Advances in Computers thread

IBM unveils two new Watson-related projects with Cleveland Clinic

IBM Research has released details on two new Watson-related cognitive technologies that are expected to help physicians make more informed and accurate decisions faster and to cull new insights from electronic medical records (EMR).

The projects known as “WatsonPaths” and “Watson EMR Assistant” are the result of a year-long research collaboration with faculty, physicians and students at Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University. Both are key projects that will create technologies that can be leveraged by Watson to advance the technology in the domain of medicine.

With the WatsonPaths project, IBM scientists have trained the system to interact with medical domain experts in a way that’s more natural for them, enabling the user to more easily understand the structured and unstructured data sources the system consulted and the path it took in offering an option. The Watson EMR Assistant project aims to enable physicians to uncover key information from patients’ medical records in order to help improve the quality and efficiency of care.
IBM unveils two new Watson-related projects with Cleveland Clinic
 
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Adidas Micoach smartwatch has heart-rate sensor

BBC News - Adidas Micoach smartwatch has heart-rate sensor

A watch with a colour touchscreen and built-in heart monitor that studies the wearer's pulse to create training programmes has been unveiled by Adidas.

The gadget - which is being targeted at runners - also includes a GPS location chip to maximise the accuracy of its readings.

It marks a move by the German firm into the smartwatch sector, although the device does not run third-party apps.

The news comes the same week as rival Nike updated its own activity tracker.
 
LED light bulb 'li-fi' closer, say Chinese scientists

Wi-fi connectivity from a light bulb - or "li-fi" - has come a step closer, according to Chinese scientists.

A microchipped bulb can produce data speeds of up to 150 megabits per second (Mbps), Chi Nan, IT professor at Shanghai's Fudan University told Xinhua News.

A one-watt LED light bulb would be enough to provide net connectivity to four computers, researchers say.
BBC News - LED light bulb 'li-fi' closer, say Chinese scientists
 
Giga-year storage medium could outlive human race

Mankind has been storing information for thousands of years. From carvings on marble to today's magnetic data storage. Although the amount of data that can be stored has increased immensely during the past few decades, it is still difficult to actually store data for a long period. The key to successful information storage is to ensure that the information does not get lost. If we want to store information that will exist longer than mankind itself, then different requirements apply than those for a medium for daily information storage. Researcher Jeroen de Vries from the Univ. of Twente MESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology demonstrates that it is possible to store data for extremely long periods


Giga-year storage medium could outlive human race
 
IBM unveils computer fed by 'electronic blood'
By James Morgan

Science reporter, BBC News, Zurich
IBM has unveiled a prototype of a new brain-inspired computer powered by what it calls "electronic blood".

The firm says it is learning from nature by building computers fuelled and cooled by a liquid, like our minds.

The human brain packs phenomenal computing power into a tiny space and uses only 20 watts of energy - an efficiency IBM is keen to match.

Its new "redox flow" system pumps an electrolyte "blood" through a computer, carrying power in and taking heat out.

BBC News - IBM unveils computer fed by 'electronic blood'
 
Tiny, cheap water-sensing chip outperforms larger, pricier sensors
Whether you're growing wine grapes or mixing cement, there are some situations in which it's vitally important to monitor moisture content. Normally water sensors are used, although these can be both large and expensive. Now, however, a team from Cornell University has created a water-sensing silicon chip that's not only tiny, but is also reportedly "a hundred times more sensitive than current devices." What's more, the chips might be possible to mass-produce for just $5 a pop.

Known as a "lab on a chip" device, the chip contains a tiny water-filled cavity. Once placed in soil, inserted in the stem of a plant, stuck in a cement matrix or put somewhere else, the chip exchanges moisture from that cavity with moisture in its environment via a nanoporous membrane. The chip measures any changes in the pressure within the cavity, that result from water either entering it or being drawn out.
Tiny, cheap water-sensing chip outperforms larger, pricier sensors
 
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Researchers develop thin film semiconductor that will drive production of next-generation displays

Researchers at the National Institute for Materials Science have developed a pixel switching semiconductor, which will be the key to driving next-generation displays, by using an oxide film with a new elemental composition.

