Stick this battery-powered Bluetooth light switch anywhere you want

There are myriad devices like the Philips Hue that can be controlled with a smartphone, but how about just… a switch? A company called Avi-on was thinking the same thing, so it created a movable Bluetooth dimmer switch that simply sticks to your wall without any holes or wiring. It can be used to control a number of GE-branded Bluetooth devices, like its Smart Bulbs and indoor and outdoor plugs. The system doesn’t require a hub, and Avi-on claims the switch’s battery will last “multi-years.” If you do want to use a smartphone instead, the company also has iOS and Android apps, with features like timers, scheduling and smart device grouping. For now, buying one isn’t quite as simple as flicking a switch. The product is currently in the development and crowdfunding stage, though Avi-on says it’ll go into production at the end of this year. Rather than Kickstarter or another funding site, Avi-on has elected to go it alone on the white label Tilt Open platform. If you’re willing to back it, the early bird starter kit is $59 for a switch and GE dimmer plug, with complete kits for small homes running $399. Filed under: Misc , Wireless Comments Source: Avi-on

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Stick this battery-powered Bluetooth light switch anywhere you want

We rode a $10,000 hoverboard, and you can too

It’s impossible to talk about hoverboards without invoking a particular movie title, so we’re not even going to try: remember that awesome scene from Back to the Future Part II ? It’s one step closer to reality: a California startup just built a real, working hoverboard . Arx Pax is attempting to crowdfund the Hendo Hoverboard as a proof of concept for its hover engine technology — it’s not quite the floating skateboard Marty McFly rode through Hill Valley (and the Wild West ), but it’s an obvious precursor to the imagined ridable: a self-powered, levitating platform with enough power to lift a fully grown adult. I initially approached the floating pallet with caution, expecting it to dip and bob under my weight like a piece of driftwood. It didn’t. The levitating board wiggled slightly under my 200-pound frame, but maintained its altitude (a mere inch or so) without visible strain. Arx Pax tells me that the current prototype can easily support 300 pounds and future versions will be able to hold up to 500 pounds without issue. Either way, you’ll need to hover over a very specific kind of surface to get it to hold anything: the Hendo uses the same kind of electromagnetic field technology that floats MagLev trains — meaning it will only levitate over non-ferrous metals like copper or aluminum. Riding the contraption was a lot fun, but also quite the challenge: the Hendo hoverboard doesn’t ride at all like McFly’s flying skateboard . In fact, without a propulsion system, it tends to drift aimlessly. Arx Pax founder and Hendo inventor Greg Henderson says its something the company is working on. “We can impart a bias, ” he tells me, pointing out pressure sensitive pads on the hoverboard’s deck that manipulate the engines. “We can turn on or off different axis’ of movement.” Sure enough, leaning on one side of the board convinces it to rotate and drift in the desired direction. Without feeling the friction of the ground , however, I had trouble knowing how much pressure to exert — Henderson’s staff had to jump in and save me from spinning out of control. Clearly, this might take some practice. As fun as its current form is, Henderson didn’t necessarily set out to reinvent transportation. The Hendo engine’s original inspiration came from architecture. “It came from the idea of hovering a building out of harms way, ” he says. “If you can levitate a train that weighs 50, 000 kilograms, why not a house?” After some prodding he clarifies the idea as a sort of emergency lifting system that could theoretically rise a building off of its foundation during an earthquake, essentially rendering the natural disaster’s tremors harmless. The idea sounds as fictional as, well, a hoverboard — but he already built one of those. Henderson says that floating a building is a long term goal. Right now, the technology is in its early stages, and he’s just trying to get it in the hands of engineers with big ideas. That’s where the Hendo “white box” comes in. Backers who contribute to the company’s Kickstarter at the $299 level will receive a complete, working Hendo hover engine and enough hover surface to play around with. It’s a developer kit, Henderson says, and he wants makers to use it to build their own hover projects. If they have an idea they want to take to market, Arx Pax will work with them to make it a reality. “The most important piece of it all for me is the idea of taking away the limitations of how we think about problems in general. Not just thinking outside the box, but off the page, ” he says, explaining how Hover technology could be used to solve old problems in new ways. “When you do that — when you approach problems that were seemingly impossible in different ways — you’ll never cease to be amazed by the solutions you can come up with.” While long-term goals go far beyond that of the not-so-humble hoverboard, there are plenty of Kickstarter goals focused on scratching that itch exclusively. 250 backers at the $100 level will be eligible for a five minute ride on one of the company’s prototype boards, and $1, 000 buys a privately coached hour-long ride. Not content with merely renting hover-time? Okay, okay: the first ten backers to contribute $10, 000 will get a hoverboard to keep. The delivery date? 10/21/2015 — the date Marty McFly arrives in the future . Filed under: Misc , Transportation Comments Source: Hendo Hover

