AT&T Will Be Able to Handle the iPhone

Monday, June 21, 2010

Pity AT&T and their troubled data network. While previous iPhones' data usage was largely confined to static webpages, simple apps and maybe the occasional song streamed through Pandora, the just-announced iPhone 4's (available June 24) hunger can best be described in one word: video. In other words: If you thought the iPhone was a data-hog before, you ain't seen nothin' yet.

The ability to capture 720p HD video and edit it right on the phone using the new mobile version of Apple's iMovie video editing software. Users will then be able to send their massive video files into the ether over the AT&T network.

-A Netflix app that can stream entire movies over either Wi-Fi or AT&T's network.

-A new operating system (iOS4 it will be called) that will allow users to keep audio-streaming apps such as Pandora running in the background while they complete other tasks. This should dramatically increase the usage of these data-heavy programs.

If the previous iPhones' comparably puny data demands were enough to bring AT&T's network to a standstill in some cities, what's going to happen when customers get their hands on these new features?

Of course, AT&T anticipated this and, just last week, announced the death of their unlimited iPhone data plans. But while this move may stem some of the bleeding, millions of iPhone users will be allowed to hold onto their grandfathered-in unlimited data plans, meaning it could be years before these caps have a noticeable impact on the network load.

At least their new "FaceTime" video calling feature (which takes advantage of the new front-facing camera) is currently Wi-Fi-only (a disappointing reality, considering the new Sprint EVO 4G does video-conferencing over 3G).

So how will AT&T handle this new data load? Other than vague comments by Steve Jobs at the recent D8 conference that it will all get better soon, we honestly have no idea. Even ambitious expansion of cellular network capacity is unlikely to fully tackle the problem—especially when one considers that this great new device will likely cause millions of new users to hop on AT&T's network. AT&T: You have our pity.

A Closer Look At The iPhone



Latest Humanoid Robots Uncanny and Creepy

An oft-cited theory in robotics, the uncanny valley, refers to that point along the chart of robot–human likeness where a robot looks and acts nearly—but not exactly—like a human.

This subtle imperfection, the theory states, causes people's feelings toward robots to veer from fondness to revulsion.” –cited in a post by Popular Mechanic’s The Truth About Robots and the Uncanny Valley: Analysis.


Thought it was interesting to know where the humans have now explored the uncanny side of robotics, though it was a little bit creepy to tell that “it wasn’t movie-like” but apparently there are possibilities that in the near future we’ll have a humanoid counterparts. In this post we listed the latest humanoid robots that have been developed. Demo and development videos after the break, then don’t be scared.

Evolution of Technology - HQ (Saturn Commercial)

Vertical Farming System Among Best Inventions of 2009

Tuesday, June 15, 2010



John already wrote about Valcent's vertical farming systems back in 2008, and I was excited to learn about a pilot vertical farm project at a UK zoo. So news that Valcent's vertical farming system has been named as the 16th best invention of 2009 by Time Magazine was bound to catch our interest.

Valcent's innovative growing solutions even featured at the unveiling of the World's tallest building in Dubai, though don't worry, it doesn't seem to have been a pitch for what Adam Stein calls "pie-in-the-sky" skyscraper farming.
Valcent was part of a workshop held by the Dubai Forum called "Architecture for Sustainable Societies" that was being held to mark the opening of the Burj Dubai. Tom Bentley, Director, Business Development for Valcent told the gathering:

"In the coming decades, as global agriculture faces the prospect of our changing climate and the challenge of feeding the world's population that is growing annually at about 1.3% and projected to double its present level of 6.5 billion by 2063, we clearly need to invest in research and infrastructure solutions that provide food to regions vulnerable to food deficits. The world population is growing, food supply is shrinking, water supplies are becoming more limited, and food production is competing for land with housing and the production of fuel crops. We have to make better use of available land."

With Solarcentury expanding into the Middle East, Al Jazeera showing an interest in Transition Towns, and permaculture activism alive and well in Jordan, there's been some interesting eco-news coming out of the Middle East recently. With climate change set to put pressure on the region, it's great to see moves to explore alternatives. Besides, I heard some crazy rumours somewhere that oil might not last forever either.

