how they are putting their money where his mouth is. They basically alined their lives and their product’s quality perfectly. Now their success is yours :)

    Check out more at Alpha Galileo.


  10. Braille 2.0

    November 3, 2011 by sshadmand

    The iPad (tablets) is at it again. After all these years Stanford has uped the anti on what the bar is for acceptable braille reading and writing devices. The tablet system shown here calibrates through a swipe and audio queues, and sets the type pad to where ever the users fingers lie. (This solves the problem with the lack of tactile response the flat screen of an iPad provides. In essence, as descried in the video, the input points find the users fingers, not the other way around.)


  11. A new dimension to the multi-toch

    November 2, 2011 by sshadmand

    Couple a lack of a keyboard and mouse with the lack of real estate in most mobile devices and you have a brand new problem with ergonomics and accessibility. Apple broke in the door with multi touch sensors that allow the screen to pinch and zoom with two fingers. The ability to recognize how your fingers interact with the screen means more intuitive gersture commands opening the door to far more access to tools and usage paths. This vide demonstares the ability for this phone to recognize what part of hand is tapping the screen. The result: your fingernail tapping the screen equals a right click, and a knuckle tab opens a new window.


  12. Screw watching 3D Screens, actually grab 3D objects!

    November 1, 2011 by sshadmand

    Microsoft is doing some cool stuff with interactive vertual 3d. No cords, or gloves, or glasses required. They are working on holograms, and not just for looking at. These holograms are able to be controlled by “touch” and simulate true interaction with virtual objects with the help of a real time physics engine. In short, it is starting to look pretty cool. If this technology continues to advance designers will be able to virtually interact with the models they create before they start need to develop any molds. At the end of the video they demo a mobile device that a user is able to pick up, interact with it, and all within a completely virtual holographic environment.

    Curious to see how it’s done? At min 1:02 they show how the system recognizes real objects, such as hands, paper, or bowls, and displays how they interact with the virtual objects onto a clear glass plate. This plus the users line of site create the illusion of true interaction with the virtual objects.

    I can’t wait for these technologies to find their way into meetings, to help team of engineers quickly to get on the same page by passing a prototype, modeled only moments ago, at a round table, as they literally pass the object from one person to the next.