Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Breakthrough technology removes arsenic from groundwater

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Breakthrough technology removes arsenic from groundwater

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

If GCHQ wants to improve national security it must fix our technology

If GCHQ wants to improve national security it must fix our technology
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Our security is better served by protecting us against online threats than it is by giving cops and spies an easier time attacking ‘bad guys’. By Cory Doctorow












Technology news, comment and analysis | theguardian.com


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Thursday, January 9, 2014

8 Examples of Mind Controlled Technology in Action

8 Examples of Mind Controlled Technology in Action
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Buck Rogers, Staff Writer
Waking Times


The age of the brain-computer interface is here, and technology has found a way to put brainwaves to practical use in the material world.


Electroencephalography, or EEG, measures low-voltage electrical signals from the brain using sensors attached to the scalp and face. When neurons inside the brain fire off, for one reason or another, electrical signals are emitted, captured, amplified then sent to a computer for interpretation. Once the signals are captured, scientists and engineers can convert this information into software commands to control real, 3-dimensional objects.


This technology works by first ‘training’ the computer to recognize brainwave patterns, then maps those inputs to the control designs of the engineer. As is the case with human ingenuity, the results are mind-blowing. Here are 8 videos demonstrating the potential for human-brain interface technology, outside of the defense industry.


Mind Controlled Robotic Limbs


The ability to physically move things is something that most of us take for granted. Using surgically implanted electrodes, and using a mind-controlled robotic arm, this paralyzed woman is able to feed herself for the first time in a decade…


The Mind Controlled Word Processor


Samsung’s intendiX EEG based system allows users to type out messages in a basic word processor on a computer…


Samsung’s Tablet Computer Controlled by Brainwaves


At the Samsung research & development facility in Dallas, TX they are developing a tablet computer that performs simple operations based on the intentions of the user…


Mind Controlled Helicopters


Researchers and students at the University of Minnesota have developed a system for controlling robots, like this helicopter, with brain patterns of the user who wears an EEG cap


Open source, and hackable, The ‘Puzzle Box Orbit’ revealed at the show… Open source and hackable the puzzlebox is a consumer product that can be used to learn the basics of EEG control mapping…


Mind Controlled Performance Art


Artist Lisa Park has developed an performance art piece that controls synthesized sound to create beautiful water dances with her emotions…


Mind Controlled Skateboard


In a rather awesome example, this mind-controlled skateboard can reach a top speed of 32 miles per hour…


Mind Controlled Robotics


A student of robotics at Taiwan National university demonstrates mind-control of various robitics including a Lego robot…


This potential applications for this technology are enormous and this is proof that thoughts are indeed things.



About the Author

Buck Rogers is the earth bound incarnation of that familiar part of our timeless cosmic selves, the rebel within. He is a surfer of ideals and meditates often on the promise of happiness in a world battered by the angry seas of human thoughtlessness. He is a staff writer for WakingTimes.com.


Sources:


- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroencephalography


This article is offered under Creative Commons license. It’s okay to republish it anywhere as long as attribution bio is included and all links remain intact.


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Category: Contributors, Ideas, Ingenuity, Mind, Science, Self, Technology, Time & Space, Video, Waking Times




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Wednesday, December 11, 2013

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Saturday, December 7, 2013

Ultimate Amazing Technology - 2015

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Sunday, December 1, 2013

VIDEO: Indian Spacecraft Leaves Earth"s Orbit, Headed For Mars







India’s Mars Orbiter Mission spacecraft is officially headed to Mars. It launched out of Earth’s orbit Sunday morning.













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Monday, November 18, 2013

Audi"s advance risks stalling without new technology drive

Audi"s advance risks stalling without new technology drive
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BERLIN Mon Nov 18, 2013 12:16pm EST



The company logo of Volkswagen

The company logo of Volkswagen’s Audi AG premium unit is pictured on the hub caps of a car during the annual news conference in Ingolstadt March 11, 2008.


Credit: Reuters/Michael Dalder




BERLIN (Reuters) – German luxury carmaker Audi has boasted Vorsprung durch Technik – advancement through technology – as its slogan since the 1970s. But signs are growing it is losing sight of its own advice.


Research and development spending by the 81-year-old brand, which is the profit engine of parent Volkswagen (VW), last year amounted to less than three-quarters of arch-rival BMW’s outlay and a smaller fraction of Mercedes owner Daimler’s.


