7 Reasons to Consider a Home Gym

If you think of picking up better health habits and don't like crowded gyms, consider setting a home gym catered to your needs.

5 Top Picks for Christmas Holiday Like a Fairytale

If you imagine Christmas holiday this year being like a fairytale, you should consider visiting these hidden gems!

7 Fashion Accessories To Lift Up Your Style Quotient

Get heads up on the trendiest as well as classic fashion accessories that would elevate your style to another level.

Sensibo

Microsoft News : Start Button and Start Menu are not coming back. A tutorial will be available


Description : 

CFO and Chief Marketing Tami Reller confirmed to Investment Firm Nomura that the Start menu would not be coming back to Windows 8

From Arstechnica :

In these meetings, Reller discussed the concerns that reviewers have raised about the Windows 8 interface : in particular, the lack of familiarity that the interface will have, and the worry that it will be confusing for mouse users. Windows 8 removes the Start button and instead depends on hot corners for essential functionality, and in the current beta there is little to tell users what to do. 


According to Nomura, Reller confirmed that the Start button will remain gone, but that the discoverability problem will be addressed through a tutorial for users, so that when they first run the operating system they will be guided through the new interactions.

Well, so that's that then.

Nothing to see here, move along.

Those who want start orb and start menu back, can still use 3rd party softwares to achieve it (at least for the Consumer Preview Build.

More to come soon...

*by andreascy*

Intel - How Far We've Come (1968-2012)

Description :

Time flies when you're having fun, but it goes by even faster when you're creating the future. This short video from Brian Krzanich's 2012 Intel International Sales and Marketing Conference keynote shows just how much they've created in 44 years. 



Homepage

*by andreascy*

Microchip News : Capacitive Touch Sensing Overhead Console Demo using mTouch™

Description :

The Overhead Console demo features the usage of Microchip's mTouch™ technology in a capacitive touch sensing application in an automotive module. A single, cost effective PIC18F66K80 microcontroller is the cornerstone of this demo featuring 11 capacitive touch inputs with various styles of touch pads housed in a module with class "A" curved surfaces. 





RGB LED lighting is used for backlighting the touch pad graphics. LIN and CAN communication protocols are supported. 


More on :

http://www.microchip.com/pagehandler/en-us/technology/mtouch

http://www.microchip.com/stellent/idcplg?IdcService=SS_GET_PAGE&nodeId=1478&redirects=automotive

*by andreascy*

Google Maps App for Android Updated to 6.5


Description :

Google has announced an update for its Google Maps app for Android devices, with the Mountain View, Calif., company promising new, robust options. Now at version 6.5, the mobile app has all of the public transportation option found on the desktop version of Google Maps, TG Daily reported Thursday. 

Users will have more options when searching, allowing them to search for routes that involve fewer public transportation options, or one that has the least amount of walking no matter how many transfers are required, and one that its algorithms determine as the recommended route, Google said. 


"Whether you just need to get somewhere as fast as possible, or you want to avoid the risk of a missed connection or you prefer not to tire your legs, you can get the transit directions that best suit you". The user interface has been enhanced for the most current version of Android, but even those running versions below 4.0 will see improvements. Handsets capable of displaying high-resolution graphics will see graphics crisper with quicker load times, the company said.


More on Google play.

Are you using Google Maps? Comment below and let us know your experience with this app. If you are an Android user then definitely you'll love this section. Send us your suggestions for the future. If you need our help then contact us. We'd love to help!

*by andreascy*

Viewing Angle : Glass - Enabling an Evolving Display Industry

Description :

Corning experts discuss the changing landscape and growing need for diversification within the display industry. Corning Glass Technologies Chief Technology Officer, Peter L. Bocko and John Bayne, vice president and general manager for High Performance Display, explain how glass remains an enabling material for the newest consumer electronic devices.


If you liked this post then here is our RSS feed. Feel free to subscribe and receive all the latest trending tech news around the world straight to your inbox. We never spam.That's a promise!

