Today is the second and last day of Qualcomm's Uplinq conference in San Diego California, but we've still got a bunch in store. This morning, we sat down at the keynote and listened to HTC CEO Peter Chou talk about where HTC has been, its plans for the future, and make an announcement about HTC Sense development. After that was Nokia CEO Stephen Elop, who outlined five principles which will help Nokia
Posts Tagged ‘Future’
Google’s platform extends its reach with Android@Home
May 13th, 2011
admin SAN FRANCISCO—The first Android smartphone came in 2008. Then in 2010, the platform appeared on tablets. Now, Android wants to move into your home. At its I/O developer conference on Tuesday, Google showed a sneak preview of its Android@Home project, which will extend the Android platform into household objects. That means some day in the future, you could control home appliances—your dishwasher, the heating system, the lights in your house—using your Android device as a remote control. Read the comments on this post
Brazilian Scientists to the World: Get Ready for the Pineapple and Banana Cars of the Future
March 29th, 2011
admin It looks like the cars of the future won’t be hovercrafts or flying spaceships. Neither will they be automobiles that can transform or vehicles that can run on different types of terrain. At least, not yet, that is. The automobile industry is constantly transforming and trying to build more efficient and greener cars. Because of these efforts, we’ve seen the age of the electric cars and we have seen prototypes of cars that run on water as well as vehicles that are powered by solar energy. Now these are all great, but there’s another solution brewing around that will not only use eco-friendly materials during its manufacture but will also result in the production of a stronger, lighter car that will do wonders for fuel economy. Is the world ready for pineapple and banana cars to hit the road? Ready or not, scientists in Brazil are making all these possible, having developed a more effective means of utilizing fibers from pineapples and bananas to produce automotive plastics that are stronger and lighter than the current ones being used today. The study is headed by Dr. Alcides Leão, who presented the findings of his research group during the 241 st National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS). Dr. Leão explained that while the fibers used to reinforce the new breed of plastics will be coming from fruits such as bananas and pineapples, the resulting plastic produced will be extremely strong and stiff, with the strengh of these nano-cellulose fibers coming close to that which is exhibited by Kevlar. Kevlar is the renowned synthetic fiber that is commonly used for bulletproof vests, tires, ropes, brakes, and fibers of the material are also often used to reinforce composite materials. However, unlike these synthetic traditional plastics, the nano-cellulose fibers are completely green and renewable. “The properties of these plastics are incredible,” Dr. Leão explained, “They are light, but very strong; 30 percent lighter and 3 to 4 times stronger.” He further goes on to elaborate that a lot of car parts, such as dashboards, bumpers, and side panels can also be made using nano-sized fruti fibers in the future. “For one thing, they will help reduce the weight of cars and that will improve fuel economy.” These green plastics also have marked mechanical advantages over their conventional counterparts. According to Dr. Leão, nano-cellulose reinforced plastics have greater resistance to damange from heat, spilled gasoline, water, and oxygen. The most promising source of nano-cellulose are the stems and leaves of pineapples. Dr. Leão adds that other fibers from fruits can also be good sources, such as bananas, coir fibers obtained from coconut shells, sisal fibers from the agave plant, and fique, which is a plant closely related to the pineapple. The scientists prepare the nano-fibers by inserting the leaves and stems from these plants into a pressure-cooker-like device. Chemicals are added and the mixture is heated over several cycles until a fine material resemlbling talc is produced. The scientists explained that while the process is costly, it only takes just a pound of nano-cellulose to produce a hundred pounds of extremely strong and lightweight plastic. According to Dr. Leão, automobile manufacturers have already begun testing nano-cellulose reinforced plastics with promising results. He predicted that this technology will be used within a matter of two years. The plastics also show great promise for medical applications such as in the production of artificial ligaments and heart valves. The study was funded by the government of Brazil, Pematec, Toto Industria and Comercio Ltd., as well as by other private companies. Source: American Chemical Society
World’s First ‘Practical’ Artificial Leaf Can Cheaply Turn Water Into Energy
March 28th, 2011
