Amazing Technology Invented By MIT – Tangible Media

Just found this, but it actually a over a year old:

Published on Nov 12, 2013

At the MIT Media Lab, the Tangible Media Group believes the future of computing is tactile. Unveiled today, the inFORM is MIT’s new scrying pool for imagining the interfaces of tomorrow. Almost like a table of living clay, the inFORM is a surface that three-dimensionally changes shape, allowing users to not only interact with digital content in meatspace, but even hold hands with a person hundreds of miles away. And that’s only the beginning.

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TED 2014 Year In Review

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Watch “A Swarm of One Thousand Robots” on YouTube

A Swarm of One Thousand Robots:

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Five Famously Wrong Predictions About Technology – IEEE – The Institute

Five Famously Wrong Predictions About Technology
If these came true, there would be no home computers, tablets, or Internet
By KATHY PRETZ 19 December 2014
From: http://theinstitute.ieee.org/ieee-roundup/opinions/ieee-roundup/five-famously-wrong-predictions-about-technology

With the new year almost here, it’s that time when predictions about the future abound. I thought it would be fun to end 2014 by revisiting prognostications from the past that were, well, off the mark to put it kindly.

There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home.

Ken OlsEn, president Digital Equipment, 1977.

Olson made this statement at the World Future Society meeting in Boston. While he admits he said it, he claims his statement was taken out of context.

While PC sales are dropping—technology research company Gartner forecasted a 6 percent drop from last year, more than 276 million PCs are expected to be shipped this year, 37 years after Olson’s prediction. About two-thirds of the sales are from computer owners who are updating their equipment. The remaining third are replacing their machines with tablets, which brings me to the next prediction, a recent one.

In five years, I don’t think there will be a reason to have a tablet anymore…tablets themselves are not a good business model.

Thorsten Heins, then Blackberry CEO, 2013.

Heins told this to Bloomberg but a month later he revised his comments by saying “We’re interested in the future of tablets, whatever that is.”

Tablets will be around a lot longer than Heins’s tenure at Blackberry: he lost his job in November 2013. About 235 million tablets are forecast to ship by the end of the year, according to the research firm IDC. But it forecasts year-over-year growth of the worldwide tablet market is slowing to just more than 7 percent, compared to 52.5 percent in 2013. That’s because those who have tablets are holding onto them longer, an average of three years. Unlike Heins’s prediction, many organizations have found a way to make tablets part of their business model. School districts are using them as teaching aids, restaurants are taking orders with them, and interior designers can show clients what their new furniture and curtains in a room will look like. What is giving tablets a run for their money might be what some call phablets like Samsung’s Galaxy Note, which combines the functionality of larger smartphones and tablets. But smartphones wouldn’t be around if the next prediction had come true.

There’s no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share.

Steve Ballmer, Former Microsoft CEO, 2007.

In April of that year, Steve Ballmer told USA Today, “There’s no chance that the iPhone is going to get any significant market share. No chance.” Ballmer cited the iPhone’s relatively high US $499 subsidized price as one of his reasons.

Apple is thought to have sold some 38.2 million iPhones in the third quarter of 2014, according to market research firm Gartner’s quarterly handset sales tracker. Gartner expects Apple to have record fourth-quarter sales, with demand for its iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus outstripping supply. Sales of Samsung’s feature phones and smartphones declined in the third quarter of 2014, but it continues to lead in sales with more than 73.2 million units sold as of the third quarter, according to Gartner.

Cellular phones will absolutely not replace local wire systems.

Martin Cooper, developer of the first handheld cellphone, 1981.

IEEE Life Fellow Martin Cooper, then director of research at Motorola, gave the Christian Science Monitor this reason why the portable phone wouldn’t replace the landline: “Even if you project it beyond our lifetimes, it won’t be cheap enough,” Cooper said. He did foresee how the device would let people become more mobile. “People don’t realize how tied they are to a single place,” he argued.

I swapped my landline for my cellphone nearly a decade ago. But I’m not the only one to cut the cord with landlines. More than a quarter of U.S. households have stopped using landline phones, according to U.S. Census Bureau data from 2013. Just 71 percent of households had landlines in 2011, down from a little more than 96 percent 16 years ago. Cellphone ownership reached 89 percent, up from about 36 percent in 1998, the first year the survey asked about the devices.

I predict the Internet in 1996 [will] catastrophically collapse.

Robert Metcalfe, coinventor of the Internet, 1995.

Metcalfe, one of the inventors of the Ethernet, told InfoWorld in 1995, “The Internet will soon go spectacularly supernova and in 1996 catastrophically collapse.” Metcalfe, who received the 1996 IEEE Medal of Honor, was discussing capacity and whether the infrastructure of the Internet would hold up under ever-increasing traffic. He ate his words—literally. In 1999, addressing the Sixth International WWW Conference, Metcalfe put a copy of his infamous column into a blender, pureed it, and drank it.

The predictions have come full circle since most of us use our computers, tablets, and smartphones to surf the Internet, causing traffic to grow at steep rates. According to a report prepared by Cisco Visual Networking Index, global Internet traffic has increased fivefold over the past five years, and will increase threefold over the next five years. Overall, Internet traffic will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 21 percent from now to 2018. This whole Internet thing doesn’t appear to be going away anytime soon. And I think we are all happy this prediction never came true.

