New DARPA tech can scan eyes in a moving crowd

New DARPA tech can scan eyes in a moving crowd
DARPA and Dallas's Southern Methodist University have teamed up to build a better retinal scanner. Ideally you'd want someone standing still, looking straight forward, and scan the full eye. Now? DARPA and SMU claim they could possibly scan all the eyes in an unaware crowd. [Read more...]

Robot Wars: The 6 scariest unmanned aerial vehicles

Robot Wars: The 6 scariest unmanned aerial vehicles
Look out, everybody, because here come the unmanned aerial vehicles, otherwise known as UAVs or drones. They've been flourishing in the Iraq War, starting with just a few unarmed drones when the conflict began in 2003, and now growing in numbers to more than 7,000. Many are packing serious missiles and bombs, and some soon could be autonomous. This is undoubtedly the dawn of an entirely new era of military might: robot wars. [Read more...]

Autonomous copter flies with astonishing precision



Who knew a quadrotor helicopter could fly with such grace and perfection? This autonomous radio-controlled aircraft was programmed by the geniuses at the GRASP Lab at the University of Pennsylvania. Now that is some sweet flying.

Each of this quadrotor bot's moves is transmitted from an outboard computer to the helicopter via 2.4GHz XBee wireless networking. According to its builders, "The quadrotor knows the location and orientation of the window from the motion capture system."

And how does it stick to the wall? Velcro.

X-51A scramjet breaks record for longest hypersonic flight

X-51A scramjet breaks record for longest hypersonic flight
The X-51A Waverider blasted itself into the longest hypersonic flight in history yesterday, streaking across the sky at Mach 5 for just over 200 seconds. That's 10 times longer than the previous record, set in 2004 by NASA's X-43. While the X-51A has already flown a couple of times while remaining attached to its mother ship, this was the first time the unmanned plane flew independently.

Hypersonic flight, defined as faster than Mach 5 (around 3,800 mph), is not easy. Conventional turbine jet engines can't handle such tremendous speeds. To complete its hypersonic flight, the 14-foot-long Waverider launched from the wing of a B-52 over the Pacific Ocean, and with the help of a solid rocket booster, screamed up to Mach 4.8 before that booster was jettisoned. [Read more...]
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Artsy Back to the Future hoverboard replica actually hovers

Artsy <i>Back to the Future</i> hoverboard replica actually hovers
French artist Nils Guadagnin is paying homage to Back to the Future II in the most appropriate way: by recreating the pink hoverboard Marty McFly, erm, "procures" from a little girl. And hover it does — it even has a nice little bounce when the artist taps it.

Sadly, it probably doesn't have enough lift for anyone to ride it, though Guadagnin certainly didn't skimp on the tech: "Integrated into the board and the plinth is an electromagnetic system which levitates the board. A laser system stabilises the object in the air." Lasers! [Read more...]

Tablet costs less than half of the iPad, plays 1080p

Tablet costs less than half of the iPad, plays 1080p
We had to do a double take when we saw the $180 price on this 7-inch X10 touchscreen Tablet PC. Amid a sea of me-too slate PCs, this one makes lofty claims, including the most eyebrow-raising of all: the ability to play 1080p video over its HDMI port. [Read more...]

Sony builds astonishing roll-up OLED display of the future

Sony builds astonishing roll-up OLED display of the future

Look what Sony's done with an OLED display. This 4.1-inch screen is so thin and flexible, it can wrap around a pencil-sized cylinder. Its 432 x 240 resolution still shines bright, albeit not quite perfectly, with some funky horizontal and vertical lines. Even so, it's so much better than any others that came before, it represents a breakthrough. [Read more...]

Concept car could put an end to road rage once and for all

Concept car could put an end to road rage once and for all
This is the Muon by designer Taeho Yoon. Like pretty much every other concept car, it promises to do something crazy — namely, sense how you're feeling. While the concept is far-fetched, it still makes you wonder: could a car help our moods? [Read more...]

