April 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: Wearables
Solar-powered dresses are so two years ago. These days, dames in the know are all about that piezoelectric material, evidenced by the incredibly flashy Piezing. Dreamed up and designed by Amanda Parkes, this piece of garb is all set to steal the show at the 2ndSkin expo in San Francisco, and according to CNET, it features electricity-generating fabrics around the joints of the elbows and hips. When the wearer walks, bends or gets downright nasty on the dance floor, the mechanical stress conjures up energy which is stored as voltage in a built-in battery where it can presumably be used later for charging your favorite handheld gizmo. Sure gets our electrons flowing.
[Via textually, image courtesy of James Patten]
Read - 2ndSkin expo
Read - CNET article on Piezing
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Posted in art, design, energy, battery, electricity, generator, clothing, garb, clothes, motion, piezoelectric, 2nd skin, 2ndSkin, Amanda Parkes, AmandaParkes, dress | No Comments »
March 2nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Tablet PCs

It’s been a solid tick since we heard a peep from Motion Computing, but nearly a year after we first wrapped our paws around the firm’s C5 medical tablet, the F5 has arrived. Granted, this bugger is more suited for service industries and field work than the ER, but its “semi-rugged” nature ensures that it’ll get the job done almost anywhere. Packed within the IP54-compliant (read: dust, water, shock and temperature resistant) chassis is a 1.2GHz Intel Centrino U1400 processor, 10.4-inch XGA (1,024 x 768) View Anywhere display, 40GB HDD (optional 32GB SSD available), built-in 802.11a/b/g and Bluetooth, WWAN (EV-DO) support and a 2-megapixel camera for good measure. Additionally, you’ll spot an optional barcode reader, integrated RFID reader / passive tag, a biometric scanner, three USB 2.0 ports, Ethernet, VGA output and a battery good for about 1.5 hours of usage. Unfortunately, such a well-spec’d Slate PC won’t come cheap, as this creature will set you back a stiff $2,699 to $4,000 depending on configuration.
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Posted in rugged, tough, motion, Motion Computing, MotionComputing, tablet pc, TabletPc, F5, semi-rugged, slate pc, SlatePc | No Comments »
February 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: Robots
Tokyo University engineer Tsuyoshi Horo has developed a novel system for controlling robots (or in this case, a moving stool) using a simple set of hand and body gestures. The researcher is utilizing a circular array of cameras to track and detect body movement within a controlled environment, and then translate those movements to actions for an automaton. The cameras are used to create a real-time, 3D, volumetric model of objects or people in the space, which is then converted into a psychedelic stack of virtual cubes which are read and processed as data. Viewed movement allows a user to control something like the direction of a bot simply by pointing which way they’d like it to go. Sure, that’s all well and good, but we’re more interested in getting ourselves Tron-ed into a highly complex Rubik’s cube — where do we sign up? Watch the videos after the break to see the system (and the blocks) in action.
[Via technabob]
Continue reading Gesture-controlled robot is at your service
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Posted in bot, gestures, motion, gesture controlled, GestureControlled, tokyo university, TokyoUniversity, Tsuyoshi Horo, TsuyoshiHoro | No Comments »
December 6th, 2007 by
Filed under: Wearables
You only thought light-up gear was so last century. As fate would have it, kids aren’t tired of rockin’ blinky apparel just yet, and Tomorrow Incorporated is looking to take advantage of the lingering fad. One-upping the LA Lights kicks that once ruled the hallways, the Britepack book bag ($39.99) sports a semi-circle of LEDs that light up in a pre-determined pattern each time a step is taken, and they automatically go dormant whenever it detects that class is in session (read: it’s sitting idly). Apparently, these packs will even be available in wheeled (oh noes) and non-wheeled versions, and while a couple colors look to be available as we speak, you can look forward to a host of “add-on accessories” to land next year. As much as we’d like to think that these just won’t take off, we doubt TI will have a tough time moving its inventory.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in backpack, ugly, kids, motion, britepack, kid, Tomorrow Incorporated, TomorrowIncorporated | No Comments »
November 27th, 2007 by

Now that the Wii’s thoroughly indoctrinated everyone and their mothers (and grandmothers) into the joy of motion-sensitive gaming, it’s only natural to ask what’s next — and a system of cheap accelerometers, gyroscopes, and ultrasonic sound emitters developed by a team at in Switzerland could provide some answers. The sensors are linked up and used like a rudimentary motion-capture suit — only instead of needing a controlled environment and special cameras, microphones worn on the torso pick up beeps from the emitters to locate your limbs as you flail about. The system is flexible enough to be used during active sports like skiing or bicycling for more accurate motion capture or just to control video games, since no silly ping-pong ball suit is required. The team says the $3000 system is built from off the shelf parts, yet compares favorably to commercial mo-cap systems costing tens of thousands more — and what’s more, they expect the price to fall to “hundreds of dollars” soon. Excellent — we were thinking it was about time to do some real damage in Wii Boxing. Check a vid of the system in action after the break.
Continue reading Cheap sensors could enable next-gen mo-cap games
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in eth, motion, motion capture, motion sensitive, MotionCapture, MotionSensitive | No Comments »