Thursday, November 20, 2008
Monday, July 09, 2007
Friday, January 19, 2007
Flexi-boat debuts.

It has twin hulls, like a catamaran, connected to each other and a control cabin by four metal legs. The legs ride on titanium springs -- like shock absorbers -- that allow the WAM-V to adjust to the surface of the water -- to flex like knees.
Nice clear wake in the middle for waterskiing too.
Thursday, January 18, 2007
Can you see me now ?

The microchip implant replaces the dead rods and cones. The implant is dotted with several thousand micro-photodiodes, which react to light and produce small electrical impulses in parts of the eye’s retina.
“The good thing about this device that we’re using is that it doesn’t have any wires to it," Narfstrom told LiveScience. "So it’s like a small disk that is very inert and not so traumatic to the eye that we slide into the retina.”
Hyper-resolution, multi spectrum with night vision overlay available for christmas 2012.
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Hands On and On Interface

More detailed presentation video here.
I knew all those childhood piano lessons would finally payoff.
Monday, January 08, 2007
Nanoscale Fibre Optics

It could lend itself to miniature electrical circuitry and microscopic light-based switching devices for optical computing. It also could have medical applications such as retinal implants for people with the eye disease macular degeneration or detecting single molecules of pathogens in the body......
"You can envision making chips that can move light around -- basically convey information at the speed of light rather than using electronics. So it's optics for the manipulation of information rather than electronics."
Mmmm...speed of light.
Friday, January 05, 2007
Can you see me now ?

Ames Laboratory senior physicist Costas Soukoulis, working with colleagues in Karlsruhe, Germany, designed a silver-based, mesh-like material that marks the latest advance in the rapidly evolving field of metamaterials, materials that could lead to a wide range of new applications as varied as ultrahigh-resolution imaging systems and cloaking devices."
Seeing really isn't believing after all.
Thursday, January 04, 2007
Cancer Fighter Patented

The Johns Hopkins researchers cautioned that their double-punch molecule, described in the December issue of the journal Chemistry & Biology, has not yet been tested on animals or humans.
"For a long time, cancer researchers did not pay much attention to the use of sugars in fighting cancer," Department of Biomedical Engineering postdoctoral fellow said. "But we found that when the right sugar is matched with the right chemical partner, it can deliver a powerful double-whammy against cancer cells."
That's that then....next..Flying Cars please.
Tuesday, January 02, 2007
Thursday, December 21, 2006
Warp Factor Mr Zulu

They have developed a new transmission and receiving system that is able to process data directly before and after its conversion into optical signals using electrical processing only.
Current systems handling very high data rates have to split signals into multiple lower data-rate signals and later reconvert them from optical to electrical, a process that adds to costs and reduces network capacity.
107-gigabits-per-second transmission could send two DVDs in a second.
Fully immerisve scratch and sniff VR still on track.
Monday, December 11, 2006
The Walls have eyes.

It provides quick and covert intelligence on the movement and location of people in a room or building - without the need for invasive sensors.
Stealth ninja gear now mandatory.
Nano Tools

To design the nanoknife, the NIST and CU scientists welded a carbon nanotube between two electrochemically sharpened tungsten needles.
In the resulting prototype, the nanotube stretches between two ends of a tungsten wire loop.
For those hard to get places.
Can You See Me Now ?

The so-called Europe Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT) is budgeted at between 800 million and a billion euros (1.04-1.3 billion dollars).
A design approved by more than 250 ESO astronomers at a four-day meeting in Marseille, southern France, at the start of the month calls for an optical/infrared telescope with a 42-metre (136.5-feet) -diameter composite mirror, the largest in the world. The mirror will comprise 906 hexagonal segments, each 1.45 metres (4.7 feet) in size. Their light will be channelled to an "adaptive optics" system, chiefly comprising a smaller mirror whose shape can be distorted by tiny actuators and helps to correct for image fuzziness that occurs when light passes through Earth's atmosphere.
If all goes well, the E-ELT will start operations in 2018, and will be more than 100 times more sensitive than the present-day largest optical telescopes, led by the 10-metre (32.5-feet) Keck telescope in Hawaii.
It could hugely advance knowledge of planets around other stars, the earliest moments of the Universe, "super-massive" black holes and enigmatic phenomena called dark energy and dark matter.
The initial design sketched for the telescope was an OWL ("OverWhelmingly Large") design with a 100-metre (325-feet) mirror. But this was scaled back in 2005 because it was too costly and too complex to build on ESO's budget timescale.My wish list now to include Inferometry Array of Space based OWLS.
Friday, November 24, 2006
Gaming Evolution
The clip was produced for a presentation made by game developer David Perry at the TED Conference in Marin County.
Wednesday, November 22, 2006
Are You Staring At Me ?

Electrical stimulation of a key area of the brain near the temple upset the mind's perception of the body..
The brain generates an image of the body in the mind. But this is an external image as if the body were projected under, facing or behind the person. "In the first two instances, the patients still recognises their own image; in the latter, however, they sense another, sombre and menacing, presence."
I hate it when that happens.
Tuesday, November 21, 2006
ITER - Sign me Up.

The facility is to be built in Cadarache, in southern France, over a decade starting 2008.
The release of energy from a fusion reaction is 10 million times greater than from a typical chemical reaction, such as burning a fossil fuel.
'.......we will be able to derive as much energy from a litre of seawater as from a litre of petrol or a kilo of coal.'"
Pentagon launches Operation "Hands Around The Oceans".