*by andreascy*

Boston Dynamics : Sand Flea Jumping Robot

Descripion :

We wrote an article recently about : Boston Dynamics : Changing Your Idea of What Robots Can Do. A really interesting topic with full references to all of these High - Tech robots made by Boston Dynamis, all of these years, including specific information, pictures, videos, testing results, their future vision etc.


Today we present to you their latest robot named Sand Flea.


Sand Flea is an incredible 11-lb robot with one trick up its sleeve : Normally it drives like an RC car, but when it needs to it can jump 30 feet into the air. An onboard stabilization system keeps it oriented during flight to improve the view from the video uplink and to control landings. 


Current development of Sand Flea is funded by the The US Army's Rapid Equipping Force


For more information visit : 

www.BostonDynamics.com

*by andreascy*

Building Windows 8 - Touch Hardware

Description :

While Windows 7 has some touch screen features built in, few of the Windows 7-based PCs have used it. Windows 8, with its Metro UI, offers up a more full featured touch interface. In the latest post on Microsoft's official Windows 8 developer blog, team members Jerry Koh and Jeff Piira give an update on the efforts to make Windows 8 work on both existing and upcoming touch-based hardware products.



Microsoft first revealed how different touch interactions will work with Windows 8 back in September during the BUILD conference. You can see which touch movements correspond to Windows 8 command in the figure above. While Windows 8's touch interface will work on PCs made for Windows 7, PCs and tablets made especially for Windows 8 will have some extra features.


The blog post states that Windows 8 hardware will require that the digitizers support at least five fingers. Koh and Piira write :

"The reason we went in this direction is a response to developer feedback. Developers do not want their creativity to be limited, and in particular, they let us know that they want to be free to use whichever multi-finger gestures or controls are useful. They do not want requirements for a minimum number of fingers that may not make sense for their application. As such, we focused on a minimum of 5 fingers to enable scenarios like whole hand interactions (all 5 fingers) or multi-finger/multi-hand scenarios. This will address the feedback, and unlocks opportunities for developers to push the envelope with multi-touch applications."


There also have been a number of issues in getting the Windows 8 touch screen experience to work well on Windows 7 PCs. The blog post states :

"In order to make edge swipe work consistently on Windows 7 PCs, we created a mode where there is a 20-pixel buffer to catch the edge swipe gesture. This allows a majority of PCs to reliably invoke the charms and use Windows 8 effectively. The downside of this buffer is that it takes away some real estate from the application, and from developers."

Some of the touch interactions in Windows 8 on PCs made first for Windows 7 won't work as well. The blog post cites a few of them, including individual taps not working every time, having swipe and slide being misinterpreted as a tap command on some hardware, and swiping from the edge not always working. The blog post says that users of older Windows 7 hardware can sometimes get around these limitations. It states, "For example, if the charms don’t appear after an edge swipe, you can try again, but swipe more slowly."

Chart showing test results for Right Edge Swipe (no mitigations) on Windows 7 touch screens, Success rate is distributed between 0% and 100%, with a few data points around 55%.

Microsoft has been testing 64 Windows 7-based touch screens with Windows 8 running inside. The final results show that the vast majority of them will be able to handle at least the basic Windows 8 touch screen commands. However, some will work better than others. As the above chart shows, using the right edge swipe touch command on Windows 7 touch screens show that many of the attempts did not succeed at all.
PCs and tablets made especially for Windows 8 should be far more capable of handling its touch screen language. The blog post states, "Microsoft tests and certifies each new touch device before it can enter the market as a Windows 8 PC. This is how we will ensure consistency and quality in touch hardware for Windows 8."


*by andreascy*


Galaxy Nexus and Android Beam: Touch

Description :

Android Beam makes sharing simple. Touch two phones back-to-back, then tap to beam YouTube videos, apps, web pages, contacts, directions and more across phones. Available on NFC (Near Field Communication) - enabled Android devices running Android 4.0, Ice Cream Sandwich. 



*by andreascy*

OSA : Researchers discover a new path for light through metal

Description :
Helping bridge the gap between photonics and electronics, researchers from Purdue University have coaxed a thin film of titanium nitride into transporting plasmons, tiny electron excitations coupled to light that can direct and manipulate optical signals on the nanoscale. 