A flat panel display is an important interface in modern information society, which displays the electronic bit information used in machines in a human-recognizable form. Conventionally, amorphous silicon thin films and polysilicon thin films had been used to make field-effect transistors to be used as pixel switches for TVs and smartphones, but there have been strong calls for the development of high-performance semiconductor films with higher definition or higher speed. At present, indium gallium zinc oxide (IGZO) transistors are potential oxide semiconductors with high field-effect mobility. However, it is generally difficult to adjust the manufacturing conditions for stably and efficiently producing high-performance oxide semiconductors, and this is presenting a major challenge in actual production.

Read more at: Researchers develop thin film semiconductor that will drive production of next-generation displays
 
Apple releases new iPad Air, replaces original iPad with Retina display


Apple releases new iPad Air, replaces original iPad with Retina display | ExtremeTech
At Apple’s special October 22 event in San Francisco, the company has unveiled the iPad Air. It is significantly thinner and lighter than the fourth-generation iPad, and looks a lot like a larger iPad Mini. It replaces the fourth-gen iPad completely, will be priced at $500 for the 16GB WiFi model, and will be released on November 1. $630 will get you a cellular-enabled iPad Air.

iPad Air

Unlike the last few iPad generations which have been relatively minor updates, the fifth-gen iPad — now called the iPad Air — is a major departure. The iPad Air has a 43% smaller bezel than its predecessor. It is 7.5mm thick (down from 9.4mm), and weighs just one pound (453 grams), down from 1.4 pounds. As far as we can tell, the iPad Air’s screen is still the same 10.1-inch Retina display.

The 64-bit A7 SoC, which debuted in the iPhone 5S, powers the iPad Air. The M7 coprocessor is also present. Apple says the new iPad Air is the thinnest and lightest “full-size tablet,” and yet it still manages 10 hours of battery life. MIMO WiFi 802.11n is supported, but no 802.11ac.

The iPad Air is available to pre-order today, with a November 1 release date. You can choose from space gray or silver. The fourth-gen iPad will disappear entirely, while the iPad 2 is being kept on as Apple’s cheap ($400) full-size tablet.

iPad Air hands-on

We knew Apple‘s full-sized iPad was going to get a significant refresh, and we weren’t wrong. The iPad Air takes the 9.8-inch screen of the fourth-gen iPad and wraps it up in a brand new, super-skinny casing; we’d usually take Apple’s “you have to feel it to believe it” commentary as hyperbole, but here’s one of those times that you only really get the wow-factor when you pick up the fifth-generation slate. Read on for some first impressions.

http://www.slashgear.com/ipad-air-hands-on-22302611/
 
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ORA “true augmented reality” glasses to ship in January

ORA, a wearable computer similar to Google Glass, was showcased today at GMIC San Francisco, the largest mobile tech conference in Silicon Valley. Optinvent, the manufacturer behind the wearable, is billing the headwear as “the only true AR smart glass” on the market. ORA doesn’t shy from looking clunky, embracing its necessary bulk with bold styling.
ORA is unique in that it has two modes: a full AR mode and a dashboard mode. In full AR mode, ORA’s display appears directly in front of the wearer’s field of vision, a feature which Google Glass does not have. In dashboard mode, the display is positioned 20 degrees off center and nearer to the wearer’s periphery for a more Glass-like, glance-based UX.
ORA ?true augmented reality? glasses to ship in January - SlashGear
 
Tesla Model S will get Android emulator and Chrome browser

At a conference in Germany today, Tesla Motors‘ CEO Elon Musk has revealed some upcoming plans for the auto maker’s popular Model S: an Android emulator and Chrome browser. This will work alongside the car’s snazzy capacitive touch-based dashboard control system, swapping out the current browser for Google’s offering and opening up possibilities for developers.

