Tag Archives: Revolution

Screen Grabs: Raspberry Pi survives electronics blackout for a cameo on Revolution

Screen Grabs chronicles the uses (and misuses) of real-world gadgets in today’s movies and TV. Send in your sightings (with screen grab!) to screengrabs at engadget dot com.

Screen Grabs Raspberry Pi survives worldwide electronic blackout for a came on Revolution

The original premise of NBC’s show Revolution is that in the near future some unknown worldwide catastrophe devastated all electronic devices, plunging everyone into a blackout. As the plot has progressed however, in limited cases the power is coming back on. That includes a nanotech machine a couple of characters are planning to use to perform emergency surgery — by shoving what appears to be a USB stick into an open wound — and its configuration is enabled thanks to a very familiar looking $ 35 device. Keen eyed viewers spotted a Raspberry Pi (top center) as it popped on screen a few times, however like our own prime time cameo it flashes by very quickly, the screencap above may be your best look at it.

[Thanks, Gene]

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Home Console Gaming May Suffer Death By A Thousand Cuts, Rather Than A Major Revolution

Screen Shot 2013-05-11 at 2.01.37 PMThe Ouya is making its way out to backers even now (though my shipping notification still hasn’t arrived. Grrr.) and judging by early impressions, it’s no silver bullet to take down behemoths like Sony and Microsoft. The $ 99, Android powered console still isn’t fully formed exactly, but it’s doubtful that between now and June 25 it’ll take on giant-killer proportions. Likewise the recently-announced BlueStacks Android gaming console, which features a subscription-based pricing model, probably won’t alone topple the giants.
TechCrunch

Touch Bionics i-limb ultra revolution is controllable via a mobile app

Touch Bionics has just announced a new product in its inventory called the i-limb ultra revolution. It features a biosim mobile app that is usable through iOS devices. The i-limb ultra revolution features a powered rotating thumb, 24 Quick Grip options, and extra sensitive electrodes. Ian Stevens, the CEO of Touch Bionics, states that the

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SlashGear

T-Mobile’s iPhone 5 ad is a low-budget revolution

T-Mobile decides it will present the case for its new iPhone 5 offer very simply. Yes, of course it uses the word “revolutionizing.” [Read more]

    




CNET News

The Pirate Bay’s Oldest Torrent Is Revolution OS

jrepin writes “After nearly 9 years of seeding The Pirate Bay’s oldest working torrent is still very much alive. Interestingly, the torrent is not a Hollywood classic nor is it an evergreen music album. The honor goes to a pirated copy of Revolution OS, a documentary covering the history of Linux, GNU and the free software movement.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

‘Secret energy revolution’ could hasten end to dependence on foreign oil

A wealth of new technologies — from underwater robots to 3-D scanners to nano-engineered lubricants — are transforming the energy exploration industry in ways that will hasten the end of America’s reliance on Middle East oil.


FOX News

U.S. inventiveness at highest point since Industrial Revolution

U.S tech companies lead all other industries in patent production, a new study finds. But when patent activity is measured on a per capita basis globally, the U.S. ranks ninth.
Computerworld News

Gillmor Gang: The Revolution Will Be Notified

gillmor-gang-test-pattern_excerptThe Gillmor Gang — Robert Scoble, Keith Teare, Kevin Marks, and Steve Gillmor — fight a never-ending battle for truth, justice, and the American Way. The Gang feels blessed to have survived the Mayanocalypse, the Fiscal Cliff, and the complete inability of Microsoft to reverse its tailspin into massive mediocrity. You can verify that last comment by the fact that we don’t mention Microsoft once in the show.

We do talk at endless length (@scobleizer) about Google Glasses, which I suggest should be replaced with Google Underpants. Also Apple’s opportunity to extend AirPlay into a rewrite of the media industry formerly known as television. Facebook Gifts. Open standards and a Scoble end of year barnstorm on all the tech shows. Happy Holidays to Leo, Jason, and all the folks in the chat room.
TechCrunch

A Techno-Sensory Revolution is Coming, According to IBM

The five human senses? We’ll have have technologies that stimulate each of them in new ways.







