The trickiest thing about the brain mapping project might be that we don’t even know what we’re trying to learn.
Tag Archives: Pioneer
A Chat With Robotics Pioneer Red Whittaker On The Google Lunar X Prize And The Future Of Interstellar Exploration
Red Whittaker is a certified legend in the robotics community. The head of the Field Robotics Center at Carnegie Mellon University, Whittaker has been instrumental building the driverless car that took part in the DARPA Grand Challenge as well as the Mars Rover, a robot designed to explore volcanoes, the arctic, and other planets.
TechCrunch
Intel invests in SDN pioneer Big Switch Networks
Intel Capital has invested in software-defined networking company Big Switch Networks, as it hopes to help the company change the way data centers are networked.
Computerworld News
With $2.3M From Vint Cerf & More, Tech Pioneer Judy Estrin Unveils EvntLive, The Web’s New Interactive Concert Hall
You may not be familiar with her name, but Judy Estrin has quietly become one of Silicon Valley’s most successful serial entrepreneurs and executives. She began her career working with Vint Cerf’s research group at Stanford University — the same one that played a central role in the development of the Internet. Since the early ’80s, she has founded seven technology companies, has served as the CTO of Cisco Systems and held board positions at FedEx for 20 years, Sun Microsystems for eight years, and currently sits on the board of The Walt Disney Company (a position she’s held since 1998). Oh, and she’s also the author of “Closing the Innovation Gap” and led the team that developed one of the first local area networks.
TechCrunch
Pioneer shows off 2013 headunit line, rocks our minds with bass (video)
Pioneer launched a stack of new sets this year for CES as well as an iPhone 5 connectivity solution for those left hanging since upgrading to Apple’s latest phone. We’ve seen the headunit specs so we thought we’d give you a pic tour of the newest devices as well as a short clip of us sitting in the custom Lexus CT 200h playing with its ridiculous system. The centerpiece of the system is the AVH-X8500BHS receiver (above) and a custom Steampunk-inspired sub enclosure loaded with six PRS D800 amps. End result? hair-moving, skin-creeping bass and volume. We’re digging seeing all the AppRadio expansion to Pioneers’s line and can only hope we see prices drop — and even become pack-ins — for the now rather expensive connectivity cables.
Continue reading Pioneer shows off 2013 headunit line, rocks our minds with bass (video)
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Transportation
What Turned VR Pioneer Jaron Lanier Against the Web
i_want_you_to_throw_ writes “Details of Jaron Lanier’s crusade against Web 2.0 continue in an article at Smithsonian Magazine. The article expands upon Lanier’s criticism of Web 2.0. It’s an interesting read, with Lanier suggesting we are outsourcing ourselves into insignificant advertising-fodder and making an audacious connection between techno-utopianism, the rise of the machines and the Great Recession. From the article: ‘As far back as the turn of the century, he singled out one standout aspect of the new web culture—the acceptance, the welcoming of anonymous commenters on websites—as a danger to political discourse and the polity itself. At the time, this objection seemed a bit extreme. But he saw anonymity as a poison seed. The way it didn’t hide, but, in fact, brandished the ugliness of human nature beneath the anonymous screen-name masks. An enabling and foreshadowing of mob rule, not a growth of democracy, but an accretion of tribalism. … ‘This is the thing that continues to scare me. You see in history the capacity of people to congeal—like social lasers of cruelty. That capacity is constant. … We have economic fear combined with everybody joined together on these instant twitchy social networks which are designed to create mass action. What does it sound like to you? It sounds to me like the prequel to potential social catastrophe. I’d rather take the risk of being wrong than not be talking about that.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
What Turned VR Pioneer Jaron Lanier Against the Web
i_want_you_to_throw_ writes “Details of Jaron Lanier’s crusade against Web 2.0 continue in an article at Smithsonian Magazine. The article expands upon Lanier’s criticism of Web 2.0. It’s an interesting read, with Lanier suggesting we are outsourcing ourselves into insignificant advertising-fodder and making an audacious connection between techno-utopianism, the rise of the machines and the Great Recession. From the article: ‘As far back as the turn of the century, he singled out one standout aspect of the new web culture—the acceptance, the welcoming of anonymous commenters on websites—as a danger to political discourse and the polity itself. At the time, this objection seemed a bit extreme. But he saw anonymity as a poison seed. The way it didn’t hide, but, in fact, brandished the ugliness of human nature beneath the anonymous screen-name masks. An enabling and foreshadowing of mob rule, not a growth of democracy, but an accretion of tribalism. … ‘This is the thing that continues to scare me. You see in history the capacity of people to congeal—like social lasers of cruelty. That capacity is constant. … We have economic fear combined with everybody joined together on these instant twitchy social networks which are designed to create mass action. What does it sound like to you? It sounds to me like the prequel to potential social catastrophe. I’d rather take the risk of being wrong than not be talking about that.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Antivirus pioneer McAfee may be released from detention in Guatemala
Antivirus pioneer John McAfee could soon be released from detention in Guatemala where he is being held on charges that he entered the country illegally in an attempt to escape authorities in Belize where he is wanted for questioning in a murder case.