10 Best Cities for the Next Decade

We live in challenging times. Unemployment remains high, and the U.S. lead in technology and science is slipping as many foreign countries gain ground. But some U.S. cities, though slowed by the Great Recession, still thrive by lifting good old American innovation to new levels. And that will help put more Americans back to work and keep our international edge. [Read more...]

Tron's light cycles, meet LED spokes showing full images

<i>Tron's</i> light cycles, meet LED spokes showing full images

Putting some LEDs on bikes is nothing new, but Japan's Suns & Moon Laboratory is taking the idea a step further with its Anipov LED system. With the wheel spinning, the setup will be able to display damn near any image you want, and it's easier than you might think. [Read more...]

Awesome photo: massive crane lifts warship out of the water

Awesome photo: massive crane lifts warship out of the water

Sheee-yoot, now this one humdinger of a crane. If you look at the tiny silhouettes of the people in rafts around the warship (well, half of the warship), you really get a sense of just how big this thing must be. [Read more...]

Cursed phone number that killed 3 gets BANNED

Cursed phone number that killed 3 gets BANNED
If you live in Bulgaria, you won't ever be assigned the cellphone number 0888 888 888. That's because every single person who's ever had that number was killed under suspicious circumstances. It's gotten so bad that cellphone provider Mobitel has permanently banned the number. [Read more...]

Jigsaw puzzle-solving software is the most advanced in the world

Jigsaw puzzle-solving software is the most advanced in the world
A team led by programmer Taeg Sang Cho has developed software that can figure out 400-piece jigsaw puzzles. Previous iterations of the technology needed a helping hand via less pieces or limited colors, but Cho's program can handle any image or photograph. [Read more...]

Brave scientist becomes first person 'infected with computer virus'

Dr. Mark Gasson from the University of Reading in the U.K. implanted a chip under the flesh of his hand. It allows him to open special doors and even keeps his cellphone locked down so only he can use it. What else does it let him do? Well, contract a virus only meant for computers. [Read more...]

Internet too slow? See how you compare with the top 10 cities

Internet too slow? See how you compare with the top 10 cities
How's your broadband treating you lately? Ookla, the people responsible for that useful speedtest.net site where you can quickly measure your broadband download and upload speeds, released some telling stats today. It turns out that the United States average download speed of 10.12Mb per second (Mbps) is faster than the worldwide average of 7.69Mbps. [Read more...]

Yet another flying car concept that'll never exist

Yet another flying car concept that'll never exist
Flying cars are always perpetually a few years away in the future. But the thing is, we have the technology to make them now. They're just insanely impractical. I mean, think about it: how many car accidents happen every day? What would adding another axis for people to worry about do to those safety numbers?

But despite that, people still keep designing these things as if they're ever going to exist in our lifetimes. The latest is the YEE, a car that can transform into a plane at the touch of a button. I'll give it to them: it's cool looking. But really, guys, it's never gonna happen. Just accept it.

Could this be the wrist computer of 2020?

Could this be the wrist computer of 2020?
Ten years from now, flexible OLED touchscreens will be commonplace. Here's a design concept that incorporates that technology in a most delightful way. Designer Hiromi Kiriki taps Sony for this spectacular Nextep wrist computer that does just about anything full-sized computers can do today. [Read more...]

NKorea severs all ties with rival SKorea


North Korea declared Tuesday that it would sever all communication and relations with Seoul as punishment for blaming it for the sinking of a South Korean warship.
The North also announced it would expel all South Koreans working at a joint factory park in the northern border town of Kaesong, the officialKorean Central News Agency said in a dispatch monitored in Seoul late Tuesday. [Read more...]

Audi announces crazy car that acts as its own Wi-Fi hotspot

Audi announces crazy car that acts as its own Wi-Fi hotspot
The 2011 Audi A8 boasts, according to the company, the "first factory-installed WLAN hotspot in a car." Passengers in both the front and rear seats will be able to get their Wi-Fi on with up to eight devices, including laptops, the iPad and the like. [Read more...]

