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Robots vs. the kiddies

Posted on August 12, 2005 by iksib

Oh, you silly Japanese. Ladies and gentlemen, you can now add a goldfish-catching robot to your wishlist. Face the facts: Aibos are so passé and that mecha on eBay is just too pricey.

Researchers at the Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST) have designed a robot they hope to enter into an annual goldfish catching competition for children, which takes place on August 20 in the nearby city of Yamatokoriyama.

Check out this page (in Japanese) with a link to the video. While the robot’s 3-minute haul of between 6 and 10 goldfish is paltry compared to kiddie experts, who can apparently hoist 60-plus fish, the mechanical arm/overhead camera/computer contraption is an interesting study on the ability of computers to potentially study moving cars or crowds.

Maybe I’m the only one who experienced this, but I can’t help but think of the time when my elementary school would stay open one night each year; teachers and kids would bring their families for food, prizes and games throughout the school, one of which involved goldfish. Now I’m picturing the event with a hulking robot, yards of cabling and a team of Japanese at the helm and, for some reason, it seems really weird.

[Courtesy New Scientist]

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FedEx FanatiCism

Posted on August 11, 2005 by iksib

It just keeps getting better today. Wired news has a great article about aspiring interior decorator Jose Avila (including a great snap of his neon pink coiffure), a software developer who, apparently strapped for cash, decided to furnish his apartment in an ingenious way capable of making even the most earnest dumpster divers stand back and rethink their approaches: he’s making FedEx FurNiture.

He’s created a bed, a corner desk with shelves, a table, two chairs and a couch…and earned a cease-and-desist letter from the shipping giant, who claims his work violates the Digital Millenium Copyright Act. They asked him to take his site down the day after he put it up, in June.

I love this part:

    Avila distributed cards and T-shirts featuring the website’s URL (but not the FedEx logo) at the recent Black Hat conference in Las Vegas…Avila tried to have more cards and T-shirts made, but FedEx Kinko’s refused to do the job.

Bolstered by Lawyers from Stanford Law School, Avila put the site back up, and they’re apparently gearing up for a legal tussle. Man, I love the internet.

Posted in General | 1 Comment |

7 GHz bliss

Posted on August 11, 2005 by iksib

This is a trip. Anything beginning with the sentence “How far can you push a processor without setting your room on fire?” has to be good, I say.

With a Pentium 4 670 Prescott rated at 3.8 GHz, an ASUS motherboard, 1 GB of memory, Windows Server 2003 and, most importantly, some sort of industrial-strength cooling device that looks like it could be used to make ice cream, this Japanese blog includes pictures (thankfully) of the process, and a final processor speed of…7133.5 MHz!

[Kudos to Softpedia and Engadget]

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Shuttle crazy

Posted on August 10, 2005 by iksib

shuttle-747Given the media frenzy surrounding the recent shuttle mission and landing yesterday morning at Edwards Air Force Base in California, check out these cool NASA photos of the SCA (shuttle carrier aircraft) – i.e. an empty 747 with additional rear stabilizers to minimize turbulence caused by the brick shuttle on top.

Check out a decent Slate.com explainer on these flights. Some important details:

    •Number of 747s NASA owns: 2
    •Codenames: NASA 905, NASA 911
    •How the shuttle-747 combination comes together: the shuttle mate-demate device, or MDD (sounds kinky)
    •Cost of a cross-country trip: $230,000
    •Distance the unwieldy contraption can fly without refueling: 1,000 nautical miles
    •Number of previous trips: 51, including a trip to the Paris Air Show
    •What they do most of the time: sit at Edwards, waiting for wayward shuttles
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MS joins the fray

Posted on August 10, 2005 by iksib

msnfilterIt was obviously only a matter of time before this happened. Building on the previous post, I wanted to briefly include something about MSN Filter, given its recent launch. With posts in five categories (lifestyle, music, tv, sports and technology), it’s a bit unclear what the immediate goal behind Filter may be, but the technology section seems to be on par with other blogs in the genre (as if I’m any authority). At least they’ve put up some information about those behind the posts – when I first saw filter the posts might as well have come from the sky. According to this InformationWeek article, Microsoft is building content with the help of hired bloggers, “experts in different areas…[with] free reign to write about those topics.”

Features offered by the service include RSS, MSN alerts to new content and comments (.NET passport required).

Talk amongst yourselves…and do what you will.

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One in six visiting blogs

Posted on August 10, 2005 by iksib

ComScoreIf you’re reading these words, this should come as no surprise to you.

On the heels of comScore’s recently-released Behaviors of the Blogosphere (PDF), which claims that nearly 50 million Americans spent some time on blogs during the first quarter of 2005, C|NET’s been hypothesizing about ways to study blogs. Interestingly (or perhaps not), comScore’s results coincide partly with Technorati’s, calculated by measuring links, but comScore obtained their data through some 1.5 million internet users who allowed the group to monitor their online behavior. According to Technorati engineer Kevin Marks, quoted by C|NET, the fact that two different methodologies resulting in very similar results is good news: links are mirroring readership, validating each approach. Welcome to the age of the blog.