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We rode a $10,000 hoverboard, and you can too

Ferrari’s hybrid commits sacrilege, rolls in electric-only mode

Pop quiz, hotshot. How much horsepower do you get with a 789HP V12 and 160HP electric motor? Any Ferrari fan knows the (insane) answer: 949. That’s the total output from the $1.69 million hybrid LaFerrari , and Ferrari has always said that both motors would always work as one to produce it — no electric-only mode. But a new video has shown the limited-edition supercar rolling out of its garage as silently as a cat before the V12 comes alive. It’s mighty strange to see a dead-quiet Ferrari (especially considering its past stance on EVs), even if it was just for a few hundred yards. We’re not sure if that means it’ll now do that in stop and start driving like your hippy uncle’s Prius, though Ferrari has promised a 5 mile EV-only mode on future cars. Not that it’s going to help the EPA numbers — it is a 217 mph car, after all. Filed under: Transportation Comments Via: Autoblog Source: Carlo Delucis

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Ferrari’s hybrid commits sacrilege, rolls in electric-only mode

Tractor beams are suddenly a lot more plausible

Tractor beams now have a better shot at crossing from science fiction trope to reality, thanks to scientists at The Australian National University (ANU). They managed to push and pull a 0.2mm sized particle nearly 20cm using a “hollow” laser beam. That’s a hundred-fold improvement over recent efforts at light propulsion, which have only moved microscopic particles short distances. The ANU team placed gold-coated glass spheres in the light-free center of the beams, creating hotspots on the surface that propelled the spheres via air reactions. The hotspot’s location was changed by adjusting the polarization, giving scientists full control over the sphere’s motion. Sure, it’s not exactly the Death Star, but the scientists think it’ll work over long distances — meaning it could one day be used to, say, control pollution or move dangerous particles in the lab. [Image credits: Patrick Kovarik/AFP/Getty Images, ANU] Filed under: Science Comments Via: CNET Source: Nature

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Tractor beams are suddenly a lot more plausible

X-ray machine used to disappoint ‘Star Wars’ fan

Back in the day, British Star Wars fans could send off for a figurine enclosed in an opaque white box. Of course, if you wanted to peek at whatever was hidden inside, you’d have to open the packaging, which would take a massive chunk off the value. Without it, however, you’d never know what was inside, with toys ranging from standard-issue models through to ultra-rare Boba Fett pieces that are now worth around $8, 000. UK collector Dave Moss paid just $8 for one such box, and began to wonder if it was possible to peek inside using more modern methods. An online appeal put him in touch with Rob Burman (pictured) from Collectors Gazette who decided to contact the University of Nottingham to see if it could help. It turns out that the Hounsfield Facility has some super-powerful CT scanners, which are usually used to study the roots of plants while they remain undisturbed in soil. It wasn’t a big leap to make between roots in soil and a toy in a box, and it wasn’t long before the university was scanning the package. On the upside, the hardware was able to visualize a detailed 3D image of the piece, but on the downside, it was a regular ol’ Emperor figure that’s only worth around $50. Still, Dave Moss isn’t complaining now that the mystery has been solved, but we’re left to wondering what would have happened to Erwin Schrödinger and his imperiled cat had the tech been around way back in 1935. [Image Credit: The Hounsfield Facility / University of Nottingham] Filed under: Misc , Science Comments Via: The Independent Source: Nottingham University

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X-ray machine used to disappoint ‘Star Wars’ fan

No one has a platinum album in 2014

The decline in album sales is certainly nothing new, thanks to the smattering of streaming options now available to eager listeners. However, 2014 looks to be particularly awful. Forbes reports that nearly 10 months into the year, no release since January has yet to reach platinum status — a release that sells 1 million copies. What’s more, only one has sold a million copies: the Frozen soundtrack that hit shelves last year. At this point in 2013, five different albums had hit that sales mark (Justin Timberlake’s The 20/20 Experience led the pack). How bad are the numbers? Well, the best-selling effort that was actually released in 2014 is fourth on the year’s sales tally (Eric Church’s Outsiders ). And singles are seeing the same fate, albeit at a slower pace. So far, 60 tracks have sold a million — down from 83 at this point last year. As Forbes points out, sales usually see a boost during Q4 (holiday bump), but popular artists like Adele, Katy Perry and others capable of selling loads of albums don’t have new material on tap before the year’s end. [Photo credit: Gabe Souza/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images] Filed under: Misc Comments Via: Fact Mag Source: Forbes

