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Archive for the 'Technology' Category



Self-Energy Converting Sun Glasses

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Designers Hyun-Joong Kim & Kwang-Seok Jeong create the world’s first “Self-Energy Converting Sunglasses” or called SIG. The SIG sunglasses feature lenses made of dye solar cells that are able to collect energy throughout the day, turning them into electricity to power your small devices through the power jack at the back of the frame.

The dye solar cell is described by the designers of the SIG as ”cheap organic dye    [used with] nano technology [providing] cheap but high energy efficiency.” Inexpensive, light, and visible-ray penetrable. The lens turns sunlight rays, (rays that would otherwise harm the eye,) into electrical energy.

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Wikiscanner Creator Virgil Griffith’s Profile

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Actually it’s not Wikiscanner Creator Virgil Griffith‘s laptop case above, but we can image how mystical it will. The below is a snip from Virginia Heffernan’s New York Times profile of Virgil Griffith, the creator of Wikiscanner.

Girls hang on Virgil Griffith. This is no exaggeration. At parties, they cling to the arms of the 25-year-old hacker whose reason for being, he says, is to “make the Internet a better and more interesting place.” The founder of a data-mining tool called WikiScanner, Griffith is also a visiting researcher at the mysterious Santa Fe Institute, where “complex systems” are studied. He was once charged, wide-eyed rumor has it, with sedition. No wonder girls whisper secrets in his ear and laugh merrily at his arcane jokes.
WikiScanner, which Griffith created last year, makes it possible to figure out which organization made which edits to a Wikipedia entry by cross-referencing IP addresses with a database of IP address owners. You can imagine how much fun this tool is to deploy — to see how someone with a senate.gov address tinkers with the Jeremiah Wright entry, or how Diebold apparently protects its reputation by deleting criticism of its voting machines and political connections. The promise of WikiScanner is to help free Wikipedia from both propaganda and sabotage. But Griffith says he also aspires “to create minor public-relations disasters for companies and organizations I dislike.”

He’s a troublemaker, then. A twerp. And a magnet for tech-world groupies. At the WebbyConnect conference in Southern California last month, I saw it with my own eyes: Griffith, enjoying a White Russian that I first mistook for chocolate milk, reveled in the attention of his female fans. He smiled broadly. He seemed like a young Henry Kissinger, but sweet, or Arthur Fonzarelli, but not a dropout.  from NYT: Internet Man of Mystery

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The Bible Writer

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Here’s an industrial robot, which writes down the bible on rolls of paper by hand. The machine draws the calligraphic lines with high precision. Like a monk in the scriptorium it creates step by step the text. Starting with the old testament and the books of Moses “bios [bible]” produces in seven month continuously the whole book. All 66 books of the bible are written on rolls and then retained and presented in the library of the installation. The result is certainly impressive. We hope that soon these robots can produce a quantity of books wider, so that everyone can have their favorite book written by hand.
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Inside Nokia Damage Test Lab

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Here’s a great photo gallery up of the Nokia Damage Test Labs, where workers bend, bake, humidify, spray, poke, drop, explode and otherwise maim mobile phone prototypes. When testing is finished, they have a battery of analytic procedures to determine how well or how poorly a phone held up. This includes analyzing a phone under electron microscopes, 3D X-rays and X-ray Spectroscopes to check for any related damage. For more photos you can visit A Look at the Nokia Damage Test Labs.

The Snow Clearing Robot – Roofus

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Shoveling snow on the roof is a difficult work and when faced with commercial sized buildings, it’s more difficult. But robot Roofus disigned by Michal Glogowski is happy to take the job on singel handed. Roofus’s main function is to take away the snow from big, flat roofs of market centers, big halls and plants, which may prevent from catastrophies. It collects the snow to the container and throws it away from the roof’s edge. It can cross the barriers. It features two electric motors, caterpillar tracks, and sensors on each side of its body for navigation, tips the scales at a touch over 100kg it’s and can take 250kg per load.
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