Showing posts with label Uncategorized. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uncategorized. Show all posts

Controling Robotic Arms Is Child's Play

Technology News - Catching a ball is no problem for most people. Getting a robotic arm to catch a ball using a catcher attachment is a bit trickier. To find out just how tricky it is -- or to see if it's easier than they think -- visitors to the Sensor+Test trade fair in Nuremberg should head for the Fraunhofer booth. There, researchers will be presenting an industrial robotic arm with six joints, at the end of which is a catcher. Visitors can control the arm using a hand-held input device: When they move the hand holding the device, the robot emulates their movement.
"The input device contains various movement sensors, also called inertial sensors," says Bernhard Kleiner of the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA in Stuttgart, who leads the project. The individual micro-electromechanical systems themselves are not expensive. What the scientists have spent time developing is how these sensors interact. "We have developed special algorithms that fuse the data of individual sensors and identify a pattern of movement. That means we can detect movements in free space," summarizes Kleiner.

What may at first appear to be a trade show gimmick, is in fact a technology that offers numerous advantages in industrial production and logistical processes. The system could be used to simplify the programming of industrial robots, for example. To date, this has been done with the aid of laser tracking systems: An employee demonstrates the desired motion with a hand-held baton that features a white marker point. The system records this motion by analyzing the light reflected from a laser beam aimed at the marker. Configuring and calibrating the system takes a lot of time. The new input device should eliminate the need for these steps in the future -- instead, employees need only pick up the device and show the robot what it is supposed to do.

The system has numerous applications in medicine, as well. Take, for example, gait analysis. Until now, cameras have made precise recordings of patients as they walk back and forth along a specified path. The films reveal to the physician such things as how the joints behave while walking, or whether incorrect posture in the knees has been improved by physical therapy. Installing the cameras, however, is complex and costly, and patients are restricted to a predetermined path. The new sensor system can simplify this procedure: Attached to the patient's upper thigh, it measures the sequences and patterns of movement -- without limiting the patient's motion in any way.

"With the inertial sensor system, gait analysis can be performed without a frame of reference and with no need for a complex camera system," explains Kleiner. In another project, scientists are already working on comparisons of patients' gait patterns with those patterns appearing in connection with such diseases as Parkinson's.

Another medical application for the new technology is the control of active prostheses containing numerous small actuators. Whenever the patient moves, the prosthesis in turn also moves; this makes it possible for a leg prosthesis to roll the foot while walking. Here, too, the sensor could be attached to the patient's upper thigh and could analyze the movement, helping to regulate the motors of the prosthesis. Research scientists are currently working on combining the inertial sensor system with an electromyographic (EMG) sensor. Electromyography is based on the principle that when a muscle tenses, it produces an electrical voltage which a sensor can then measure by way of an electrode. If the sensor is placed, for example, on the muscle responsible for lifting the patient's foot, the sensor registers when the patient tenses this muscle -- and the prosthetic foot lifts itself. EMG sensors like this are already available but are difficult to position.

"While standard EMG sensors consist of individual electrodes that have to be positioned precisely on the muscle, our system is made up of many small electrodes that attach to a surface area. This enables us to sense muscle movements much more reliably," says Kleiner. [Source]

Technology News

iPhone 4 prototype 64 GB


Technology News - From time photos and videos circulating on the network of mysterious iPhone 4 prototype with an internal memory of 64 GB, which is actually something plausible and not so difficult to achieve for Apple since the iPod touch is available now with this cut of memory .

According to a rumor picked up by the next This is my 64 GB iPhone 4 could be sold very soon. Many retailers have received a notice in which reference is made to a model of 64 GB iPhone 4, with the same characteristics as the other version except of course the cut of memory.

While waiting for the next generation iPhone, Apple seems to want to prolong the life of the current model with new versions like the iPhone4, and soon the white 64 GB model. Who knows, maybe this is not exactly a surprise to be unveiled tonight in the Apple Store to celebrate the 10th anniversary.

Technology News

Almost 1 Month Later, Sony Playstation Network Coming Back On Line




Technology News - Sony has flipped the switch to bring its Playstation Network back on line, after a lengthy, three-week outage. Sony Corporation Executive Deputy President Kazuo Hirai said that services would be brought back online in phases, and that first phase was underway.