For those who are unfamiliar, Tesla Motors’ Model S features a large 17-inch capacitive touch-based dashboard system rather than the tactile-and-touch systems found in many modern cars. Through this system, the driver can perform common controls for the vehicle that would otherwise be achieved with buttons and knobs, as well as other things like navigation and media.

Tesla Model S will get Android emulator and Chrome browser - SlashGear


I'd like to see voice command added to this...like; Left door, lock. Or maybe windows "down".

Now that would be cool ;)
 
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Hand Motion 2.0 is Kinect® for iPhone and iPad

by Motion Technology


Hand Motion 2.0 is an iPhone & iPad app that allows you to control your device with touch-less hand gestures. It is Kinect for iOS!
What we do

Hand Motion 2.0 is changing the way people think about iPhone & iPad apps. With our app, anyone can control their devices with touch-less hand gestures. Think of it as Microsoft Kinect® built directly into your iPhone and iPad! Welcome to The Next Generation iOS app!

It uses HAND GESTURES detected via the built-in webcam in your device to control your iPhone and iPad.
- Take Photos with waves of your hand!
- Works via your webcam -- no additional hardware necessary
- Works best from 1-4 feet distance from webcam

Hand Motion 2.0 is Kinect® for iPhone and iPad by Motion Technology ? Kickstarter



Neurio: Home Intelligence

by Energy Aware Technology Inc.

A revolutionary new technology that makes an ordinary home smart. Learn what's happening in your home, and teach it some new tricks!
* UPDATE: SOLAR SUPPORT * Neurio can now monitor Solar generation! Check out the new Solar Package reward.
* EUROPEAN COUNTRIES * Support us to our $115,000 stretch goal, and we will get CE certification!
* Check our Kicktraq page, a nifty way to track Neurio's progress *


http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/energyaware/neurio-home-intelligence
 
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Auris skye adds Wi-Fi streaming to existing music docks

Many of the latest music players are launching with Wi-Fi for sharing music from a computer, iOS, or Android device. Perhaps you have an older model, and you still want to be able to take part in the wireless music listening fun. A new product called the Auris skye aims to bring such an experience to existing docks with a 30-pin connector.

Auris skye adds Wi-Fi streaming to existing music docks
 
Field-effect transistors get a boost from ferroelectric films

1 hour ago by Chelsea Whyte
(Phys.org) —As microelectronics get smaller and smaller, one of the biggest challenges to packing a smartphone or tablet with maximum processing power and memory is the amount of heat generated by the tiny "switches" at the heart of the device.

A complex metal oxide film – designed by IBM and University of Texas, Austin (UTA) researchers, and tested at IBM, the National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS) at Brookhaven National Laboratory, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) – could help reduce the voltage required to switch electronic signals, and thus the excessive energy they require. Their research is published in the October issue of Nature Nanotechnology.

"This project is to develop films that will allow us to decrease the voltage needed to make the switch flip in a nanotransistor," said Jean Jordan-Sweet, an IBM researcher at NSLS. "The emphasis is on trying to incorporate ferroelectrics into the industry standard silicon-based devices to increase the performance while reducing the need for more voltage."

Read more at: Field-effect transistors get a boost from ferroelectric films
 
Energy-saving Neurio power monitor tells you when coffee's ready
Energy-saving Neurio power monitor tells you when coffee's ready | DVICE

What if you lived in a home that could tell you when your toast was ready, turn on your favorite tune when you walk into a room or when your laundry had finished drying? No, I'm not talking about an episode of the Jetsons, because all of that is already possible with a little power monitor called Neurio.