Titanium nitride's addition to the short list of surface-plasmon-supporting materials, formerly composed only of metals, could point the way to a new class of optoelectronic devices with unprecedented speed and efficiency. "We have found that titanium nitride is a promising candidate for an entirely new class of technologies based on plasmonics and metamaterials," said Alexandra Boltasseva, a researcher at Purdue and an author on a paper published March 27 in the Optical Society's (OSA) open-access journal Optical Materials Express. "This is particularly compelling because surface plasmons resolve a basic mismatch between wavelength-scale optical devices and the much smaller components of integrated electronic circuits."


Value of Plasmons :

Metals carry electricity with ease, but normally do nothing to transmit light waves. Surface plasmons, unusual light-coupled oscillations that form on the surface of metallic materials, are the exception to that rule. When excited on the surface of metals by light waves of specific frequencies, plasmons are able to retain that same frequency, but with wavelengths that are orders-of-magnitude smaller, cramming visible and near-infrared light into the realm of the nanoscale.
In the world of electronics and optics, that 100-fold contraction is a boon. Circuits that direct the paths of electrons operate on a much smaller scale than optical light waves, so engineers must either rely on small but relatively sluggish electrons for information processing or bulk up to accommodate the zippy photons. Plasmons represent the best of both worlds and are already at the heart of a number of optoelectronic devices. They have not had widespread use, however, due to the dearth of materials that readily generate them and the fact that metals, in most cases, cannot be integrated with semiconductor devices.

Plasmonic Materials :

Until now, the best candidates for plasmonic materials were gold and silver. These noble metals, however, are not compatible with standard silicon manufacturing technologies, limiting their use in commercial products. Silver is the metal with the best optical and surface plasmon properties, but it forms grainy, or semi-continuous, thin films. Silver also easily degrades in air, which causes loss of optical signal, making it a less-attractive material in plasmon technologies.
In an effort to overcome these drawbacks, Boltasseva and her team chose to study titanium nitride - a ceramic material that is commonly used as a barrier metal in microelectronics and to coat metal surfaces such as medical implants or machine tooling parts- because they could manipulate its properties in the manufacturing process. It also could be easily integrated into silicon products, and grown crystal-by-crystal, forming highly uniform, ultrathin films - properties that metals do not share.
To test its plasmonic capabilities, the researchers deposited a very thin, very even film of titanium nitride on a sapphire surface. They were able to confirm that titanium nitride supported the propagation of surface plasmons almost as efficiently as gold. Silver, under perfect conditions, was still more efficient for plasmonic applications, but its acknowledged signal loss limited its practical applications.
To further improve the performance of titanium nitride, the researchers are now looking into a manufacturing method known as molecular beam epitaxy, which would enable them to grow the films and layered structures known as superlattices crystal-by-crystal.

Technologies and Potential Applications :

In addition to plasmonics, the researchers also speculate that titanium nitride may have applications in metamaterials, which are engineered materials that can be tailored for almost any application because of their extraordinary response to electromagnetic, acoustic, and thermal waves. Recently proposed applications of metamaterials include invisibility cloaks, optical black holes, nanoscale optics, data storage, and quantum information processing.
The search for alternatives to noble metals with improved optical properties, easier fabrication and integration capabilities could ultimately lead to real-life applications for plasmonics and metamaterials.
"Plasmonics is an important technology for nanoscale optical circuits, sensing, and data storage because it can focus light down to nanoscale," notes Boltasseva. "Titanium nitride is a promising candidate in the near-infrared and visible wavelength ranges. Unlike gold and silver, titanium nitride is compatible with standard semiconductor manufacturing technology and provides many advantages in its nanofabrication and integration."
According to the researchers, titanium nitride-based devices could provide nearly the same performance for some plasmonic applications. While noble metals like silver would still be the best choice for specific applications like negative index metamaterials, titanium nitride could outperform noble metals in other metamaterial and transformation optics devices, such as those based on hyperbolic metamaterials.