HP Slate officially alive, ditching Windows 7 for Palm WebOS

HP Slate officially alive, ditching Windows 7 for Palm WebOS

It's hard not to feel a little robbed by HP's Slate. It was supposed to be the tablet computer to answer Apple's tablet toy, but turns out toys are pretty popular. Directly related or not, HP floundered in the wake of the iPad, but it's back with the Slate once more. [Read more...]

Hubble catches planet being devoured by its star


Hubble catches planet being devoured by its star

The Hubble space telescope has discovered a planet in our galaxy in the process of being devoured by the star that it orbits, according to a paper published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The doomed planet, dubbed WASP-12b, has the highest known surface temperature of any planet in the Milky Way -- around 1,500 degrees Celsius (2,800 degrees Fahrenheit). [Read more...]

New 'super discs' could hold thousands more than DVDs for cheap

New 'super discs' could hold thousands more than DVDs for cheap

A team at the University of Tokyo has found that using titanium oxide could mean discs with storage capacities more like hard drives. The best part? The material is cheaper than what's used in the likes of Blu-ray discs. [Read more...]

2.7 million gamers reach for `Halo'

"It's exceeded our expectations," said Bungie Studios community director Brian Jarrard. "Our only real perspective going into this was the 'Halo 3' beta test, which had about 800,000 people. We knew there were a couple million copies of 'ODST' out there, but we really didn't have any specific information that let us know what the population might be like." [Read more...]

Ferrari Will Build Hybrid To Protect V12

ferrari will build hybrid to protect v12
When Ferrari unveiled the Vettura Laboratorio HY-KERS at the Geneva Motor Show people asked why Ferrari developed a hybrid model. And the answer is not "because the market asked for it", but, according to Amedeo Felisa it was in order to protect the V12 engine.

In an interview with AutoCar he said: "That is why we are developing hybrid technology. Hybrid means we can protect the V12. And while people expect Ferrari to adopt turbocharging for future generations of its V8 models, he said that the next Enzo might be powered by a V12 engine mated to an electric motor.

Now, we are a little confused because a few days ago, AutoCar reported that "Felisa also hinted that the new Ferrari Enzo will be powered by a direct-injection twin-turbo V8 when it is launched in 2012." So, V8 or V12? Unfortunately, it seems that Ferrari is going to keep us guessing until the curtain is finally pulled back to reveal their choice.

We also don’t fully understand the resistance to turbocharging. Ferrari has used this tactic in the past with the likes of the Ferrari 288 GTO and the Ferrari F40. Of course that was with the V8 and before they switched to a naturally aspirated V12 in 1995. It seems Ferrari has no intentions of going backwards.

MCLAREN ANNOUNCES 35 GLOBAL RETAIL LOCATIONS


Ahead of the MP4-12C ’s global debut at the Goodwood Festival of Speed, McLaren Automotive has announced the city and market locations for its global retail network. McLaren’s dealer network will initially include 35 retail locations, but will continue to expand in 2012.
North America will account for 8 of those initial dealerships, with another two to be added by the end of 2010. Locations for McLaren’s North American retail stores will eventually include Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Orange County, Miami, New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Tampa and Toronto. [Read more...]

Check out the Periodic Table of The Empire Strikes Back

Check out the Periodic Table of <i>The Empire Strikes Back</i>

What elements made The Empire Strikes Back a classic? After 30 years (30 years exactly, because Star Wars: Episode V opened May 21, 1980), we finally know — thanks to The Periodic Table of The Empire Strikes Back!

Teleportation over 10 miles: the Ultimate secure line?


We picked our jaws off the floor when we heard about tiny particles being teleported just a foot or two away, but now scientists have topped that by 10 miles. This tech won't be transporting Kirk and his Away Team to the surface of some distant planet anytime soon, but it has seriously practical applications to communications.
Quantum physics says photons can, in some ways, occupy two places at once. When one photon gets entangled with another, whatever happens to one of those particles also happens to another, even if it's TEN frickin' miles away! Now THAT's a fast connection.
The good news: The researchers were able to send this info with 89% fidelity. The bad? Information transmitted in this way will be hard to encrypt. But they're working on that. There's good reason to work on it; if they can get this right, the communication would be completely secure. Since there's no physical medium for the transmission to travel through — not even

Fastest Cars Under $50,000

 BMW Z4  BMW 335  BMW 135
The Texas Mile is an annual three-day racing event held on an airport runway 90 miles south of San Antonio. The rules are simple: more than 200 amateur racers in 11 different classes have a one-mile chance over the course of three days to see how fast they can go. [Read more...]