While BMW trumpets its new “i” series of electric cars and Mercedes wins rave reviews for its new CLA and GLA ranges of sporty compact models, Audi risks looking like a laggard in an industry where innovation is a major draw for customers.


“I’ve grown tired of that single-frame grille,” said Stefan Reimann, a 47-year-old public relations manager looking at the front of the new Audi A3 compact at a Berlin showroom.


“BMW and Mercedes seem to be so much more progressive now. It’s about time for Audi to live up to their promise,” he added.


The stakes are high. Audi contributed over 40 percent of VW’s (VOWG_p.DE) nine-months profit of 8.6 billion euros ($ 11.6 billion) and it is critical to funding the expansion of Europe’s biggest carmaker as it strives to overtake General Motors (GM.N) and Toyota (7203.T) and become world number one by 2018.


Any weakening at Audi could also add to doubts about VW’s broader strategy, with some analysts questioning whether a new manufacturing platform aimed at sharing costs among its brands will deliver the projected benefits, and whether it has cut prices too much to win market share in Europe.


On the surface, everything looks fine.


Audi, which has doubled model lines and deliveries over the past decade, is shrinking BMW’s (BMWG.DE) sales lead, with deliveries in the first ten months of 2013 at a record 1.31 million cars versus 1.35 million at BMW.


The brand, which pioneered all-aluminum bodyworks and “Quattro” four-wheel drives in the 1980s, is also rapidly expanding in fast-growing emerging markets, with new production facilities in China, Mexico and Brazil.


But there are signs that all is not well.


Audi is on its third R&D chief in 16 months and a VW source told Reuters the parent was concerned the brand is resting on its laurels just as rivals push new technologies and designs.


TROUBLE DOWN THE LINE


The gap is barely apparent under the bonnets in car showrooms – though industry-watchers point out that Audi’s flagship A8 lacks the rival Mercedes S-Class sedan’s plug-in hybrid powertrain option or its semi-autonomous driving function for traffic jams.


For now, Audi’s drift is most visible among the more innovative vehicles that are too easily dismissed as niche models or far-fetched prototypes.


Audi has little to show, for example, opposite BMW’s i3 and i8 electric cars – which also pioneered carbon-fiber manufacturing techniques tipped to see wider use – or Daimler’s investment in hydrogen fuel cells and self-driving cars.


Even when it doesn’t lead to mass sales, such risk-taking can pay dividends for a brand’s “halo”. BMW has received 100,000 test-drive applications for the futuristic i3 mini.


“Constant innovation is absolutely crucial for high-end carmakers,” said Boston Consulting Group senior partner Andreas Maurer. “If a customer feels that a premium manufacturer has nothing new in the pipeline, that company is in trouble.”


But battery-powered versions of the Audi R8 sports car and A1 subcompact were shelved last year as VW focused on plug-in hybrids as a more conservative approach to meeting European Union carbon emissions targets.


“Audi lacks a vision of the future as well as core competence on technology,” said Arndt Ellinghorst, London-based head of automotive research at ISI.


“They have little to offer nowadays in terms of a clear corporate message and mainly live off their past success.”


The loss of momentum is also showing up in projections.


IHS Automotive, among the most authoritative forecasters, expects Audi to be outsold once more by Mercedes next year, after three years in the industry’s No. 2 slot. Neither will overtake BMW’s global sales by 2020, it predicts.


BRAIN DRAIN


A 16 percent rise in Audi’s R&D budget to 2.9 billion euros last year from 2010 was dwarfed by BMW’s 43 percent surge to 4 billion, according to company data. Mercedes parent Daimler (DAIGn.DE) posted a 14 percent rise to 5.6 billion euros.


The figures do not necessarily compare like with like, however, as Audi also benefits from R&D spending in other parts of the VW group.


Audi rejects the idea it is losing its technology mojo, pointing to its plug-in hybrids – which avoid the range limitations of pure-electric cars – and its own use of aluminium and composites to cut weight.


Yet senior executives seem to think there are problems.


Audi’s latest R&D boss, Ulrich Hackenberg, unexpectedly pulled a concept car from September’s Frankfurt car show line-up and ordered engineers to install an alternative hybrid powertrain, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said.


Christoph Stuermer, Frankfurt-based analyst with IHS, says Audi is suffering the effects of a brain drain that saw the division’s CEO, R&D chief and top designer all leave for the VW brand in 2007. They were followed two years later by the transfer of its engine development chief to Porsche.