*by andreascy*

ORNL Scientists Developed a Method to Convert Polyethylene Into Carbon Fiber

Description :

Common material such as polyethylene used in plastic bags could be turned into something far more valuable through a process being developed at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory

ORNL Scientists Developed a Method to Convert Polyethylene Into Carbon Fiber

In a paper published in Advanced Materials, a team led by Amit Naskar of the Materials Science and Technology Division outlined a method that allows not only for production of carbon fiber but also the ability to tailor the final product to specific applications.

"Our results represent what we believe will one day provide industry with a flexible technique for producing technologically innovative fibers in myriad configurations such as fiber bundle or non-woven mat assemblies," Naskar said.

Using a combination of multi-component fiber spinning and their sulfonation technique, Naskar and colleagues demonstrated that they can make polyethylene-base fibers with a customized surface contour and manipulate filament diameter down to the submicron scale. The patent-pending process also allows them to tune the porosity, making the material potentially useful for filtration, catalysis and electrochemical energy harvesting.

Naskar noted that the sulfonation process allows for great flexibility as the carbon fibers exhibit properties that are dictated by processing conditions. For this project, the researchers produced carbon fibers with unique cross-sectional geometry, from hollow circular to gear-shaped by using a multi-component melt extrusion-based fiber spinning method.

The possibilities are virtually endless, according to Naskar, who described the process.
"We dip the fiber bundle into an acid containing a chemical bath where it reacts and forms a black fiber that no longer will melt," Naskar said. "It is this sulfonation reaction that transforms the plastic fiber into an infusible form.

"At this stage, the plastic molecules bond, and with further heating cannot melt or flow. At very high temperatures, this fiber retains mostly carbon and all other elements volatize off in different gas or compound forms."

The researchers also noted that their discovery represents a success for DOE (Department of Energy), which seeks advances in lightweight materials that can, among other things, help the U.S. auto industry design cars able to achieve more miles per gallon with no compromise in safety or comfort. And the raw material, which could come from grocery store plastic bags, carpet backing scraps and salvage, is abundant and inexpensive.

*by andreascy*

UF : Researchers envision a promising new technique - Writing graphene circuitry with ion "pens"

Description :

The unique electrical properties of graphene have enticed researchers to envision a future of fast integrated circuits made with the one-carbon-atom-thick sheets, but many challenges remain on the path to commercialization. Scientists from the University of Florida have recently tackled one of these challenges - how to reliably manufacture graphene on a large scale. 


The team has developed a promising new technique for creating graphene patterns on top of silicon carbide (SiC). SiC comprises both silicon and carbon, but at high temperatures (around 1300 degrees Celsius) silicon atoms will vaporize off the surface, leaving the carbon atoms to grow into sheets of pure graphene. Researchers had previously used this thermal decomposition technique to create large sheets of graphene, which were then etched to make the patterns required for devices.

A layer of graphene is shown with a tiny nanopore drilled into its surface. Researchers at Harvard and MIT demonstrated that the membrane holds potential for speeding up DNA sequencing due to its extreme thinness.

The etching process, however, can introduce defects or chemical contaminants that reduce graphene's prized electron mobility. In contrast, the Florida team's technique allowed the researchers to confine the growth of graphene to a defined pattern as small as 20 nanometers. The team found that implanting silicon or gold ions in SiC lowered the temperature at which graphene formed by approximately 100 degrees Celsius. The team implanted ions only where graphene layers were desired, and then heated the SiC to 1200 degrees Celcius.


At this temperature the pure SiC did not form graphene, but the implanted areas did. Using this technique, the team successfully created graphene nanoribbons, thin lines of graphene with nanoscale dimensions. With further refining, the process, described in the AIPAmerican Institute of Physics' journal, Applied Physics Letters, may be able to encourage selective graphene growth at even lower temperatures, the researchers write.

*by andreascy*

UCSB : Ripping electrons from their cores - Physicists mix 2 lasers to create light at many frequencies

Description :

A team of physicists at UCSB (University of California, Santa Barbara) has seen the light, and it comes in many different colors. By aiming high- and low-frequency laser beams at a semiconductor, the researchers caused electrons to be ripped from their cores, accelerated, and then smashed back into the cores they left behind. This recollision produced multiple frequencies of light simultaneously. Their findings appear in the current issue of the science journal Nature.

