MIT Media Lab’s Wearable, Interactive Snakebot Experiments

It’s often said that “Children are our future, ” but that phrase never mentions robot snakes. There are enough people working on robot snakes that “Robot snakes are our future” sounds more relevant. Carnegie Mellon snakebot OC Robotics snakebot Tesla snakebot The latest in Robot Snake News comes to us from MIT Media Lab’s Tangible Media Group , whom we naively gave a Core77 Design Award to in 2014, not realizing that they would turn their attention towards controlling us with robot snakes. It is too late for us to take the award back, so we may as well look at what they’re working on. First off, the research team behind the LineFORM project have sneakily changed the word “snake” to “line” to throw us off the trail. Here’s their description: We propose a novel Shape Changing Interface which has the form of a “Line”. Lines have several interesting characteristics from the perspective of interaction design: abstractness of data representation; a variety of inherent interactions / affordances; and constraints as boundaries or borderlines. By utilising such aspects of lines together with the added capability of shape-shifting, we present various applications in different scenarios such as shape changing cords, mobiles, body constraints, and data manipulation to investigate the design space of line-based shape changing interfaces. The word substitution is understandable, because the paragraph is more frightening when you read it with the word “snake” where it’s supposed to be. (Try it.) In any case, they’ve come up with some novel applications: LineFORM from Tangible Media Group on Vimeo. Notice that even the developer himself looks terrified when picking up the “phone.” You don’t have to be an expert in body language to understand that he’s wondering if it’s going to wrap itself around his neck, or grab his glasses off of his face and snap them in displeasure. My robophobia aside, I do think the lamp bit was neat, and I imagine that if tamed the monster could create a useful work lamp in a tough-to-reach spot. I also dug the “expressive cord” bit revealing data transfer, and I’d like to see more—for example, when your external hard drive is full, I’d like to see a mouse-sized lump travel down the cord, cause a choke, then have to travel back into your computer. The project’s full name, by the way, is ” LineFORM: Actuated Curve Interfaces for Display, Interaction, and Constraint ” [PDF]. Again, there’s nothing in there about snakes, robots, or children.

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MIT Media Lab’s Wearable, Interactive Snakebot Experiments

Office Web Apps update brings web image pasting, PowerPoint slide editing and more

Microsoft’s Office Web Apps are great for those with a SkyDrive account and any device with an IE, Firefox, Chrome or Safari browser who don’t want to lug the full Office 365 suite around. Since functionality can be a tad limited, however, Redmond’s just added more features with the latest update. For starters, you can now copy and paste pictures from the web into Word, PowerPoint and OneNote Web Apps. Other new functions include cursor-following tools in all the programs, the ability to rearrange slides in PowerPoint Web App along with comment viewing, touch-based chart resizing and more in Excel Web App. Microsoft’s posted some sample files that work without a SkyDrive account, so if you want to give it a whirl, hit the source. Filed under: Internet , Software , Microsoft Comments Source: Office Web Apps

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Office Web Apps update brings web image pasting, PowerPoint slide editing and more

The Hobbit Will Use Dolby’s Crazy 64-Speaker Atmos Sound

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey is shaping up to be a groundbreaking event for film technology. First, we heard that Director Peter Jackson shot the film at 48 frames-per-second , and now he’s telling us that the film’s sound will be mixed for Dolby’s ultra-intense new Atmos system. More »

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The Hobbit Will Use Dolby’s Crazy 64-Speaker Atmos Sound

Boeing’s New Missile Remotely Disables Computers as It Flies By

This is CHAMP: Boeing’s new missile otherwise known as the Counter-electronics High-powered Microwave Advanced Missile Project. It automatically disables PCs and other electronic devices as it soars through the skies, using a burst of powerful radio waves—and it was successfully tested last week . More »

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Boeing’s New Missile Remotely Disables Computers as It Flies By

Microsoft Urges Businesses To Get Off XP

An anonymous reader writes “It’s approximately 11 years since Windows XP was unveiled, and this week Microsoft was still at it trying to convince users that it’s time to upgrade. A post on the Windows For Your Business Blog calls on businesses to start XP migrations now. Microsoft cites the main reason as being that support for XP ends in April 2014, and ‘most new hardware options will likely not support the Windows XP operating system.’ If you run Windows Vista, Microsoft argues that it’s time to ‘start planning’ the move to Windows 8. As this article points out, it’s not uncommon to hear about people still running XP at work.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Microsoft Urges Businesses To Get Off XP

Japan Getting Real-Time Phone Call Translator App

another random user writes with news that NTT Docomo, Japan’s largest wireless carrier, will be rolling out a real-time translation app for phone calls on November 1. At launch, the app will translate Japanese into English, Mandarin, and Korean, and later that month it will add French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, and Thai. No word on Klingon. From the article: “The products have the potential to let companies avoid having to use specially trained multilingual staff, helping them cut costs. They could also aid tourism. However, the software involved cannot offer perfect translations, limiting its use in some situations. … It provides users with voice translations of the other speaker’s conversation after a slight pause, as well as providing a text readout. … NTT Docomo will soon face competition from France’s Alcatel-Lucent which is developing a rival product, WeTalk. It can handle Japanese and about a dozen other languages including English, French and Arabic. The service is designed to work over any landline telephone, meaning the company has had to find a way to do speech recognition using audio data sampled at a rate of 8kHz or 16kHz. Other products — which rely on data connections — have used higher 44kHz samples which are easier to process.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Japan Getting Real-Time Phone Call Translator App