The Best Invention Of The Year: NASA's Ares Rockets2009

Monday, June 14, 2010

Metal has no DNA; machines have no genes. But that doesn't mean they don't have pedigrees — ancestral lines every bit as elaborate as our own. That's surely the case with the Ares 1 rocket. The best and smartest and coolest thing built in 2009 — a machine that can launch human beings to cosmic destinations we'd never considered before — is the fruit of a very old family tree, one with branches grand, historic and even wicked.

There are a lot of reasons astronauts haven't moved beyond the harbor lights of low-Earth orbit in nearly 40 years, but one of them is that we haven't had the machines to take us anywhere else. The space shuttle is a flying truck: fine for the lunch-bucket work of hauling cargo a couple of hundred miles into space, but nothing more. In 2004, however, the U.S. committed itself to sending astronauts back to the moon and later to Mars, and for that, you need something new and nifty for them to fly. The answer is the Ares 1, which had its first unmanned flight on Oct. 28 and dazzled even the skeptics.

From a distance, the rocket is unprepossessing — a slender white stalk that looks almost as if it would twang in the Florida wind. But up close, it's huge: about 327 ft. (100 m) tall, or the biggest thing the U.S. has launched since the 363-ft. (111 m) Saturn V moon rockets of the early 1970s. Its first stage is a souped-up version of one of the shuttle's solid-fuel rockets; its top stage is a similarly muscled-up model of the Saturn's massive J2 engines.

If that general body plan doesn't exactly break ground, that's the point. NASA tried breaking ground with the shuttles and in doing so broke all the rules. Shuttle astronauts sit alongside the fuel — next to the exploding motor that claimed Challenger, beneath the chunks of falling foam that killed Columbia. And when you fly a spacecraft repeatedly as opposed to chucking it after a single use, there's a lot of wear to repair.

When NASA engineers gathered to plan the next generation of America's rockets, they thus decided to go back to the future — way back. The Saturn V was the brainchild of Wernher von Braun, the German scientist whose bright genius gave the U.S. its finest line of rockets — and whose dark genius gave Hitler the V2 missile that rained terror on London. Von Braun had, in turn, drawn insights from American rocket pioneer Robert Goddard. Goddard built on the work of 17th century artillery innovator Kazimierz Siemienowicz, a Pole.

The Ares 1 is a worthy descendant of their rockets and others, with lightweight composites, better engines and exponentially improved computers giving it more reliability and power. The Ares 1 will launch an Apollo-like spacecraft with four crew members — perhaps by 2015. Alongside it, NASA is developing the Brobdingnagian Ares V, a 380-ft. (116 m) behemoth intended to put such heavy equipment as a lunar lander in Earth orbit, where astronauts can link up with it before blasting away to the moon. Somewhere between the two rockets is the so-called Ares Lite — a heavy-lift hybrid that could carry both humans and cargo and is intended to be a design that engineers can have in their back pockets if the two-booster plan proves unaffordable.

The new rockets could take astronauts to some thrilling places. The biggest costs — and risks — associated with visiting other celestial bodies are from landing and taking off again. But suppose you don't land? An independent commission appointed by the White House to make recommendations for NASA's future recently returned its 154-page report and made strong arguments for bypassing the familiar boots-in-the-soil scenario in favor of a flexible path of flybys and orbits.

Under the new thinking, astronauts could barnstorm or circle the moon, Mars and Mars' twin moons, deploying probes to do their rock-collecting and experiments for them. They could similarly sample near-Earth objects like asteroids. They could also travel to what is known as the Lagrange points — a scattering of spots between Earth and the moon and Earth and the sun where the gravitational forces on the bodies are precisely balanced and spacecraft simply ... hang where they are. These would serve as ideal spots for deploying probes and conducting cosmic observations.

Troublingly for Ares partisans, the same commission that called for such creative uses for the new rockets also called into question how affordable they are, arguing that it might be better simply to modify boosters now used to carry satellites and put a capsule on top. Maybe — but there's the question of safety too. NASA designers say the Ares line will be 10 times as safe as the shuttle and two to three times as safe as competing boosters.

There's no way of knowing if those projections are too rosy, but if history teaches us anything, it's that the space program's grimmest chapters — the launchpad fires and shuttle disasters — unfold when policy planners lean too hard on engineers. The finest moments occur when the bureaucrats give the designers a clean sheet of drafting paper and let them dream. There's genius in knowing how to create a truly big invention — and there's wisdom in knowing how to recognize it and use it.

Worlds Inventions - Google News

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