UCSB : Ripping electrons from their cores - Physicists mix 2 lasers to create light at many frequencies

"This is a very remarkable phenomenon. I have never seen anything like this before," said Mark Sherwin, whose research group made the groundbreaking discovery. Sherwin is a professor of physics at UCSB and a co-author of the paper. He is also director of the campus's Institute for Terahertz Science and Technology. 

When the high-frequency optical laser beam hits the semiconductor material - in this case, gallium arsenide nanostructures - it creates an electron-hole pair called an exciton. The electron is negatively charged, and the hole is positively charged, and the two are bound together by their mutual attraction. "The high-frequency laser creates electrons and holes," Sherwin explained. "The very strong, low-frequency free electron laser beam rips the electron away from the hole and accelerates it. As the low-frequency field oscillates, it causes the electron to come careening back to the hole." The electron has excess energy because it has been accelerated, and when it slams back into the hole, the recombined electron-hole pair emits photons at new frequencies. 

"It's fairly routine to mix the lasers and get one or two new frequencies, Sherwin continued. "But to see all these different new frequencies, up to 11 in our experiment, is the exciting phenomenon. Each frequency corresponds to a different color." 

In terms of real-world applications, the electron-hole recollision phenomenon has the potential to significantly increase the speed of data transfer and communication processes. One possible application involves multiplexing -- the ability to send data down multiple channels - and another is high-speed modulation. 

"Think of your cable Internet," explained Ben Zaks, a UCSB doctoral student in physics and the paper's lead author. "The cable is a bundle of fiber optics, and you're sending a beam with a wavelength that's approximately 1.5 microns down the line. But within that beam there are a lot of frequencies separated by small gaps, like a fine-toothed comb. Information going one way moves on one frequency, and information going another way uses another frequency. You want to have a lot of frequencies available, but not too far from one another." 

The electron-hole recollision phenomenon does just that - it creates light at new frequencies, with optimal separation between them. 

The researchers utilize a free electron laser - a building-size machine in UCSB's Broida Hall -- to produce the electron-hole recollisions, which they note is not practical for real-world applications. Theoretically, however, a transistor could be used in place of the free electron laser to produce the strong terahertz fields. "The transistor would then modulate the near infrared beam," Zaks continued. "Our data indicates that we are modulating the near infrared laser at twice the terahertz frequency. This is where we could really see this working to increase the speed of optical modulation, which is how you get information down a cable line." 

The electron-hole recollision phenomenon creates many new avenues for research and exploration, Sherwin noted. "It is an interesting time because there are a lot of people who can participate in doing this kind of research," he said. "We have a unique tool -- a free electron laser -- which gives us a big advantage for exploring the properties of fundamental materials. We just put it in front of our laser beams and measure the colors of light going out. Now that we've seen this phenomenon, we can start doing the hard work of putting the pieces together on a chip." 

In discussing the research team's discovery, Sherwin cited Michael Polanyi, the Hungarian scientist and science philosopher. "He talked about growing points in science, and I'm hoping this is going to be one of those, where a lot of people can use it as a foundation for going off in a lot of different directions," he said. "I want to continue working on it, but I'd like to see a lot of other people join in." 

Also contributing to the research is the paper's second author, R.B. Liu of The Chinese University in Hong Kong. "This is an excellent example of the value of communicating with scientists from all over the globe," said Sherwin. "If we had never met, this research would not have happened." 


To see all the other great stuff we found for you check out this page. Don't miss a single word! Kindly share your thoughts with us.

*by andreascy*

Samsung's GALAXY Note : Introducing Premium Suite with Ice Cream Sandwich

Description :
Software upgrade for GALAXY Note offers exclusive S Pen optimized applications, enhanced multimedia features and Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.


S Note, an unique tool that combines your notes and sketches with other digital content, giving you a new way to create your own stories. 


Also includes innovative shape- and formula-match functions, instant digitization of tables and grids, and knowledge search engines.