The addition of luxury sports car brand Porsche to VW’s stable in 2012 is also causing problems at Audi, according to another source familiar with the matter.


“There’s a certain amount of jealousy at play,” the source said, requesting anonymity.


In a bid to fight back, Audi plans to refresh design and create a more distinctive face for high-end models and sportier vehicles, boost lightweight construction and plug gaps in SUV offerings while expanding to 60 models from 46, the source said.


But it may face an uphill struggle. IHS is forecasting that sales of the A1, Audi’s smallest model, will drop to 101,700 cars in 2018, down 16 percent from 2012, while sales of BMW’s rival Mini hatchback rise 3.1 percent to 140,300.


At the top end, sales of the A8 sedan are expected to rise 19 percent to 44,900 cars, compared with gains of 22 percent to 81,900 for the revamped Mercedes S-Class and 30 percent for BMW’s 7-Series, to 85,300 cars.


($ 1 = 0.7421 euros)


(Additional reporting by Irene Preisinger; Editing by Laurence Frost and Mark Potter)






Reuters: Business News




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Saturday, November 16, 2013

SMALL CAP MOVERS: Buoyant technology sector gears up for takeover battles

SMALL CAP MOVERS: Buoyant technology sector gears up for takeover battles
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By Jamie Ashcroft, Proactive Investors


|


Investors in small cap technology companies can look forward to a new wave of consolidation driven activity, as takeover speculation adds to what has already been a buoyant year for the sector.


Perhaps unsurprisingly, given the volatility in commodity markets, small cap technology shares have generally outperformed their natural resource harvesting peers on AIM.


Throw into the mix a rejuvenated appetite for new technology listings and share sales and it is clear that technology firms big and small are enjoying a renaissance.


Buoyant year: Small cap technology shares have generally outperformed their natural resource harvesting peers on AIM

Buoyant year: Small cap technology shares have generally outperformed their natural resource harvesting peers on AIM



On AIM this week, the spotlight was on Belfast-based high-end imaging specialist Andor Technology, which met Oxford Instrument’s £160mln advance with an aloof response.


Andor says it is willing to negotiate takeover proposals, however, it described the publicising of an indicative 500p per share offer as ‘premature and unhelpful’.


The market reckons there’s still more to come and that other suitors may yet make a play for the company. Andor shares gained 25 per cent this week.


This could just be the first of many takeover battles, according to Steve Asfour, market maker at FinnCap Securities.


‘I’m surprised we haven’t seen more [deals in the sector] already,’ he said.


‘There are a lot of technology stocks that are trading at big discounts to where we feel they should be. The technology and bio-pharma sector has been very buoyant recently. I’d be very shocked if there is not more activity.’


“Some of these [larger] companies that are sitting on piles of cash – they’re either going to have to use it or give it back to shareholders. So, I would imagine they’ll be trying to use the war chest now.”


The week’s other technology winners included eye-tracking specialist Seeing Machines, which won another safety system deal for mining trucks.


Drug developer GW Pharmaceuticals moved about 20 per cent higher, whilst telecoms innovator Tangent Communications climbed strongly as well.


Standing at 3,666 the FTSE AIM 100 only managed a marginal rise this week, though trading volumes do remain healthy.


In particular, oil and gas junior San Leon has been a busy stock. One trader reckons most of the stock’s recent sellers have now been mopped up and have been bought up by “safe hands”.


In the recent week’s the firm acquired new near-production assets in Turkey, to supplement its high impact exploration, though an accompanying share placing dampened the enthusiasm for some.


The expectation, now, is that a busy period with lots of newsflow will drive a meaningful rally in the share price.


The trader said: ‘It feels like the majority of the sellers are gone – I’ve taken most of them out!’


Ambitious Irish oil explorer Fastnet revealed a double helping of good news for its prospects in Morocco.


First it unveiled a new assessment of the Tendara Lakbir licence, onshore, near the Algerian border, which supports the belief that it could potentially resemble the giant tight gas fields that the neighbouring country is known for.


The crucial issue for this project, however, is recoverability. The company is confident its plan to deploy modern technologies will work. So much so, an ‘in house’ reckoning gives next year’s drill programme a 75 per cent chance of success.


On Thursday, Fastnet revealed its process to sell a portion of its 18.75 per cent stake in the Foum Assaka offshore project – alongside BP and Kosmos Energy – has moved into the final stages.