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Petition To Bring Google Fiber To Memphis Seeks 10K – FOX13 News, WHBQ FOX 13

Petition To Bring Google Fiber To Memphis Seeks 10K
Posted: Dec 19, 2014 8:31 PM CST Updated: Dec 26, 2014 8:31 PM CST
By Sarah Bleau, Reporter

From: http://www.myfoxmemphis.com/story/27675398/petition-to-bring-google-fiber-to-memphis-seeks-10k

FOX13 News, WHBQ FOX 13

New development announcements for Memphis brought a lot of Bluff City pride this week: IKEA and H&M, to start.

Memphians now hope Google Fiber is next.

Google Fiber delayed its next announcement for the latest cities receiving the high-speed internet network until after the New Year. A statement this week by the company said mayors and city leaders across the country stepped up to make high-speed broadband access a priority.

“If businesses know that there is superfast Internet being offered in Memphis and for an affordable decent reasonable price, then there are going to be businesses that are going to want to come here,” said Shawn Mufti, a University of Memphis student who created a petition to bring Google Fiber to Memphis.

He created the petition in mid-July, after Google Fiber announced in February it was heading to Nashville.

“It brought me great frustration knowing that Memphis has the highest poverty rate in the nation for city of its size; I think I saw one estimate as high as 28.7-percent,” Mufti said, “So as the old adage goes if you want something done right you got to do it yourself.”

Within four days the petition reached 1,000 signatures. With the renewed Memphis development energy circulating, Mufti is now hoping to reach 10,000 followers.

“I’ve been meeting with some community stakeholders like hospitals, colleges, banks and universities, just people who have a really big influence in this community, trying to gather information on how high-speed Internet has benefited their business or agency,” said Mufti.

Sign and share his petition to bring Google Fiber to Memphis at this link: https://www.change.org/p/bring-google-fiber-to-memphis-tn

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Google – Year In Search 2014

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1st Robot Airline Passenger

Robot flies to Germany as airline passenger from Los Angeles
By Michael Fleeman
LOS ANGELES Mon Dec 15, 2014 8:22pm EST
From: Reuters.com

Herzog, a doctoral student at Max Planck Society, pushes 'Athena', the first 'humanoid' robot to fly as a passenger, as  they arrive at Los Angeles International Airport

(Reuters) – A humanoid robot with a head, hands and feet and wearing stylish red sneakers boarded a flight for Germany at Los Angeles International Airport on Monday, becoming what was billed as the first robot traveling as a paid passenger on an airline.

The robot, named Athena, created a scene at the Tom Bradley International Terminal as she was pushed in a wheelchair up to the Lufthansa counter to pick up her ticket to Frankfurt. Television crews swarmed, camera flashes went off and people aimed their cell-phone cameras at her, exclaiming: “It’s a robot!”

Built by the Salt Lake City engineering and robotics company Sarcos, Athena was purchased by Germany’s Max Planck Society, which along with researchers at the University of Southern California are trying to make her perform tasks too dangerous for humans, such as cleanup after the nuclear disaster at Fukushima, Japan.

“We don’t want humans to go there and sacrifice their lives,” said Max Planck doctoral student Alexander Herzog, who was pushing Athena through the airport. “I would like to have a robot achieve the same task, such as opening up doors and cleaning up.”

Right now, Athena can do little more than sit and bask in attention. The software to make her legs move and stand is still in the works, though her arms can operate and her mouth glows blue on a white head fitted with cameras and sensors.

She got an economy ticket but still enjoyed special treatment, including a cut to the front of the ticket line in the first-class lane.

And while Athena did not have to go through the regular metal detector, the Transportation Security Administration had a special electronic pat-down awaiting, said airport spokeswoman Nancy Suey Castles. “TSA didn’t want us to say what it was,” she said.

As for the flight, Athena was strapped into a seat like a regular passenger, but was put in the off position, accompanied all the way to her new laboratory home in Germany by Herzog and Jeannette Bohg, senior research scientist at the Max Planck Society.

Representatives for Lufthansa could not be reached for comment.

Athena could have been shipped in a big box like any other electronic gear, but the scientists “wanted to see how humans responded to a robot sitting in a plane,” said Castles.

Plus, added Herzog, “It’s cheaper to get a seat.”

(Reporting by Michael Fleeman; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Mohammad Zargham)

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How to make an Arduino from scratch

Check out this awesome Instructable.

http://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-make-an-Arduino-from-scratch

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‘Liftoff of Orion’ video

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Military Robot Fueled By Google Technology Has Learned Karate

Military Robot Fueled By Google Technology Has Learned Karate
from: CBS (San Fransisco)

MOUNTAIN VIEW (CBS SF) – The Pentagon-backed team developing a robotic soldier that looks like something out of ‘Terminator’ has released a new video showing off the balance and mobility of their creation.

The two-legged Atlas robot is the work of Boston Dynamics, a recent Google acquisition. The project to develop the hydraulic, human shaped hero is overseen by DARPA, a wing of the U.S. Defense Department. The tool, which researchers say will someday rescue people in environments where humans can’t survive, appeared in 2013 and has been undergoing refinements since.

The latest video – released by research partner ihmc Robotics – shows the robot carrying out Daniel LaRusso’s famous training montage from “The Karate Kid” while balancing on a pile of cinder blocks.

At 6’2″ and 330 pounds, the robot – known as Ian – can also walk, jump and drive a car.

The original design for the Atlas requires a tethered power source, but researchers are reportedly working to eliminate that handicap.

Google acquired Boston Dynamics a year ago. At that point, the company had already gained Internet fame for similar YouTube videos of animal-inspired creations accomplishing difficult tasks.

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