Computerworld News
Biotech Amgen to Buy Genetics Pioneer DeCode
Amgen places a $ 415 million bet that human genetics will boost drug discovery.
DeCode genetics, the Reykjavik-based human genetics company founded by Kari Stefansson, will soon have an American owner. Amgen, a biotech drug developer based near Los Angeles, California, announced today that it will buy DeCode for $ 415 million. Amgen says the purchase will enhance the company’s ability to identify successful drug targets.
New Theory About the Source of Pioneer Space Probe Deceleration
First time accepted submitter deathcow writes “After forty years, a fresh perspective on old Pioneer data leads to new conclusions as to why the Pioneer probes are decelerating. Many theories to the slowing probes have persisted over the years — was it gravity? some type of unforeseen radiation? dark matter? Thanks to the data backup preservation efforts of a NASA Ames Research engineer, mountains of old telemetry data were still available for studying this curious anomaly.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Anti-virus pioneer John McAfee: I’m innocent of murder in Belize
Anti-virus pioneer John McAfee reportedly wanted for murder in Belize
Anti-virus pioneer John McAfee is reportedly wanted for murder in Belize after allegedly gunning down a U.S. citizen in San Pedro Town on Sunday.
Computerworld News
Open Ed’s Business Woes: Textbook Pioneer Flat World Knowledge To Revoke Free Access To Texts
Founded in 2007, Flat World Knowledge was one of the early pioneers in the move to bring free and open access to textbooks to students and educators. The independent publisher offered its learning content for free, giving students the access to texts in print, eBook form, eReaders, audiobooks and downloadable PDFs, etc. Produced by actual authors and reviewed by peers, Flat World allows teachers to modify and edit those texts to fit their particular class through its own simple editing tools, printing new copies on-demand. With customizable, free texts on-demand, Flat World’s model won over many students, leading the company to claim that it had become one of the largest online publishers of free and open textbooks. Be that as it may, while many (aside from the big educational publishers) support the movement to make textbooks and educational content significantly more affordable — and even free — finding workable business models that support free and open access has proven challenging. This week, Campus Marketplace reported that Flat World Knowledge has been forced to drop its free access to textbooks. The decision was made largely because of the cost of supporting free access, in other words it was a business decision that many have or will face as part of the shift to open learning. Flat World offers its learning content for free, but charges for more convenient ways to access material, for print or beefed-up versions and for study aids. By eliminating its free option, the company hopes to make its pricing more equitable for all of its institutional partners so that everyone is paying the same price. The company will still offer bookstore partners its so-called “All Access Pass” that includes digital version of its textbooks, including eBook files, PDFs, audio, HTML functionality and study aids for $ 28 and will sell the pass on its homepage for $ 35. Textbooks themselves will start at $ 19.95. All in all, it’s not a huge change for students or partners, and nearly all of the company’s partners are on board with the move (as, obviously are the teachers and experts producing the textbooks), according to The Chronicle of Higher Ed. Even if students end up paying $ 20 to $ 25 for their textbooks, it’s still a very attractive alternative to the cost of traditional textbooks. Obviously, the company does not want to say that its free content is cannibalizing the revenue generated from charging
TechCrunch
Pioneer doubles down on MixtTrax for new car stereos
The MixTrax software is able to automatically generating continuous music mixes from your media library and its built into every new Pioneer stereo. [Read more]![]()
CNET News
Rest In Peace, Charles Alfred Eldon: A Pioneer Of Silicon Valley, A Role Model For This New Generation
Decades before Steve Jobs, the Google founders, and Mark Zuckerberg, small groups of unglamorous technologists turned Santa Clara Valley into the world-changing region we are still reinventing today. My grandpa, Charles Alfred “Bud” Eldon, was one of them, a Hewlett-Packard engineer and executive since the days of the apricot orchards. He passed away at 7:45am this morning.