New on MIT Technology Review

New Airwave-Sharing Scheme Will Launch a Wireless Revolution

A policy change means that sections of spectrum can be “checked out” for different purposes at specific locations.

Aiming to boost wireless bandwidth and innovation, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission is poised to recommend the biggest regulatory change in decades: one that allows a newly available chunk of wireless spectrum to be leased by different companies at different times and places, rather than being auctioned off to one high bidder.







New on MIT Technology Review

The San Francisco Games Revolution Is Over

CIMG0034The Bay Area is the epicentre of a massive disruption which shook the games industry to its foundation. It erupted through what we call social and mobile games, drew huge audiences and changed the fundamental economics of games and introduced a whole new language of play. It even went beyond games into what we now call gamification.

I call it the San Francisco Revolution. And I think it’s over.
TechCrunch

Robotics Revolution: The Robots Are Just Getting Warmed Up

Robot FlowersEditor’s note: Saad Khan is a seeker of bad-assness. He found it at Evolution Robotics (not to mention Blekko, Zaarly, Jobvite, Luminate, and LendingClub). He’s a Partner at CMEA Capital. And he’s doing the robot today. Follow him @saadventures or SaadWired.com.

This past week it was announced that Evolution Robotics, maker of the Mint floor cleaner, is now iRobot. The announcement is hot off the presses, the implications forming. But one thing is clear: the robot era has begun, and no one is safe, not even from their short arms and incessant nagging.
TechCrunch

How Games Are Driving a Mobile Graphics Revolution

The needs of players are helping to push advances from chip makers like Qualcomm and Nvidia.

Since Apple opened its App Store in 2008, catering to the needs of gamers has been increasingly important for mobile-device makers. While the iPhone was not designed primarily for games, they soon dominated the best-selling app charts, a pattern that was duplicated on Android devices and looks set to repeat with Windows phones. Qualcomm, a major manufacturer of chipsets for mobile devices, estimates that 60 percent of smart-phone users regularly play games on the devices.







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Adobe: ‘TV Everywhere’ revolution is just beginning

Adobe says the 7 million households that watched the Olympics pushed the TV Everywhere mindset into the mainstream.
[Read more]
CNET News

The Emerging Revolution in Game Theory

The discovery of a winning strategy for Prisoner’s Dilemma is forcing game theorists to rethink their discipline. Their conclusion? Winning isn’t everything.

The world of game theory is currently on fire. In May, Freeman Dyson at Princeton University and William Press at the University of Texas announced that they had discovered a previously unknown strategy for the game of prisoner’s dilemma which guarantees one player a better outcome than the other.







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A Twitter Tweak, or a Revolution in Online Discourse?

Branch—a startup created by two Twitter cofounders—hovers in a space between a private, lengthy e-mail thread and a public stream of tweets.

Twitter cofounder Evan Williams took less than 140 characters to ask on Monday: “What are the limitations of an invite-only conversation? What do you gain and what do you lose?”







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Talkin’ Bout A Revolution: The All-Star Enterprise Panel At Disrupt

Arrington PAs we keep saying with these things, this year’s Disrupt SF is going to be huge so get your tickets here. And if you are interested in becoming a sponsor, opportunities can be found here as always. With Yammer’s $ 1.2 billion acquisition by Microsoft, Box’s recent raise of $ 125 million (valuing the company at a whopping $ 1.2 billion), and Asana’s cash infusion from Founders Fund, Benchmark, Andreessen Horowitz, and Mitch Kapor, enterprise these days is anything but boring.

Which is why you should tune in to our all-star enterprise panel at TechCrunch Disrupt, which will feature Box CEO Aaron Levie, Asana co-founder Justin Rosenstein, Okta CEO Todd McKinnon and Cloudera’s COO Kirk Dunn.
TechCrunch

Is It Time For an OpenGL Gaming Revolution?