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iPod navigation

Posted on August 9, 2005 by iksib

ipodcolorOn his .Mac homepage, Ian Meyer demonstrates an ingeniously simple way to use your iPod photo (and fourth generation ‘Pods) as a portable direction finder. Simply take screenshots of Google maps and download them to your iPod, and presto! Directions that doesn’t involve carrying a bulky atlas, crude drawings of the route (that’s me) or a long list of directions:

    L on Downing
    Go .75 miles, take the third left on Anderson
    Go straight through the second major intersection after the Dairy Queen, but be sure to stay right…

What an elegant, simple, and new way to use the ever-so-ubiquitous iPod. Good job, Ian!

Props to The Unofficial Apple Weblog and Make: Blog for showing me the light.

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Self control?

Posted on August 9, 2005 by iksib

Just saw this on BoingBoing:

A 28-year-old South Korean man died of heart failure after finishing a 50-hour first-person-shooter gaming session, according to Reuters. He was in an internet cafe, having apparently just completed his more than two day session (punctuated by breaks to go to the toilet and take brief naps on a makeshift bed). Upon failing to return home one day, his mother had asked the man’s former colleagues (he recently quit his job to devote more time to games) to find him. When they did, he told them he would finish the game and go home.

The cause of death was reported as heart failure.

Posted in General | 2 Comments |

All about the VOIP

Posted on August 9, 2005 by iksib

A few VOIP tidbits this morning:

skype voipbuster

Quite a bit of speculation is floating around about Skype being snapped up. The Register lists potential suitors as Yahoo!, Google or News Corp’s Rupert Murdoch, while The Independent claims that $3 billion might be Murdoch’s magic number. Meanwhile, Skype says it isn’t for sale. Ultimately, it’s impossible to predict the service’s long-term growth; venture capitalist Tim Draper compares Skype’s purchase to Microsoft’s of Hotmail in 1998 for $450 million – the service now has nearly 200 million users. I suppose Skpe could ultimately go belly-up if people lose all interest in VOIP, but that seems unlikely. The tech big boys wouldn’t be so interested if they believed this to be the case.

Meanwhile, the guys at Engadget posted this morning about VoipBuster, who, appropriately, is busting Skype when it comes to calling rates. According to Skype Journal, the service allows users to make free calls to most of the SkypeOut countries after opening account and paying a single Euro (~$1.27) worth of credit. That’s it! Free calls to most of the world for just over a dollar. VoipBuster shows its limitations, however, in a complete lack of a feature set – no chat, no conference calls, no online presence information, and no PC-to-PC calling. But for PC-to-phone, for now it doesn’t get any cheaper.

pssst: make a Mac version!

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WiFi at 30,000

Posted on August 8, 2005 by iksib

connexionI’m familiar with Boeing’s Connextion inflight internet connection service, but I hadn’t been following it closely enough to know about some of the details behind the lagging of U.S. airlines in bringing the technology stateside. According to Information Week, 12 overseas carriers offer the service on 70 aircraft, some of which hit 13 U.S. cities on one end of their route. But domestic carriers still aren’t biting. Carriers remain hesitant due to factors including the cost of retrofitting aircraft (purportedly $500,000 each) and an unknown level of interest in the service, and they do make a valid point about two U.S. airlines in bankruptcy, more flirting with it and the disappearance of free meals, pillows and other goodies. Ironically, American, Delta and United were all original investors in Connexion, but pulled out in the wake of 9/11. In June, United became the first U.S. carrier to get FAA approval for wireless networks on their planes – they plan to introduce service in 2006.

In related news, Qualcomm is teaming with Connexion to test and demonstrate the successful use of CDMA and GSM mobile phone technology over onboard networks.

Sadly, this might mean that before too long we’ll all be within earshot of idiots squawking on their cell phones. All I can say is that by that point I hope I have the ability to quietly get some surfing done on my laptop.

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More news on Amazonflix

Posted on August 8, 2005 by iksib

amazonboxSo the rumor mill is working once again, according to this Wired News article, published this morning, Via clues gleaned from job postings on the company’s job site, Amazon is apparently looking for engineers to work on an online DVD rental service.

Having entered both the UK and German online DVD rental markets already, it’s likely only a matter of time before Bezos & Co. start battling with Netflix, Wal-Mart and Blockbuster online.

Any guesses on when we’ll see those Amazon-themed mailers?

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Wikicensure?

Posted on August 7, 2005 by iksib

Ars Technica has an interesting article discussing the potential future of Wikipedia, timely due to the fact that Wikimania has been going since Thursday (it ends tomorrow). According to Yahoo! News, Wikipedia cofounder Jimmy Wales says the system needs to find a way to both protect information from abuse and allow open access.

Apparently one way to do this could be through “stable contents,” Wales says – pages that are frozen after their quality is deemed undisputed. Citing an example in which a Wikipedia user substituted a picture of Pope Benedict in April with one of Star Wars’ evil emperor Palpitine, Wales is obviously feeling pressure to increase Wikipedia’s credibility while simultaneously trying to give individual visitors the control that makes the system so powerful.

Having experimented with Wiki myself and even suggested it to prospective employers and friends as a way to facilitate communication between groups of different sizes, it will be interesting to see where this one goes.

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About

Jeremy Toeman is a seasoned Product leader with over 20 years experience in the convergence of digital media, mobile entertainment, social entertainment, smart TV and consumer technology. Prior ventures and projects include CNET, Viggle/Dijit/Nextguide, Sling Media, VUDU, Clicker, DivX, Rovi, Mediabolic, Boxee, and many other consumer technology companies. This blog represents his personal opinion and outlook on things.

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