I’m going to share a little bit about his life below, because my generation in Silicon Valley and the tech world needs to know about all the shoulders of giants we are standing on, and the heights we can also reach. Too many of us don’t right now.
His story begins in Hawaii during the Great Depression.
TechCrunch
Pioneer DDJ-WeGo is its cheapest DJ controller yet
Regenerative medicine pioneer continues changing lives with first successful laryngotracheal implants
Dr. Paolo Macchiarini is no stranger to world firsts, and less than a year after performing a synthetic windpipe transplant, the Karolinska Institute Professor has coordinated no less than two successful transplants of synthetic sections of larynx. Amazingly, both patients were able to breathe and talk normally straight after surgery, the basic functions we take for granted that they either struggled with or were simply unable to do before. The implants consisted of personally designed synthetic scaffolds coated with the candidates’ own stem cells, so there’s neither the chance of rejection nor the burden of life-long immunosuppressant therapy. Despite the amazing feat, Dr. Macchiarini ain’t done yet, claiming this is the first of many steps towards building a synthetic, complete larynx — voice box and all. Jump past the break for the official PR issued by Harvard Bioscience, the company responsible for growing what’s in that tub.
Regenerative medicine pioneer continues changing lives with first successful laryngotracheal implants originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jun 2012 05:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink
New Scientist |
Harvard Bioscience | Email this | Comments
Engadget
Online Pharmacy Pioneer Arrested In Florida
FeatherBoa writes “A Manitoba man who was one of the first entrepreneurs in the cross-border online pharmacy industry has been arrested in Florida and is facing charges related to the sale of foreign and counterfeit medicines. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration claimed many of the drugs promoted as Canadian actually came from other countries. An FDA spokesperson commented, ‘Many of these websites are operating outside of the United States. However, the internet’s broad reach allows these websites to reach U.S. consumers.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Linux creator and stem cell pioneer share tech’s $1.5 million ‘Nobel’
SETI Pioneer Jill Tarter Retires
ananyo writes “After 35 years, astronomer Jill Tarter is retiring from the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) — a field she helped pioneer and popularize, most recently at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California. Tarter, who inspired the late Carl Sagan to create the fictional character Ellie Arroway, heroine of the book and movie Contact, says she will instead focus her efforts on what she calls ‘the search for intelligent funding.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Pioneer touts world’s first car GPS with augmented reality HUD (video)
We’ve seen augmented reality, and GPS with augmented reality, but we haven’t seen the two combined at the front of a car’s windshield. A pair of Cyber Navi rigs from Pioneer promise to change all that, using an add-on, laser-projected heads-up display from MicroVision that shows driving directions just above the road itself, making sure that you focus on what’s in front rather than squinting at the LCD off to the side. If you do need to look at that LCD, however, you’ll get yet another augmented reality view if your car has a camera up front, more detail about the route and a new speed limit sign alert system. The usual rounds of DVD media, iPhone/iPod playback and 1Seg over-the-air TV tuning are also on tap. Buying either of the new HUD-equipped GPS units will require a deep wallet, some patience and an airplane trip to Japan, however — the 2-DIN ZH99 and dual 1-DIN VH99 cost ¥300,000 and ¥320,000 ($ 3,770 and $ 4,021) respectively, and their late July release isn’t known to include the US at this stage.
Continue reading Pioneer touts world’s first car GPS with augmented reality HUD (video)
Pioneer touts world’s first car GPS with augmented reality HUD (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 May 2012 14:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink
Tech-On |
AVIC-VH99HUD (translated) | Email this | Comments
Engadget
Online Video Content Pioneer Revision3 In Acquisition Talks With The Discovery Channel
Seven years in, Revision3 and its stable of web stars have more than survived the tough early days of building a video content business on the web. The San Francisco company is now bringing in a respectable 100 million video views per month, following a big 2011 — and it may be about to cash in.