FTC approves Google merger with AdMob thanks to Apple competition

The Federal Trade Commission said Friday it has approved Google’s acquisition of AdMob, a mobile advertising platform, after a six-month review of the $750 million deal.
The search giant can thank Apple for the approval, as the agency cited the iPhone maker's entry into the mobile advertising market as evidence of competition in the industry. [Read more...]

Google open video codec may face patent clash

The group that controls the patented H.264 video codec backed by Apple and Microsoft is "looking into" the creation of a patent pool license for VP8, the codec Google open sourced to much fanfare this week. [Read more...]

Here's how easy it'll be to hook up Google TV

If you don't want to buy a whole new TV to enjoy Google TV, this Logitech box will let you hook up to the new Google goodness in no time. The Logitech Google TV Companion is pleasingly small, and connects via an HDMI port and network connection to bring you Google's upcoming enhanced interface for viewing Internet TV. [Read more...]

What if you could tell a battery was low just by looking at it?

This concept design, dubbed the Hungry Battery, is a pretty standard-looking set of batteries when they're all charged up. But unlike normal batteries, which let you know that they're dead by no longer working, these guys actually get thinner as they lose juice.

It's a neat idea. It would certainly be helpful to have a visual indicator of how much power is left. But the way batteries fit into devices makes this seem like it wouldn't really work. If they need to fit in tightly when charged, would thinning down make them loose? If so, these won't work at all. Maybe a visual gauge on the side would make more sense.

Featherweight soccer shoe is lightest ever

In a world of incredibly light 10-ounce soccer shoes, one of these weighs 5.8 ounces. The Adidas F50 Adizero is the latest in a string of sports innovations to debut at the World Cup soccer championship, this one on the feet of Argentine player Lionel Messi. [Read more...]

World's largest auto mall has a race track on top


Those ambitious Turks in Istanbul must be planning to sell a lot of cars. They're building the gigantic Autopia Europia auto mall, the biggest in the world, giving you a full race track on top to test cars before you drive one home.

Under construction now, the five-story, 708,661-square-foot building will have room for 200 car galleries, displaying 2526 different kinds of vehicles. Meanwhile, 24 banks will be standing by to help you pay for that dream machine, and 56 bars, restaurants and cafes await for you to think over your purchase.

It's so big, the illustrations suggest using Segways to navigate the monstrous structure. The optimistic Turks expect 6 million visitors to Autopia Europia every year. Does this mean the recession is truly over? [Read more...]

Could this 'recliner' be the best stand for your iPad or Kindle?

Does your iPad or Kindle need a place to hang out? How about a nice rocking chair for it? That's essentially what the Lazy Lounger is.

What's nice about the curved-back design is that it allows your tablet-y gadget to either be held near upright or more horizontal to the surface its on, giving you a couple of options depending on how you're using it. Its $30 price tag seems a touch steep for a simple accessory such as this, but if you're looking for a versatile stand, this seems to be a good option.

Wow! Google logo is now a playable game of Pac-Man

Next-gen nanotech spy satellites will count the hairs on your head

Next-gen nanotech spy satellites 
will count the hairs on your head
Satellite cameras can already read license plates, but soon they'll be able to count the hairs on your head. That's thanks to the scientists at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, who've figured out a way to enhance infrared imaging with a series of holes that are each just 1.6 millionths of a meter wide.
Nestled inside each one of those nano-sized holes are quantum dots, ultra-tiny crystals packing some super-powerful optical and semiconductor magic. This bit of microscopic trickery creates images and night vision that's 20 times sharper than the best systems we have now.
We already know about satellite cams that can resolve images that are 20 inches across. But the highest-resolution imaging power of today's sharpest satellites is a top secret, so something 20 times better than that — what will they be able to see? And it's infrared, so the cameras will be able to spot heat sources, maybe even through walls. Even tinfoil hats won't help.