MrSeb writes “In a twist that reinforces Valve’s distaste for Windows 8, it turns out that the Source engine — the 3D engine that powers Half Life 2, Left 4 Dead, and Dota 2 — runs faster on Ubuntu 12.04 and OpenGL (315 fps) than Windows 7 and DirectX/Direct3D (270.6 fps); almost a 20% speed-up. These figures are remarkable, considering Valve has been refining the Source engine’s performance under Windows for almost 10 years, while the Valve Linux team has only been working on the Linux port of Source for a few months. Valve attributes the speed-up to the ‘underlying efficiency of the [Linux] kernel and OpenGL.’ But here’s the best bit: Using these new OpenGL optimizations to the Source engine, the OpenGL version of L4D2 on Windows is now faster than the DirectX version (303.4 fps vs. 270.6 fps). If OpenGL is faster, and it has a comparable feature set, and hardware support is excellent… why is Direct3D still the de facto API? With Windows losing its gaming crown and smartphones (OpenGL ES!) gaining in popularity, is it time for an OpenGL revolution?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

EmTech Preview: David Icke of MC10 on the Revolution in Fitness and Health Tools

MC10 imagines bendable, wearable electronics that will give everyday athletes the training knowledge of Olympians.

David Icke, CEO of MC10, wants you to feel like an Olympian. The company wants to provide users with sophisticated knowledge to fuel individual fitness and improve health, all through wearable electronics.







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OS In The Enterprise And The Component Revolution — What Startups Need To Know

Screen shot 2012-07-21 at 1.49.47 AMEditor’s Note: The following is a guest post by Jason van Zyl. van Zyl is the founder of the Apache Maven project, the Plexus IoC framework and the Apache Velocity project and helped establish Codehaus, a well-respected incubation facility for open-source community projects. He currently serves on the board of the Eclipse Foundation and is CTO of Sonatype.

Jason can be reached on Twitter @jvanzyl

It’s no secret that today’s software is very different than it used to be.  It’s often cloud-based, includes social functions, and is available to anyone, anywhere, using any type of device.   What most of us don’t see is that it’s not just different on the surface – it’s also created and delivered in a very different way.
TechCrunch

7 hard truths about the NoSQL revolution

Forgoing features for speed has its trade-offs as these NoSQL data store shortcomings show
Computerworld News

Strong AI and the Imminent Revolution In Robotics



An anonymous reader writes “Google director of research Peter Norvig and AI pioneer Judea Pearl give their view on the prospects of developing a strong AI and how progress in the field is about to usher in a new age of household robotics to rival the explosion of home computing in the 1980s. Norvig says, ‘In terms of robotics we’re probably where the world of PCs were in the early 1970s, where you could buy a PC kit and if you were an enthusiast you could have a lot of fun with that. But it wasn’t a worthwhile investment for the average person. There wasn’t enough you could do that was useful. Within a decade that changed, your grandmother needed word processing or email and we rapidly went from a very small number of hobbyists to pervasive technology throughout society in one or two decades. I expect a similar sort of timescale for robotic technology to take off, starting roughly now.’ Pearl thinks that once breakthroughs are made in handling uncertainty, AIs will quickly gain ‘a far greater understanding of context, for instance providing with the next generation of virtual assistants with the ability to recognise speech in noisy environments and to understand how the position of a phrase in a sentence can change its meaning.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Psychedelic Drug Research And The Data Mining Revolution

The web is filled with users’ descriptions of the effects of psychedelic drugs. Now neuroscientists are using data mining techniques to quantify the effects of these drugs on human consciousness for the first time

One of the most mysterious problems in neuroscience is the link between brain chemistry and consciousness. How do changes in our neurochemistry influence our perception of the real world? 