TechCrunch
Pioneer launches its 2012 VSX AV receivers lineup, available now starting at $249
Gallery: Pioneer VSX press shots
Continue reading Pioneer launches its 2012 VSX AV receivers lineup, available now starting at $ 249
Pioneer launches its 2012 VSX AV receivers lineup, available now starting at $ 249 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Mar 2012 20:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Pinball pioneer Steve Kordek dies at 100
Believe it or not, pinball (that most beloved of nerd pastimes) hasn’t always looked this way — a familiar field of bumpers with a pair of forward facing flippers at the bottom. That particular design originated with the 1948 title Triple Action, the work of Steve Kordek who died this week at the age of 100. Kordek is credited with a number of innovations to the analog arcade games, including multi-ball mode and drop targets. All told, the pioneer designed well over 100 different machines for Genco, Bally and Williams — some of the biggest names in the pinball pantheon — over the course of his roughly 60 year career. So, it is with a heavy heart that we bid farewell to a man that provided us with hours of entertainment and cost us plenty of quarters.
Pinball pioneer Steve Kordek dies at 100 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Feb 2012 01:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink |
Time | Email this | Comments
Engadget
Pioneer reveals Zypr as free, open alternative to Siri
Pioneer launched a free platform today called Zypr that will offer intelligent voice-controlled assistance features similar to Apple’s Siri. Whereas Siri is currently limited to only the iPhone 4S and will likely still remain limited to iOS over time, Zypr isn’t limited to only one mobile operating system and can be used on smartphones, tablets, [...]
SlashGear
Pioneer PotterNavi: a 3G bike GPS that encourages you to meander
Pioneer PotterNavi: a 3G bike GPS that encourages you to meander originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Oct 2011 13:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink
AV Watch (translated), TechCrunch |
Panasonic (translated) | Email this | Comments
Engadget
Computing Pioneer Dies
John McCarthy, creator of Lisp programming language and “utility computing” visionary, was 84.
John McCarthy, creator of the Lisp programming language and pioneer in utility computing—the forerunner of today’s cloud computing—died Sunday in Stanford, California. He was 84.
Ask Internet Visionary and Pioneer Vint Cerf
As co-designer of TCP/IP (along with Robert E. Kahn), and former chairman of ICANN, it is no exaggeration to say that Vint Cerf is certainly one of the fathers of the internet, and is often referred to as simply the father. His lifetime of network engineering accomplishments — meriting, among many other laurels, the Turing Award — leaves little doubt as to why he’s now a full-time internet visionary for Google (and formerly with Worldcom) as well as a Google VP. Now, Cerf has graciously agreed to answer Slashdot readers’ inquiries about the past and future of this little thing called the Internet, and his role in it thus far. This short call for questions is inadequate to sum up his contributions to engineering the data flows that entangle and enlighten us in 2011, but read through a few of these capsule descriptions to get a sense of them. In accord with the interview guidelines, please try not to lump together unrelated questions. (You may find that your questions are moderated downward if they aren’t concise; if you have several distinct questions, simply submit separately as many as you’d like.)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
AirPlay-enabled Music Tap systems touted by Pioneer, free us from living room control
Had your eye on an AirPlay accessory for your iPhone or iPod touch? Well, Pioneer is looking to help you pull the trigger on one. The company has announced a new set of AirPlay Music Tap systems that enable access to your music library without being chained to a peripheral. By connecting one of these bad boys to your home WiFi or ethernet network, you’ll be able to access your entire iTunes library in various locations throughout your home — after you install Apple’s Remote app, of course. Other features include a 2.5-inch full-color LCD display, Pandora, iHeartRadio, vTuner internet radio and Air Jam, which allows for playlist sharing on your arsenal of the company’s Music Tap systems. When this pair drops in October, you’ll have your choice of the X-SMC-3-S for $ 400 or the more dapper, bluetooth-enabled X-SMC4-Elite for $ 480. You can take a peek at the Elite, along with the full PR, after the break.
AirPlay-enabled Music Tap systems touted by Pioneer, free us from living room control originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Sep 2011 02:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink
iPodNN |
Pioneer (1), (2) | Email this | Comments
Engadget








Recent Comments