Using a Wi-Fi power sensor and pattern-detection algorithms via a cloud service, Neurio does away with having to install sensors on each separate device in your home. The successfully-funded Kickstarter device monitors electricity usage in your home via its breaker panel to figure out how efficiently it is being used and detects where you can cut down in order to save on your next bill. Solar-paneled home owners can also track how much solar power is being generated at any time.

The Neurio can even connect via its included Wattson app to detect and tell you when you've forgotten to turn something off, which is perfect for paranoid, forgetful folk like me who think the stove's still on after leaving the house.The device has an open API that is compatible with SmartThings, IFTTT or Raspberry Pi to give users the ability to sync their appliances and setup triggers that alert them by sending them messages.
 
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Patent shows Samsung's rival to Google Glass

A patent filing shows Samsung Electronics Co. is working on a device it calls sports glasses in a possible response to Google's Internet-connected eyewear.

A design patent filing at the Korean Intellectual Property Office shows a Samsung design for smartphone-connected glasses that can display information from the handset.

It said the glasses can play music and receive phone calls through earphones built into the eyewear's frame. It also gives hands-free control over the smartphone.

Reminiscent of the Google Glass design, Samsung's sketch shows a thumbnail-sized display over the left eyeglass. Google's eyewear has a tiny display over the right eyeglass that shows information and websites.

Read more at: Patent shows Samsung's rival to Google Glass
 
All-graphene computer chip could steer us past the 22nm copper and silicon bottleneck

In 2015 — now just over a year away — the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS), which is set out by the industry’s top experts, predicts that the copper wiring that connects together the billions of transistors in a modern CPU or GPU just can’t be miniaturized any further. The copper wires can only get so thin before the increased resistance and other manufacturing issues make them unworkable. Graphene, however, by virtue of its status as a wonder material, isn’t hindered by the same puny restrictions as copper and could theoretically scale down to just a handful of nanometers or less, allowing for the creation of computer chips that are orders of magnitude more dense and powerful, while consuming less energy.

Way back in 2011, IBM built what it called the first graphene integrated circuit, but in actuality it was more like a graphene field effect transistor (FET) and inductor connected together with other standard, CMOS components, such as plain ol’ copper wires. Now a team at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) have proposed the first all-graphene chip, where the transistors and interconnects are monolithically patterned on a single sheet of graphene.
All-graphene computer chip could steer us past the 22nm copper and silicon bottleneck | ExtremeTech
 
15th post
Review: Rhino Shield impact-resistant smartphone screen film

It was just a month ago that we reported on Evolutive Labs' Rhino Shield, a 6-layer transparent polymer film designed to protect smartphone screens. Not only is it said to ward off scratches and fingerprints, but it's also reportedly five times more impact-resistant than Gorilla Glass 2. Evolutive recently sent me a testing kit, so I could see first-hand just how tough it is – without endangering my smartphone in the process. Here's how things turned out ...

The testing kit consists of two pieces of Gorilla Glass 2, two Rhino Shield films fitted to those pieces, a block of granite (or something like it – I'm no geologist), a steel ball bearing, and a cardboard box with a built-in 15-cm (6-in)-tall "drop tower."

Review: Rhino Shield impact-resistant smartphone screen film
 
LG unveils curved-screen smartphone

LG Electronics unveiled Monday a curved-screen smartphone, taking on rival Samsung in a niche market seen as a first step on the road to fully flexible products.

Despite its name, the "G-Flex" does not bend, but uses flexible OLED (organic light-emitting diode) to produce a curved six-inch display.

The model is "the best representation yet of how a smartphone should be curved," the president of LG's mobile unit Park Jong-Seok said, in a clear dig at Samsung.

Earlier this month, Samsung started retailing its "Galaxy Round"—a 5.7-inch (14.5 centimetre) handset with a display that curves from side-to-side to fit the contour of the hand.

The "G-Flex" is curved on the vertical axis in order to, the company said, "follow the contour of the face".

Curved displays are already commercially available in large-screen televisions offered by both Samsung and LG.