Google: Android 2.2 (Froyo) is 'world's fastest mobile browser'

Google: Android 2.2 (Froyo) is 
\'world\'s fastest mobile browser\'
Google's already making great strides with its Android operating system, accounting for 28% of all smartphone sales in North America, compared to the iPhone's 21%. Now it's taken another leap forward with Android 2.2. Known as Froyo, the new version is at least two times faster than version 2.1, and in some instances a whole lot faster than that. Along for the ride is Adobe Flash 10.1, offering hardware acceleration of video and smooth navigation of Flash-enabled websites. Thwack, Apple!
New niceties abound, including the ability to tether your laptop to your cellphone. That lets you use your laptop's Wi-Fi to tap into the Android phone's 3G signal, getting you online when you're out in the field. One of our favorites: sending navigation directions from your computer to your cellphone.
There's no official ship date yet for Froyo, that the software developers kit will be rolling out in the "next few weeks."

Is the world ready for Google TV?

Google just unveiled an ambitious new project called Google TV, a new system that would bring the Web, online videos and all the goodies the big G has to offer over from your computer and onto your TV.
The video above does a good job of explaining the deal, but here's the boiled-down version: via either set-top boxes or through TVs with Google TV built-in, Google software and hardware will treat live TV like any other web content. That's to say, you'll be able to do a search for 30 Rock and it'll find all episodes coming up for you to watch or record as well as all episodes on places like Hulu and Netflix.
With more robust features like Android app support coming as well, it seems like we're just seeing the tip of this iceberg. Will Google be able to successfully infiltrate your living room? Time will tell, but my first impression of this is that it's very, very impressive.

Bluetooth: best thing to happen to receivers since surround sound

Bluetooth: best thing to happen 
to receivers since surround sound
Now that simple home theater gear like soundbars is popular, is there really any reason to own a home theater receiver anymore? One thing holding back receivers is that manufacturers have been slow to include features that are in sync with how people get their music and movies today — namely, digitally. That's why we were so glad to hear about Pioneer's new receivers and their ability to play music via Bluetooth streaming. [Read more...]

Square iPhone app will change the way we shop



It’s been awhile since I’ve truly been excited about an iPhone app, which is why I was delighted to learn about the new Square financial iPhone app (free), created by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey. Square, which officially debuted in the iTunes App Store last week, makes it possible for anyone, anywhere to accept credit card transactions using a free card reader. That means, if you’re willing to pay a fee, your roommate can pay you the rent via credit card, you can sell that television to a Craigslist stranger (no paper required), and that the corner hot dog stand doesn’t have to be cash only. It means that there’s now an app that could change the way businesses run and how we shop. [Read more...]

Awesome jet ski: fast, electric and green, and totally cool

Awesome jet ski: fast, electric 
and green, and totally cool
Summer's coming, and with it comes the annoying bzzzzz of jet ski's zipping around local lakes, rivers and oceans. Great fun, but wouldn't it be more fun on an electric jet ski that was quiet, fast, and just plain hot?
The Green Samba is an electric personal watercraft that can reach top speeds of 65 mph from silent twin direct drive electric propulsion pods, with zero emissions. No word on how long it can run with the onboard batteries, but let's hope a passing bass boat can give you a charge if you run out of juice in the middle of the lake.
This beauty, developed by the Silveira group is expected to begin testing next year, and hopefully be available before my summer vacation.

Memory-foam battery concept lets you go from AA to D

Memory-foam battery concept lets 
you go from AA to D
Who doesn't have a drawer full of a variety of batteries? If not, then you're the poor soul who never seems to have the right battery on hand when you need it, right?
The AtoD Rechargeable Battery is a design concept that attempts to solve that problem by using a single rechargeable battery core that's surrounded by memory foam that conforms to whatever shape/size you need. Brilliant, right? Well, it might be easier to make a removable sleeve to shim up a smaller battery to fit a "D" slot than it would be to squish a D-sized piece of foam down to an AA-sized slot. Sometimes, it's hard enough to fit normal batteries in — these could be a nightmare to remove, especially once the memory foam begins to expand. Plus, the design doesn't take into account the different capacities that different sizes provide.
Still, it's an interesting idea. What's next: inflatable batteries?