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No one has a platinum album in 2014

Local multiplayer is coming to Android games

Ever wish that you could just whip out your Android device and harass a passer-by to play games with you? It’s the sort of thing that Nintendo DS users, for example, have been using thanks to that company’s StreetPass feature, but, until now, hasn’t been available on Google’s smartphones. Now, however, the company has an added an update to its games infrastructure that enables “ambient, real-time” games with more than one user – so long that the game relies upon Google’s home-grown multiplayer backend . Still, maybe don’t sprint into the street and start challenging people to a dual, because they might get the wrong idea. Filed under: Cellphones , Gaming , Mobile , Google Comments Source: Android Developers (G+)

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Local multiplayer is coming to Android games

Twitter: Yes, you’re all going to see tweets from people you don’t follow

Remember when tweets started appearing in your Twitter feed from people you weren’t even following? Well, it’s no longer an experiment. In a post outlining Twitter’s “spirit of experimentation”, the social network says it’s happening across all accounts now, in the interest of surfacing tweets it “think(s) you’d enjoy.” While many of Twitter’s power-users might sigh collectively, Twitter is likely hoping it’ll offer up faster follows, a richer experience and (possibly) boost activity, especially for those users that aren’t already following hundreds of accounts. Alas, it’s not an optional thing, and is now an integral part of everyone’s Twitter timeline — alongside those occasional promoted tweets and retweets. Filed under: Internet Comments Source: Twitter (1) , (2)

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Twitter: Yes, you’re all going to see tweets from people you don’t follow

The FBI wants access to your encrypted phone data

The FBI isn’t happy with recent decisions by Apple and Google to secure communications by default, saying it could lead to “a very dark place.” That was the gist of a recent talk by director James Comey, who expressed frustration at the inability of law enforcement to keep up with technology. Both tech giants recently said they’d encrypt devices by default, meaning even the companies themselves can’t access photos, emails or other data on your device — let alone law enforcement. Comey also complained that there are now too many message and calling tools for the FBI to keep up with, and many companies are unable or unwilling to give backdoor access. He cited several cases in which phone data helped law enforcement crack cases, but during a Q&A, couldn’t cite a single example of how encrypted data hindered it. As such, Comey called on Congress to update the 20-year-old Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) to reflect modern times. So far, the White House has declined recent requests to revise CALEA, and many privacy advocates have called the FBI’s latest plea disingenuous. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said “federal law explicitly protects the rights of companies to add encryption with no backdoors, ” adding that such access makes devices more vulnerable to hackers. It gave kudos to Apple and Google for their latest encryption initiatives, saying “others in the tech industry (should) follow their lead.” For a deeper dive, check out a video of the talk below. Filed under: Cellphones , Misc Comments Source: Brookings Institute

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The FBI wants access to your encrypted phone data

Lockheed Martin thinks it can give the world unlimited clean energy in 20 years

Remember back in the ’50s, when official-sounding newsreels promised that we’d have new-kew-lur-powered cars by the ’70s and no-one would ever be unhappy? Probably not, since we’ve probably gotten that skewed sense of history from watching too many episodes of Futurama . Still, several decades behind schedule, the promise of clean and unlimited energy might finally be looming upon the horizon, thanks to Lockheed Martin . The defense behemoth believes that it might have a working prototype of its Compact Fusion Reactor in a decade, which might just save the world as we know it. For those not in the know, nuclear power is great, but there are many reasons why we’ve never ditched coal and gas in favor of it. For one, there’s a risk of a meltdown , the process produces hard-to-dispose-of nuclear waste and throws out highly lethal radiation at all times. Fusion , on the other hand, does none of these, and could theoretically be shrunk down to the point where it could power an airplane that never needs to land in order to refuel. A team at the company’s skunk works, lead by Dr. Thomas McGuire, has cherry-picked elements from previous fusion experiments to build a magnetic containment chamber that’s 90 percent smaller than previous devices. The reactor’s small size means that it’s possible to turn prototypes around in under a year, and McGuire believes that Lockheed Martin will be able to demonstrate true fusion energy by 2020. The system also promises to be able to plug into the existing gas turbine power infrastructure, which would instantly eliminate carbon emissions in the sector, and, even better, enhances “energy security, ” which is a euphemism for not buying coal and gas from your political enemies. [Image Credit: Eric Schulzinger / Lockheed Martin] Filed under: Science Comments Via: The Washington Post , Aviation Week Source: Lockheed Martin

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Lockheed Martin thinks it can give the world unlimited clean energy in 20 years