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GameStop sales dive amidst digital revolution

The #1 games retailer in the US just released numbers for its fourth quarter, historically the best and most lucrative period for any retail chain. But for GameStop, it wasn’t all good news, as the company reported a decline from the previous year, leading to total 2011 profits of nearly 80% of what they were

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SlashGear

VisiCalc’s Dan Bricklin On the Tablet Revolution



snydeq writes “Dan Bricklin, the co-creator of the PC revolution’s killer app, weighs in on the opportunities and oversights of the tablet revolution. ‘In some sense, for tablets the browser is a killer app. Maps is a killer app to some extent. Being able to share the screen with other people — that it’s a social device — also might fit the bill. I think that for tablets, there isn’t and won’t be one killer app for everyone. It’s more that there are apps that are killers for individual people. It’s the sum of all those that is the killer app. This has been true since the original Palm Pilot.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Leaked Assassin’s Creed 3 Screenshots Show American Revolution



An anonymous reader writes “After three years, Ubisoft is finally finishing the newest installment of their Templars vs. Assassins series, set during the American Revolution. PC Magazine reports that ‘If the cover art is any indicator, the new Assassin is pals with George Washington, Paul Revere, Ben Franklin, and the other leading American revolutionaries of the day.’ A team of developers at Ubisoft reportedly dedicated a full three-year development cycle to re-examining every element in the franchise to improve the game — although it could’ve taken even longer.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

IBM: We’re on the cusp of the Quantum Computing revolution (video)

Technology’s holy grail is the development of a “perfect” Quantum Computer. Traditional computers recognize information as bits: binary information that represent “On” or “Off” states. A Quantum Computer uses qubits; operating in superposition, it exists in all states simultaneously — not just “On” or “Off,” but every possible state in-between. It would theoretically be able to instantly access every piece of information at the same time, meaning that a 250 qubit computer would contain more data than there are particles in the universe. IBM thinks it’s closer than ever to realizing this dream and if you want to know more, we have the full details after the break.

Continue reading IBM: We’re on the cusp of the Quantum Computing revolution (video)

IBM: We’re on the cusp of the Quantum Computing revolution (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Feb 2012 00:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

The Revolution May Or May Not Be Branded

brandThe Occupy movement, or rallying cry, or whatever you want to call it, is by its nature decentralized. By refusing to come together under one banner other than the word “Occupy,” they’ve both diluted their message and allowed it to spread more quickly. You don’t need an Occupy license to occupy a bank’s lobby in Kansas City, but at the same time there’s a natural question of whether one occupation is related to another.

Political considerations aside, the point is that Occupy might benefit from a recognizable face. On this front, some faction of the movement has decided to do a little branding, but in keeping with the democratic, bottom-up nature of the organization (or rather disorganization), they’ve opted to run a contest and let the “official” logo be selected by popular vote. It’s a great application of web technology to an interesting problem, and will probably prove to be a memorable case study in an increasingly common phenomenon: the necessity of branding an emergent movement or pattern on the internet.
TechCrunch

The revolution will not be tweeted

Can censorship ever be a good thing? Twitter wants you to think it can be, but the truth is that it looks like the company has stepped on a slippery slope coated in lard.




FOXNews.com

Join the Mobility Revolution with These Five Apps

Smart phones are creating radical new ideas for getting around. Technology Review picks six of the most promising.







Technology Review RSS Feeds

How Games Are Driving a Mobile Graphics Revolution

The needs of players are helping to push advances from chip makers like Qualcomm and Nvidia.

Since Apple opened its App Store in 2008, catering to the needs of gamers has been increasingly important for mobile-device makers. While the iPhone was not designed primarily for games, they soon dominated the best-selling app charts, a pattern that was duplicated on Android devices and looks set to repeat with Windows phones. Qualcomm, a major manufacturer of chipsets for mobile devices, estimates that 60 percent of smart-phone users regularly play games on the devices.







Technology Review RSS Feeds

Sony “four screen” revolution to preempt Apple Siri TV

Sony is working on its own revolution in the TV market, with engineers rushing to develop the company’s “four screen” strategy before Apple can release its own television set. “There’s a tremendous amount of R&D going into a different kind of TV set” CEO Howard Stringer told the WSJ, referring to the “four screen” potential once [...]
SlashGear

Apple to Start Television Revolution, Analyst Says

Reports have suggested for more than a year that Apple is working on a smart TV product, and those reports were firmed up last week when an excerpt from Steve Jobs’s biography revealed that the Apple co-Founder was indeed working on an Apple television.




FOXNews.com

Revolution

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