Military robots seen as lifesavers

HAMMELBURG, Germany – On the outside, it looks like a normal SUV. But the prototype "autonomous robot car" — fitted with sensors and scanners, multifocal camera systems and powerful computers — might one day help avoid military fatalities from bombings and ambushes — or so its designers hope.
Researchers presented the so-called MuCar-3 at the European Land Robot Trial this week in Germany, where the world's innovators were pitching ideas to military evaluators from the United States, Europe and Japan. [Read more...]

Why 2010 will be the year of music in the cloud

Why 2010 will be the year of 
music in the cloud
Imagine if you could access your entire music library from any computer, iPhone, iPad or any other cellphone — anywhere you want. That's the promise of cloud music storage, and it's an idea that's about to really take off. [Read more...]

Modern automobiles are super vulnerable to hacking, researchers say



Modern automobiles are super vulnerable to hacking, researchers say

Well, this doesn't sound good. In a report titled "Experimental Security Analysis of a Modern Automobile," researchers found that the electronic control units (or ECUs) found in cars such as GMC's Yukon hybrid are susceptible to tampering. So vulnerable, in fact, that they labeled them as "fragile." [Read more...]

How can a flickering light stream video?

Now you can transmit digital signals with flickering lights. Chinese researchers have learned how to stream data using the imperceptible flickering of blue LED lights mounted in the ceiling. In their testing, they were able to stream digital video using these fast-blinking diodes. [Read more...]

If the iPhone were a lamp, this would be it



If the iPhone were a lamp, this would be it

This sleek desk lamp features an array of LEDs on the underside of its arm. In order to turn it on, you just pinch with your fingers on top of it to determine just how many of them you want to turn on. It's clever, and it uses the same sort of gestures that touchscreen devices such as the iPhone have trained people to use.
It begs the question: in the future will more objects be controlled by pinching and swiping? Why not, I say? It's interesting to think of touchscreen phones ushering in an entirely new way of interacting with all sorts of other devices.

Computers can now detect sarcasm? Yeah, right


If we want to verbally communicate with computers, they're going to have to learn to recognize sarcasm. A team of programmers say they've done just that, with their Semi-Supervised Algorithm for Sarcasm Identification (SASI).
After scanning 66,000 Amazon.com product reviews, which as you're probably aware are rife with sarcasm, they found 80 sentences containing patterns that enabled their software to understand sarcasm with 77% accuracy. Not bad, but it's going to take a lot more than rote learning of a few common sarcastic phrases for computers to master the art of sarcasm.
Even so, this is a great start. Accurate speech recognition is enormously difficult, and sarcasm is sometimes almost impossible to interpret. Reminds us of the professor who pointed out numerous instances of double negatives, and then declared there was no such thing as a double positive in the English language. Muttered someone in the back row, "Yeah, right."

Sleek MIT concept planes burn 70% less fuel than today's jets


Sleek MIT concept planes burn 70%
 less fuel than today\'s jets
Take a look at the planes you might be flying in 2035. Designers at MIT have figured out how to build jets that use 70% less fuel, emit 75% less nitrogen oxides, and make a whole lot less noise than today's planes.

The aircraft pictured on the left is the 180-passenger D Series, affectionately known as the "Double Bubble." It's designed to replace today's Boeing 737-class jets, but flies at speeds that are about 10% slower. Its engines are mounted on the rear of the fuselage, taking in slower-moving air that's been disturbed by the plane's fuselage. That allows them to burn less fuel while maintaining the same amount of thrust they would if they were mounted on the wings.
On the right you see the 350-passenger H Series, using many of the same tricks, but aimed at replacing the Boeing 777-class planes that travel much longer distances. Its triangular-shaped body creates enough forward lift so there's no tail needed.
These are some sweet planes, and they're a lot more realistic than that fanciful 2050 design we showed you last week that takes off vertically. Let's hope NASA accepts these designs and gives the MIT team the go-ahead for Phase 2 of this forward-looking project.
MIT is one of six teams commissioned by NASA in 2008 to develop these future craft, but we're rooting for the Boeing and Lockheed-Martin teams, working on supersonic commercial aircraft. Of course, the future will have room for both types of planes, just like when Concorde was flying.