The bidding process has now ended, with one potential buyer now entering into an exclusivity agreement so that the finer points of the deal can be negotiated. The identity of the thus far un-named buyer, and the terms of the deal are likely to be revealed next month and the deal will be completed in early 2014 ahead a possible Q1 spud date.


Exploration is, of course, a risky business and investors in AIM quoted Wessex were reminded of this painful fact once again this week as a Shell-led drill campaign offshore French Guiana came to an unsuccessful end – all four wells failed to build on the 2011 success of the Zaedyus discovery well.


Having spurned a £71mln takeover from major exploration partner Total, last March, Wessex shares are worth just £3mln and there are doubts over the micro-caps ability to pay its share of any further work on the very large licence block.


A Chinese supply deal was the catalyst for Atlantic Coal shares. Through an agreement with CIC Brancepeth Coal it will supply at least 100,000 tonnes of anthracite coal a year from its mine in Pennsylvania.


Africa-focused gold explorer Alecto Minerals received a welcome surprise as its team of geologists returned to the Kossanto area of Mali to find a mini gold rush, which has sprung up a village of artisanal miners, had unearthed precisely the kind of high grade gold veins that the company was hoping to pursue in the new field season.


It gives the firm a great start and will help the targeting of holes for the next drill programme, which will get underway before the start of the year.


The tetchy story of Nyota Minerals continued this week as the company tries to close a deal to sell two-thirds of the 3mln ounce Tulu Kapi gold project in Ethiopia for £4.5mln.


First the government confirmed the formal extension of the exploration licence for the project, and, on Friday, shareholders voted against Centamin’s bid to oust chief executive Richard Chase.







Money | Mail Online




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Friday, November 15, 2013

A glance at several retailers" technology hubs

A glance at several retailers" technology hubs

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Old-line retailers are opening tech test labs in Silicon Valley:
Business Headlines



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Sunday, October 20, 2013

Aztec 1948 UFO Crash - Secret Recovery of Alien Technology HD MOVIE Reloaded

UFO Update – Featured videos:



On March 25, 1948 a UFO spacecraft of extraterrestrial origin crashed in a place called Aztec, New Mexico. Sixteen alien bodies were discovered dead inside. …
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Aztec 1948 UFO Crash - Secret Recovery of Alien Technology HD MOVIE Reloaded

VIDEO: Police Investigate Twitter Messages Aimed At Sen. Ted Cruz







Police are investigating Twitter messages directed towards Senator Ted Cruz, the Republican who played a prominent role in efforts to derail Obamacare during the shutdown, officials said late Saturday.Capitol Police in Washington D.C. told NBC News they were looking into Tweets posted on Friday.













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Sunday, October 13, 2013

VIDEO: Charlie Hunnam Drops Out Of "Fifty Shades Of Grey"







Statement says actor’s TV schedule isn’t allowing him to adequately prepare for role of Christian Grey.













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Sunday, September 29, 2013

VIDEO: Raw: Commercial Supply Ship Reaches ISS







NASA’s newest delivery service pulled up at the International Space Station on Sunday after a week’s delay, bringing more than a half-ton of meals and special treats to the astronauts who assisted in the high-flying feat. (Sept. 29)













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Wednesday, September 18, 2013

How Photographic Technology Shapes Our Understanding of War



Three “Johnnie Reb” prisoners, captured at Gettysburg (Library of Congress)

Graphic imagery has been an indelible feature of armed conflict from the days of Civil War daguerreotypes, when Matthew Brady and other early photographers captured the horrors of the battlefield. With each succeeding war, as cameras became more advanced, the role of photography has evolved to convey the realities of combat and the agonies inflicted, primarily on the soldiers in the field. There is a tragic artistry to the unforgettable pictures of the dead and wounded in twentieth-century wars.


Some photographs are heroic. Joe Rosenthal’s iconic snapshot of Marines raising the flag at Iwo Jima in February 1945 is enshrined in national memory as a prelude to victory. Vietnam was called “The Television War” because it was the first conflict featured on news broadcasts, usually within a day or two of the events.




Joe Rosenthal’s photograph of soldiers at Iwo Jima (AP)

The imagery of today’s wars has moved beyond the relative formality of television coverage, then at its peak, to the output of digital cameras and mobile devices. They are visceral because they are so raw. Anyone with a smartphone and a YouTube account can post unfiltered videos from virtually any setting for audiences of incalculable size the world over.