Read more at: LG unveils curved-screen smartphone
 
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UK researchers say they have achieved data transmission speeds of 10Gbit/s via "li-fi" - wireless internet connectivity using light.

The researchers used a micro-LED light bulb to transmit 3.5Gbit/s via each of the three primary colours - red, green, blue - that make up white light.

Li-fi is an emerging technology that could see specialised LED lights bulbs providing low-cost wireless internet connectivity almost everywhere.


EPSRC's Ultra-parallel visible light communications (UP-VLC) project is running from October 2012 to September 2016. The vision is built on the unique capabilities of gallium nitride (GaN) optoelectronics to combine optical communications with lighting functions, and especially on the capability to implement new forms of spatial multiplexing, where individual elements in high-density arrays of GaN based light emitting diodes (LEDs) provide independent communications channels, but can combine as displays. We envisage ultra-high data density - potentially Terabit per second per square millimeter - arrays of LEDs driven via CMOS control electronics in novel addressing and encoding schemes and in compact and versatile forms.



The tiny micro-LED bulbs, developed by the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, allow streams of light to be beamed in parallel, each multiplying the amount of data that can be transmitted at any one time.

"If you think of a shower head separating water out into parallel streams, that's how we can make light behave," said Prof Harald Haas, an expert in optical wireless communications at the University of Edinburgh and one of the project leaders.

Using a digital modulation technique called Orthogonal Frequency Divisional Multiplexing (OFDM), researchers enabled micro-LED light bulbs to handle millions of changes in light intensity per second, effectively behaving like an extremely fast on/off switch.

This allows large chunks of binary data - a series of ones and zeros - to be transmitted at high speed.

Earlier this year, Germany's Fraunhofer Heinrich Hertz Institute claimed that data rates of up to 1Gbit/s per LED light frequency were possible in laboratory conditions.
MicroLED light bulb Li-fi demonstrated at 10 gigabits per second in the UK and terabits per second per square millimeter is possible
 
If Google Glass could do this, it would start a revolution

Taiwan's ITRI has a floating augmented-reality touch-screen system that would improve upon "Minority Report" technology, and it's ready to license it.
The world portrayed by Tom Cruise and his slick, glove-manipulated holographic operating system in "Minority Report" has been inching closer to reality for some time now, and as the video below shows, it could come way ahead of schedule and be even cooler than Hollywood's original vision of the future.

Taiwan's nonprofit Industrial Technology Research Institute pointed me to the below demo of its new i-Air Touch (iAT) Technology, which is essentially an augmented-reality system that falls somewhere between the compact specs of Google Glass and the original, bulkier virtual-reality systems of the 1990s. Unlike Google Glass however, it doesn't rely primarily on voice commands. Instead, it projects a virtual touch-based interface in the user's field of vision that appears to float in the air and responds to being "touched." Watch the video below for a better explanation -- a picture is definitely worth a thousand words in this case.

If Google Glass could do this, it would start a revolution | Cutting Edge - CNET News

Would be better if this would also use voice command. ;)





Google Glass meets Oculus Rift in this awesome headset

Try as they might, not many developers can legitimately claim that their augmented reality (AR) tech has a leg up on Google's. One of the few that can is Taiwan's Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI). There, a team of developers have pushed their AR headset straight into the realm of virtual reality.

The headset is called the i-Air Touch and, as the name suggests, it allows for its wearer to actually reach out and touch the images projected before them. A pair of cameras, mounted atop the headset, track the user's hand motions and recognize when they've actually interacted with the virtual image.

The intended use of the headset is reminiscent of the way Elon Musk utilized the Oculus Rift and Leap motion controller to create his Iron Man interface. The difference, of course, is that this headset combines the two into a single, wearable device. The i-Air's glasses are also translucent, similar to Google Glass, meaning that you can feasibly wear them around town.


http://www.dvice.com/2013-10-29/google-glass-meets-oculus-rift-awesome-headset
 
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