admin A team of chemistry and engineering scientists from MIT today announced the completion of their quest to create an artificial leaf that creates electricity from water like a leaf produces oxygen and food from carbon dioxide. The discovery, formally presented by its leader, MIT chemist Daniel Nocera , at the National Meeting of the American Chemical Society , doesn’t look like a leaf, but rather like a very thin credit card. But placed in a gallon of water, the biomimicked leaf can produce enough electricity for a day in a house in a developing country. In the lab, Nocera was able to keep a prototype running for 45 hours without a drop in activity. Artificial leaf uses photosynthesis to create energy from water: image via fastcompany.com “A practical artificial leaf has been one of the Holy Grails of science for decades,” said Nocera. “We believe we have done it. The artificial leaf shows particular promise as an inexpensive source of electricity for homes of the poor in developing countries. Our goal is to make each home its own power station,” he said. “One can envision villages in India and Africa not long from now purchasing an affordable basic power system based on this technology.” Tata Motors has already signed up Danel Nocera to commercialize his artificial leaf. An unidentified spokesperson from the company said that it was the latest step in Tata’s efforts to serve the “bottom of the pyramid.” With each home having the equivalent of a mini power plant, Tata’s intention just may be to bring power to the three billion people in the world who don’t have it. There have been other successful attempts at creating electricity from water, but they were too expensive to produce on a large scale. The MIT leaf is made of inexpensive materials that are readily available – silicone, electronics, and special catalysts. It was Nocera’s recent discovery of several catalysts made from nickel and cobalt, that created his breakthrough. These catalysts are what split the water into hydrogen and oxygen under very simple conditions – even dirty water can be used. His artificial leaf is now 10 times more powerful than a natural leaf at photosynthesis, and Nocera is confident that, in the future, it will be much more powerful. “Nature is powered by photosynthesis, and I think that the future world will be powered by photosynthesis as well in the form of this artificial leaf,” he said. Nature has it all, doesn’t it? sources: PopSci , LiveMint via Fast Company , American Chemical Society , Nocera abstracts
New Energy Star regs mean TVs must be 40% more efficient
March 12th, 2011
admin Meeting our our future energy needs is going to require a combination of approaches . More efficient power stations, different energy sources, and more energy-efficient devices will all help. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been helping US consumers choose energy-efficient devices for quite a while now through its Energy Star rating. This week, the EPA released new guidelines that will require TVs and cable/satellite boxes to be 40 percent more efficient than they are now to gain that coveted Energy Star label. Read the comments on this post
Gartner: Smartphones are Cool, Tablets are Hot, and Mobile PCs aren’t Mobile
March 6th, 2011
admin Research firm Gartner fanned the flames of anti-PC fanboism by essentially declaring that mobile PCs are dead. To be fair, Gartner didn’t actually say as much in so many words, but it sure did paint a pretty grim picture for the future of notebooks and netbooks, which Gartner predicts will have a tough time competing with tablets. Listening to Gartner, you’d think that by this time next year, we’re all going to be a bunch of iPad and iPhone toting hipsters too cool for for PCs. Gartner’s vision of the future is one that has consumers substituting media tables in place of mobile PCs, which “already appears to be impacting mobile PC shipments in mature markets.” There’s a “general loss in consumer enthusiasm for mobile PCs,” Gartner says, who predicts that consumers will “adopt media tablets and other mobile PC alternatives as their primary mobile device.” “Even in the professional market, media tablets are being considered as PC substitutes, likely at least delaying some PC replacements,” said Raphael Vasquez, senior research analyst at Gartner. It doesn’t stop there. Gartner says media tablets have exposed the limitations of PCs, and so too have smartphones. In fact, “the current ‘cool’ device is the smartphone, and now PCs will soon have to do battle with media tablets when they are launched in large numbers in the second quarter of 2011.” Gartner also points out that “up to now, the appeal of mobile PCs has been their portability. But mainstream mobile PCs have not shed sufficient weight, and do not offer the all-day battery life, to substantiate their promise of real mobility.” And that’s only some of what Gartner had to say. Should you be concerned that your notebook is no longer in vogue? Not as far as we’re concerned. We don’t deny that tablets are arguably the hottest tech items on the market right now, but Gartner’s probably getting ahead of themselves by predicting the mortality of mobile PCs. We’re excited as everyone else about tablets, and at the same time, we’re aware of their shortcomings. Hammering out a lengthy email is time consuming enough on a tablet, but try typing out a multiple page report. It’s not fun. And while they’re great for casual entertainment and social networking, you’re not going to rip a DVD on your tablet or do anything that requires something more powerful than a Tegra 2 chip. What’s your take on all this? Do you think tablets have a shot at eclipsing notebooks, or can these two segments co-exist?
Feature: Calling all cars: cell phone networks and the future of traffic
February 26th, 2011
admin Ask someone what they think the future of driving is, and the most likely response involves self-driving cars. And it’s true that sensing and autonomy are dramatically changing the modern car, but there’s another information revolution taking place outside the windows. Cheap sensors and network availability are



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