As a result, our view of the conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, and Syria is profoundly different. Civil unrest around the world – Egypt, Turkey, even Iran – is instantly available and shapes the perception of these events. Victimized civilians – who in the past were less visible in wars that had fixed front lines with armies engaged in classic settings – are now a dominant presence. It is the scenes of ordinary women and children, as well as fighters on both sides, in the worst of circumstances that symbolize so much of what we now perceive of chaotic war zones. There is undeniable power in this unending flow of visual brutality.



A still from the videos, distributed by the Senate Intelligence Committee, documenting the Syrian chemical weapons attacks

After the chemical weapons attacks of August 21, the Senate Intelligence Committee posted thirteen videos selected by the Open Source Center, a compilation of material provided by the intelligence community from YouTube content, posted by Syrian opposition groups with a warning: “These videos contain disturbing images of dead bodies including children. Viewer discretion is advised.”


Another excruciating example from the Syrian civil war was a front-page photo in the The New York Times, on September 5. It was a still from a video (which turned out to be more than a year old) provided “by a former rebel” showing seven terrified Syrian soldiers, their faces pressed to the dirt in the moments before they were executed.



Matthew Brady’s war photography equipment (Library of Congress)

The notion that social media has become a principal means of transmitting such ghastly portraits is a measure of how war photography has changed. There is far more to be seen than was possible before, and much of it comes from the prevalence of digital instruments in the hands of amateurs. Limits on images of dead American soldiers are still imposed by editors at traditional media outlets like the Times, “because it never wants to make public the news of a death that the family may not yet know about,” according to Joseph Kahn, the paper’s foreign editor. But such restraint is the exception when vast amounts of digital photography (and video) are intended to be directly accessible across multiple platforms.


There are, of course, still great professional photographers active in the mayhem of pervasive strife whose daring willingness to close in on the action of street fighting and unspeakable civilian suffering comes at great personal risk of injury, death, or capture. In this year’s Pulitzer Prizes, five photographers from the Associated Press won the breaking news award for their coverage of Syria. As reported in The National newspaper in the United Arab Emirates, AP’s director of photography, Santiago Lyon, said that members of the team — Rodrigo Abd, Manu Brabo, Narciso Contreras, Khalil Hamra, and Muhammed Muheisen — are “some of the bravest and most talented photographers in the world.” The AP’s pride in the work of its photographers now — and in the past — is well justified.



* * *



Two venues are lately featuring impressive, visceral war photography, new and old. The Corcoran Gallery of Art, in Washington, DC, is exhibiting the work of more than 200 photographers from 28 countries in conflicts. The images span war photography’s 165-year history.



A six-pounder gun in Washington, D.C., photographed by Matthew Brady (Library of Congress)

And, in recognition of what was a long and losing conflict, notable among other reasons because there was no censorship of the press, the AP has gathered 300 photographs from its extraordinary collection in a book called Vietnam: The Real War (to be released by Abrams on October 1). An exhibition at the Steven Kasher galley will coincide with the book’s publication. An astute introduction by Pete Hamill, who reported from Vietnam in 1965, sets up the work of 50 photojournalists, including three who were Pulitzer Prize winners: Malcolm W. Browne, a brilliant reporter captured the self-immolation of a Buddhist monk in June of 1963, a protest that revealed the mounting level of internal unrest in the country; Eddie Adams’ shot of the chief of South Vietnam’s national police firing into the head of a suspected Viet Cong official on the street during the Tet offensive of 1968 showed unforgettable savagery; Nick Ut’s 1972 photo of a naked nine-year-old girl running down a road covered in napalm burns conveyed a depth of searing pain and added to the shame so many Americans felt about the war.


A lengthy appraisal of the book by Ralph Blumenthal, who covered Vietnam and Cambodia for The New York Times from 1969 to 1971, offered this tribute to the AP:


No single source did more to document the bitter and costly struggle against North Vietnamese Communist regular and Vietcong insurgents and to turn the home front against the war, than the AP.


From 1950 to 1975, this nonprofit news cooperative, founded during the Mexican war in 1846, fielded Saigon’s largest, most battle-hardened cadre of war correspondents and photographers, including several women. Four died.



Vietnam: The Real War is a masterful representation of the impact of photography and, decades after the end of the war, what was once news is now an invaluable historical record. The reporting of wars and the photography that accompanies the words are one of journalism’s most important roles and that is as true in this Internet era of instant and unedited imagery as it was when the coverage was carefully drawn and vetted by experienced editors and bureau chiefs. 






    








Master Feed : The Atlantic



How Photographic Technology Shapes Our Understanding of War