Along with a new look and feel, the Ice Cream Sandwich update provides a more intuitive user interface, faster performance, Face Unlock, Snapshot, Photo Editor and other features.


Plus, GALAXY users can also access an exclusive GALAXY Note level in Angry Birds Space (http://samsung.angrybirds.com/galaxynote), the newest Angry Birds game from Rovio Entertainment, along with a special package of 30 challenging levels in "Danger Zone".


*by andreascy*

How Smoke Detectors Work


Description :

Bill takes apart a smoke detector and shows how it uses a radioactive source to generate a tiny current which is disrupted when smoke flows through the sensor. He describes how a special transistor called a MOSFET can be used to detect the tiny current changes.


Smoke detectors are awesome! Does anybody else have that reaction when watching stuff like this? Let us know what you think. Discover the latest trending tech news here and subscribe on our RSS feed for straight updates to your inbox.

*by andreascy*

Introducing the Intel® Server Continuity Suite


Description :

Intel Server Continuity Suite delivers software for managing both Intel® Rack and Pedestal Server and Intel® Modular Server products. It offers the channel and their SMB customers a low cost, easy to use server management solution that provides real-time, continuous backup, point-and-click systems management and easy to deploy virtualization capabilities. 


Aside from it's ability to protect critical business information, the suite's most notable feature is probably its very simple, graphical user interface -- a single "pane of glass" that intelligently integrates hardware management, server failover, virtualization, storage, RAID and data protection management.


Learn more here. Stay tuned for future updates and don't forget to subscribe on our RSS feed. Let us know what you think.

*by andreascy*

Office Webinar : Simplifying your Data in Excel


Description :

This is a recording of an Office 15-Minute Webinar. Today's webinar shows you how and why you should use Conditional Formatting and Sparklines in Excel. Also learn about remaking your Powerpoint slides to present your data in meetings or presentations. 


Learn more about these subjects at :



Doug Thomas hosts these free how-to tidbits from the Office.com help writers. See how to watch these webinars live and participate in a Q&A session :

http://aka.ms/offweb

Check also other Office related Webinars on our Blog and let us know what you think. Don't miss our Trending News and Tweets for today and of course our RSS feed. Make sure to subscribe and receive all the latest content to your email inbox. Thanks for choosing our website for your inform!

*by andreascy*

MIT 3D Stacks of Solar Panels increases their power output by up to 20x

Description :
What’s better than one pancake? A whole stack of pancakes! Using the same logic, a team of MIT researchers have stacked a bunch of photovoltaic solar cells together to produce up to 20 times the power output of conventional solar power installations.


 Basically, photovoltaic cells themselves aren’t all that expensive - according to MIT, they’re only around 35% of the total cost of a solar power installation. The main issue with solar power (and its main cost) is its low energy density, and thus the sheer surface area required to generate a sizable amount of electricity. This is why you need to cover your whole roof with cells to power your light bulbs, and why solar power plants would have to occupy tens of square miles of desert to produce as much power as a nuclear power plant.


To combat this issue, MIT has built 3D stacks of photovoltaic cells. These have the same footprint of a conventional, flat solar power setup - but as you can see in the picture above, the total surface area is much, much larger. The team built a variety of 3D designs, including a cube, and in all cases they produced between two and 20 times as much power as a flat panel. The most interesting facet of this discovery, though, is that these 3D stacks produce lots of extra power whenever the sun is near the horizon, i.e. in the morning, evening, winter, or at latitudes far away from the equator. With conventional, flat cells, it’s hard to capture low-angle light, but with an accordion structure (as pictured below) the relative angle would be closer to 45 degrees.

3D solar power cells from MIT

Squeezing more power out of low-light periods is a huge, huge deal. Beyond the large footprint required, the main issue with solar power is unreliability (cloud cover) and natural fluctuations (winter, night time). Solar installations produce most of their electricity in the middle of the day, but that’s when you least need electric light or heat. As a result, you need to store the energy for later use, which usually involves a big battery of some kind. If these 3D solar cells can capture enough light that they can produce reliable electricity in the morning, evening, and winter, then this could be exactly the kick-start that solar power needs - especially when you combine it with the ion cannon that cuts photovoltaic costs in half

*by andreascy*

Build your Personal Infographics With Intel's Digital Tool "What About Me?"