One day, your humble webcam could test you for eye disease

One day, your humble webcam could test you for eye disease

Thanks to work being done by a pair of researchers at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratories in Tennessee, something as simple as a webcam could be diagnosing your eyes as well as a trained ophthalmologist. [Read more...]

'Color a Sound' turns projector transparencies into sheet music

\'Color a Sound\' turns projector
 transparencies into sheet music
Boy, something like this would have made class a lot more interesting — and musical. Blair Neal's "Color a Sound" uses transparent sheets (just like teacher used to use) sliding across an overhead projector to act as sheet music, while the different colors and shapes of markings act as the notes. You control the tempo yourself with a crank, and the projector-boombox can even change to making drum beats for something a little funkier.

Holy crap, we've got robot avatars now

Holy crap, we\'ve got robot 
avatars now
There's a big meeting across the country. What do you do?
1960: You fly there.
1980: You have a conference call.
2000: You do a video conference.
2010: You fire up your robot avatar at the location.
Pardon? Yep, it's for real, folks. A company called Anybots has created a prototype of a robot that will serve as a person's physical presence in a remote location. You log in through the Internet and after a few keystrokes the 'bot, called QB, comes alive, leaving its charging station and ready to meet, brainstorm, greet visitors or just generally creep people out. [Read more...]

Google apologizes for grabbing personal info off of Wi-Fi networks

Google has been vacuuming up fragments of people's online activities broadcast over public Wi-Fi networks for the past four years, a breach of Web etiquette likely to raise more privacy worries about the Internet search leader. [Read more...]

Google grabs personal info off of Wi-Fi networks

Google Inc. has been vacuuming up fragments of people's online activities broadcast over public Wi-Fi networks for the past four years, a breach of Web etiquette likely to raise more privacy worries about the Internet search leader.
Even Google was troubled by its behavior, and issued a public apology Friday. The company said it only recently discovered the problem in response to an inquiry from German regulators. [Read more...]

Google to abandon its Nexus One online store

Well, that didn't last long. Just four months after seeking to shake up the wireless world by selling its Android-based Nexus One phone direct over the Web, Google has cried uncle, announcing that it'll close its online store once it has "increased the availability" of the handset in regular retail stores.
"As with every innovation, some parts worked better than others," wrote Google engineering VP Andy Rubin in a blog post Friday. "While the global adoption of the Android platform has exceeded our expectations, the Web store has not." [Read more...]

US Air Force gets a migraine from Sony's latest PS3 update

US Air Force gets a migraine from
 Sony\'s latest PS3 update
Don't you hate it when you install new firmware for some electronic device, and the resulting changes actually make it less functional? Now imagine that you're the US Air Force, and a Sony firmware update makes the 1,700 PlayStation 3s you hooked up together to form a 500 TeraFLOP processing cluster redundant.
That's right, rather than going with some ultra overpriced proprietary computing platform, the US Air Force has been experimenting with lashing together hundreds of PS3s to harness their cheap computing power. The only problem is that their systems run on a Linux platform, which is no longer supported by the latest firmware.
The Air Force PS3 clusters aren't hooked up to the PlayStation Network, (thank goodness), so the firmware SNAFU crops up only when an individual console needs to be replaced or repaired. Sony automatically updates the firmware when a system is sent in for repair, and this has led to a lawsuit claiming that the returned consoles no longer have the functionality they offered when they were originally sold.

50,000 sued over "Hurt Locker" piracy

Pirates are to blame for the paltry take ... right? While the reason for the film's commercial flop are undoubtedly far more complicated than a few thousand pirated copies, it seems that little will deter the legal action against those who saw it online (where it was available five months before its theatrical release). [Read more...]