Hirai said that this would include sign-in for the Playstation Network and the Qriocity music services and online gameplay for PS3 and PSP. Users have to upgrade their firmware and change their passwords before they can log back in to the network.

The Sony Playstation Network was taken offline on April 19 when hackers compromised the database. The episode has been disastrous for Sony PR, which took several days before admitting there'd been a security breach and revealing that its 77 million users' data had been stolen. The network has remained offline since then.
It's hard to say what's worse for gamers: this lengthy outage - one of the worst on record or the compromise of their personal data. Either way, Sony will have a long road ahead to win back the trust of gamers, who have a wide variety of options for other console or handhelds games.
Indeed, even before this recent attack on Sony, the company had lost the favor of many with its decision to sue hacker George Hotz for jailbreaking the PS3. Hotz and Sony recently settled , but not before what Electronista described as Sony's "scorched earth attitude," in which it had demanded access to the records of anyone who had viewed or commented on the jailbreak video on YouTube. Sony also requested that Twitter provide the identities of those who revealed the hack there.
Sony's actions had drawn the ire of the vigilante group Anonymous, which launched a denial of service attack on the Sony website in response. But Anonymous has denied responsibility for the hack that brought the Playstation Network down and stolen user data.
In his announcement this evening, Hirai reassured users that Sony had instituted a number of new security changes. But with their personal data compromised and after 3 weeks of no online Playstation gameplay,it remains to be seen whether or not gamers will return, or if they've found other ways to spend their gaming time and money.[Source]

Technology News

Autocad fresh

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A free, downloadable design tool, 123D allows anyone to design 3-D models, and then turn them into real-life products.

“It used to be that in order to make things you needed these big expensive machines,” Bass said. “Now you can produce things at high quality, at relatively low volume and relatively low cost.”

Best known for its flagship product, AutoCAD, which is used by thousands of professional designers — not to mention Hollywood studios — worldwide, Autodesk is clearly making a bid for the consumer market. And Bass has realized that increasingly, innovation is bubbling from the ground up, rather than trickling down from mega-institutions and companies.

“One of the things that we’re seeing is that technology is increasingly starting with consumers, and then moving up into business,” Bass told Wired.com in an interview after his appearance at the conference.

To be fair, the logic behind this free product isn’t completely altruistic. Autodesk is, after all, a business — and a large one at that. (The company had sales of nearly $2 billion last year.)

Bass said he hopes that some 123D users will “graduate” up to Autodesk’s more professionally-oriented products.

More than anything else, however, 123D represents Autodesk’s realization that there is, in Bass’s words, “an unbelievable community of people who want to be making things.”

“There are tens of thousands of people — if not more — who to create something,” Bass said.

Autodesk is teaming up with two companies, Ponoko and Techshop to help everyday ‘makers’ produce products. Ponoko offers a service where people send their designs to the company, and the company will make the parts and send them back to the consumer for assembly.

Techshop operates like a fitness gym for makers. Membership is $125 per month, makers buy their own materials, and then assemble their idea in the Techshop workshop, in the company of other makers.

Autodesk’s partnership with Ponoko and Techshop will allow people to turn their dreams into reality — literally, Bass said.

“It’s not just for making a digital thing, it’s for making physical representations of things,” Bass said. “Anything you can imagine, you can make.”[Source]
Technology News

Galaxy Tab 7 Use Dual Core Processor

Technology News - Galaxy Tab 7 Use Dual Core Processor, Samsung continues to surprise Galaxy Tab line of tablets. Although already introduced the Galaxy Tab 10.1 and Galaxy Tab 8.9, it seems the original version of the Galaxy Tab 7-inch screen versions is not forgotten. Some media reported the news that Samsung is preparing the successor to the original Galaxy. His name might be called the Galaxy Tab 7. Galaxy’s first version is often referred to as a larger version of the phone Galaxy S. Well, the new series also seems to have similarities to the Galaxy II in about the specification.

According to the leak Galaxy Tab 7, the tablet has a 1.2 GHz dual core processor, 1 GB RAM, 2 GB ROM, and 16 GB of internal memory. If this is true, of course, can be regarded as a dramatic improvement over earlier versions of Galaxy. Renewal Galaxy Tab 7, which reportedly was first released in the United States uses the Android OS Gingerbread 2.3.4. There has not been any confirmation from Samsung on the report about Galaxy Tab 7.[Source]

Technology News