Description :

"What About Me?" is a new permission-based digital tool that captures a snapshot of your social media life and turns it into a customized, personal infographic. 

Build your Personal Infographics With Intel's Digital Tool "What About Me?"

Last year, Intel created a Facebook app which dipped in consumers’ data on the Social Network to create online profile exhibitions, the Museum Of Me.

Build your Personal Infographics With Intel's Digital tool "What About Me?"

This year it’s still about getting singularly personal for the tech brand, which has launched What About Me? An app which turns Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube feeds into a Me infographic comprising images, ‘likes’, social media habits, posts and sharing behaviour.

Build your Personal Infographics With Intel's Digital tool "What About Me?"

“Social media users know that discovery is half the fun,” says Intel. “With What about Me? you can capture a snapshot of your social media life and create your own colorful image, full of clues and facts about one of the most fascinating subjects in the world – you.”

Check out this video to see how the tool captures your social life.



Feel free to leave your comments. What do you think? 

*by andreascy*

Renesas announced the RL78 Green Energy Challenge!‏

Description : 

Renesas Electronics America, Inc. is leading a great green revolution and are challenging you to transform how the world experiences green energy and low-power design. Announcing the RL78 Green Energy Challenge!

Engineers from around the world will compete for top honor by developing a unique, low-power application featuring the RL78 microcontroller (MCU). Succeed and you'll win a share of a $17,500 Grand Prize! The competition starts on March 26, 2012 and ends August 30, 2012. Winners will be announced at the Renesas DevCon in October in Anaheim, CA. 


Follow Renesas on Twitter and Facebook for a chance to win additional weekly prizes from official contest partners! Pmods, development tools, and even more cash prizes are up for grabs. Follow the weekly challenge questions and answer correctly for your chance to win. 

 

Hundreds of free RL78/G13 Demonstration Kits ("RDK"s) are being distributed to those who qualify. 




The RDK is optimized for low power and features a great mix of peripherals. It is based on the 78K0R CPU core and can be applied to a variety of consumer and industrial applications. Optimized for low-power operation, this development kit runs with a 16-bit, 32-Mhz RL78G13 MCU @ 40.6 DMIPS. 


Software is supported by the IAR RL78 Embedded Workbench, as well as a Micrium full uC/Probe license. The RDK comes fully loaded with the Embedded Workbench, 16-KB Kickstart edition. Request a full license of the IAR Embedded Workbench when you sign up for a free RDK.
Join the RL78 Green Energy Challenge today! 


More on Facebook :



Good luck!

*by andreascy*

TED : Donald Sadoway - The missing link to renewable energy

Description :

What's the key to using alternative energy, like solar and wind? Storage - so we can have power on tap even when the sun's not out and the wind's not blowing. In this accessible, inspiring talk, Donald Sadoway takes to the blackboard to show us the future of large-scale batteries that store renewable energy. 




As he says: "We need to think about the problem differently. We need to think big. We need to think cheap."



*by andreascy*

Intel® Package on Package (PoP) BGA Rework Video

Description :

Intel has developed the processes to remove and replace high density electronic components packaged in a Ball Grid Array, or BGA format. For Package-on-Package, or "PoP" devices, these guidelines include : developing the proper Thermal Reflow Profile 



*by andreascy*





MWC 2012 : Wind River Improves Android to Make It Attractive to Automotive Uses

Description :

Everyone knows that Android is wildly popular in the mobile phone market. In the course of just a few short years, it went from literally zero (it didn't exist on the market before October, 2008) to being king of the (smart phone) hill in about 3 years. But, for all of the advantages & benefits that Android has as an Operating System, it certainly is not perfect, especially for use in Automotive Platforms. That's why Wind River, an Intel Company, is hard at work to make some very noticeable improvements.