Hydrogen-powered airliner of 2050 takes off vertically



Hydrogen-powered airliner of 2050 takes off vertically

Let's jump 40 years into the future with designer Victor Uribe, and look at that, it's just about time for his Airbus A350H airliner to lift off from the center of Frankfurt. In the crowded world of 2050, Uribe says there won't be room for conventional airports any more, so that's why he's designed his hydrogen-powered aircraft to take off vertically.
In this design concept, the aircraft's hydrogen fuel is synthesized from water drawn from a nearby river. That fuel is pumped to the awaiting jets, refueling as they perch high atop their mid-21st-century runways, which now look more like elegantly-designed platforms.
Nice work, Victor — but by 2050 we're hoping telepresence will be so well-developed that dragging our carcasses around the globe will be unnecessary. If not, we'd rather have jet packs, maglev bullet trains and flying cars. [Read more...]

Liquid-repellent shoes let you actually walk on water

How high will Virgin Galactic really go?


Infographic: How high will Virgin
 Galactic really go?
You may have heard about Virgin Galactic and its recent test flight of SpaceShipTwo, the craft that'll soon be taking tourists into space to the tune of $200,000 a pop. But have you ever wondered just how far up the ship actually travels? So did we. This graphic we made should clear things up, comparing SpaceShipTwo with other things that fly. Click on the thumbnail below to see the results at full size.

Camera red dot sight turns your DSLR into a deadly weapon

Camera red dot sight turns your 
DSLR into a deadly weapon
If you're a gamer addicted to Modern Warfare 2, I don't have to tell you what this is. For the uninitiated, it's a red dot sight, a gun attachment that makes it a whole lot easier to aim down the barrel. And now you can take it off the battlefield and into the park when you're taking pictures.
Yes, this is a red dot sight for cameras. Sure, it looks a little ridiculous, but it also looks a little awesome. And for a mere $45, this is pretty close to impulse buy territory. Hey, who knows, maybe using this in the real world will improve your aim in-game? Stranger things have happened.

How to reclaim your Facebook privacy in just two minutes

Facebook is once again in hot water for how it handles a user's privacy, though this time it's looking like some real trouble for the company. Facebook members and the media alike are calling for the service to put its users first, security fears are fueling movements calling for people to leave the site and Facebook's CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, certainly isn't doing the site any favors when it was found out he called his earliest users "dumb fucks" and offered to steal their personal data. Maybe he'll appreciate privacy a little more, now. [Read more...]

Blow out 50 candles for the laser this weekend

Blow out 50 candles for the laser
 this weekend
This Sunday will mark the 50th anniversary of the laser. The world's first functional laser sent out its initial pulses on May 16th back in 1960, where Theodore Maiman (pictured above), showed off the technology at the Hughes Research Laboratories. While Maiman is known as the father of the laser for being the first to realize one, he actually wasn't awarded the patent for the technology — that went to Charles Townes and Arthur Schawlow of Bell Labs who, in 1958, published a paper detailing the work they themselves did on realizing a working laser without having built one. [Read more...]

Super tandem cycle looks like it could fly


Super tandem cycle looks like it 
could fly
Tandem bicycles are usually so dorky, but not this one by designer Robert Zuchowski. It's as aerodynamic as it gets. Check out that shaft drive extending from the front petals to the back wheel. Magnificent.
The prototype's built, and now it's time to mass-produce this superbike, Robert. I can't wait to try it, as long as you let me sit up front. [Read more...]

Here's how to soak up that oil spillHere's how to soak up that oil spill


Here\'s how to soak up that oil 
spill
Look at this strange substance. It's called Aerogel, and it's a super insulator with the lowest density of any solid substance in the world. Affectionately known as "frozen smoke," it happens to be really good at sucking up a bunch of slimy oil. Its maker, AeroClay, is hard at work creating a spongy version of this shapeable goo that could be fabricated into gigantic sheets that soak up only oil, but not water. This would be perfect for cleaning up that gigantic oil slick, otherwise known as the Gulf of Mexico. [Read more...]