 

For example, while Android is the clear leader in smart phones, many people still use Apple-based iPhones and iPods. So, Wind River demonstrates the ability to plug a iOS-based device into a Android-based reference design & play the media, such as music, stored on the iOS device. Also, while Android has a relatively decent boot time (typically under a minute), it may still feel long if it is in the central console in your car. So, tweaking the system, Wind River was able to demonstrate a 7-second boot time - which is about the amount of time it would take you to turn on your car & fasten your seat belt. Lastly, Wind River also shows how they can put Android-based applications into windowed-environment like you would have on your PC so that you can quickly move from one application to another.

For more information about Android Offerings from Wind River, please see :


So, that's what was announced at MWC so far, but please leave use comments below as to what improvements you'd like to see brought to Android next! 


*by andreascy*

Intel Solutions Summit 2012 Highlight Video

Description :

Intel celebrated another successful solutions summit in New Orleans in 2012 during their Summit Week. The video below includes soundbites from their Channel Partners, Executives, and demos from their showcase. 



*by andreascy*

MIT Ultra Speed Laser-Powered Camera Can Detect Objects Hidden Around Corners

Description :

Scientists at MIT have created a new camera that uses a titanium-sapphire laser as a light source, and it's so sensitive it can see around corners. 

MIT Ultra Speed Laser-Powered Camera Can Detect Objects Hidden Around Corners

MIT researchers say it could be used in medical, industrial or even consumer products.

MIT Ultra Speed Laser-Powered Camera Can Detect Objects Hidden Around Corners
MIT Ultra Speed Laser-Powered Camera Can Detect Objects Hidden Around Corners

The video below shows how scientists at the MIT Media Lab reconstruct a hidden object using scattered laser light.


Future applications may include seeing in dangerous or inaccessible locations, such as inside machinery with moving parts, or in highly contaminated areas. 

Read the original research here and check out the researchers project url here.

*by andreascy*

General Motors and Nasa : Developing a Robotic Glove - Making a Human Hand Stronger

Description :

A robotic glove for more enhanced operation of hand tools by U.S. astronauts as well as autoworkers is being developed by NASA and General Motors

The device, called K-glove or Robo-Glove, feature finger actuators for grasping support to human fingers. The pressure sensors in the fingertips detect when the user is grasping a tool, resulting in synthetic tendons automatically pulling the fingers into a gripping position and holding them in that position until the sensor is released.

General Motors and Nasa : Developing a Robotic Glove - Making a Human Hand Stronger

"Initial testing of the Robo-Glove indicates the wearer can hold a grip longer and more comfortably," the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said. 

"For example, an astronaut working in a pressurized suit outside the space station or an assembly operator in a factory might need to use 15 to 20 pounds of force to hold a tool during an operation but with the robotic glove they might need to apply only 5 to 10 pounds of force." 

The Robo-Glove resulted from NASA and GM's Robonaut 2 project, which launched the first humanoid robot into space. In developing the robot, it was given hands with unprecedented dexterity, which has resulted in the new development effort.

General Motors and Nasa : Developing a Robotic Glove - Making a Human Hand Stronger

"The prototype glove offers my spacesuit team a promising opportunity to explore new ideas, and challenges our traditional thinking of what extravehicular activity hand dexterity could be," said Trish Petete, division chief, Crew and Thermal Systems Division, NASA's Johnson Space Center. 

Dana Komin, GM's manufacturing engineering director, Global Automation Strategy and Execution, said: "When fully developed, the Robo-Glove has the potential to reduce the amount of force that an autoworker would need to exert when operating a tool for an extended time or with repetitive motions. In so doing, it is expected to reduce the risk of repetitive stress injury."


The first two prototype gloves were produced last year. The prototype weighs about 2 pounds and is powered by an off-the-shelf lithium-ion power-tool battery.


Check also more teamed works from General Motors and Nasa on the video below:




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Microsoft Video : Cloud Computing's Role in Job Creation

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Microsoft released this new video about Cloud Computing's Role in Job Creation. The cloud is making a real difference for businesses today : powering productivity, cutting costs and freeing up IT staff to focus on more mission-critical work. But's it's also helping to restore economic health by helping create new job opportunities all over the world.

 

*by andreascy*

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