The fastest digital camera

Casio EX-F1 is the fastest digital camera in the world. EX-F1 can capture in salvo up to 60 pictures per second, at the maximum resolution of 6 mega pixels and record the video in Full HD format with 60 fps, or at a smaller resolution up to 1200 fps catching movements that can not be seen with eyes.

The first bionic eye

Doctor Mark Humayun, professor of the ophthalmology and biomedical engineering together with experts from the Doheny Eye Institute, Los Angeles, California initiated the first bionic eye. Bionic eye consists of a video camera at the dimensions of the haricot bean grain implanted in the eyeball. The camera is connected to an artificial retina, which transmits moving images to the brain by the optic nerve.

A new Nokia concept: fan phone with a flexible screen

In case you were impressioned with the Morph concept, then we are ready to strike you again, now with a phone concept Open.

Researchers cram bio-signal monitoring system inside baseball cap

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Never before has headgear been so intrinsically linked with actual brain waves. Thanks to a team of researchers looking to create a method for “continuously monitoring high-temporal resolution brain dynamics without requiring conductive gels applied to the scalp,” a new baseball cap has been created to do the trick. Said hat conceals five embedded dry electrodes which contact the wearer’s forehead, while a single electrode behind the left ear acquires EEG signals. From there, the data is transferred wirelessly and can be processed in real-time to determine a driver’s level of drowsiness, for instance. The gurus behind the invention have high hopes for its future, and they’ve already envisioned it being used in a plethora of medical scenarios and for controlling home electronics. To those about to rock this — prepare for some serious hat-hair.

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Nanosoccer at 2008 US RoboCup Open promises to be a real riot for the microscopic set

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All your unicellular buddies are just going to love this. The National Institute of Standards and Technology is rallying a trio of student-built nanobot teams to compete at the world’s most popular sport, which will be the second time nanosoccer has accompanied the RoboCup Open. The difference with this year’s competition is that the public will be invited to watch. Of course, with a playing field the size of a grain of rice, a microscope will be used to show the crazy antics of the remote-controlled robots as they bat around nanoballs the diameter of a human hair. Sounds harmless, but just you wait: before you know it these little bots will start marrying Spice Girls and faking on-field injuries just like the pros.

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Nanosoccer at 2008 US RoboCup Open promises to be a real riot for the microscopic set

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All your unicellular buddies are just going to love this. The National Institute of Standards and Technology is rallying a trio of student-built nanobot teams to compete at the world’s most popular sport, which will be the second time nanosoccer has accompanied the RoboCup Open. The difference with this year’s competition is that the public will be invited to watch. Of course, with a playing field the size of a grain of rice, a microscope will be used to show the crazy antics of the remote-controlled robots as they bat around nanoballs the diameter of a human hair. Sounds harmless, but just you wait: before you know it these little bots will start marrying Spice Girls and faking on-field injuries just like the pros.

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ASUS prepping to sue Gigabyte over “disinformation”

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ASUS is firing up the legal team to address what it percieves as defamation on the part of Gigabyte. In the line of fire is ASUS‘ Energy Processing Unit, which Gigabyte claims isn’t a technological change on the part of ASUS, but instead “numbers marketing” and “cheating end users.” Gigabyte says ASUS also misrepresented the energy saving numbers on Gigabyte’s competing DES motherboards, and had plenty of other nerdy trash talk for its rival. “How can you believe it? Everything [Asus] say are lies,” was the money quote from a Tom’s Hardware article on the subject, and ASUS isn’t going to take it lying down. “This ‘disinformation’ is not only extremely damaging to ASUS but also completely misleading to the consumers. ASUS reserves the right to take legal action against any individual, organization or corporation which creates or spreads such rumors.” We love a good nerd fight, and this is shaping up into a right proper one.

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Swashbot sashays his way into our hearts

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Most bug-inspired robots do a much better job of creeping us out than giving us the warm fuzzies, but this here Swashbot R/C robot from Crabfu is just too cute for words. It kind of looks like he’s trying to find his little robot buddies so they can sing a song about slushies before nap time, while simultaneously dragging a cinder block behind him. You know, cute. Video is after the break.

Continue reading Swashbot sashays his way into our hearts

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Oscar Pistorius free to qualify for Olympics on prosthetics

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Good news for the cyborgs in the crowd: the ruling by the International Association of Athletics Federations that barred double-amputee sprinter Oscar Pistorious from a shot at the Olympics has been overturned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Detractors from Oscar’s entry into the Olympics have cited a suspect study that says Oscar could be using as little as 25% of the energy of other sprinters, thanks to the mechanical advantage of his “Cheetah” prosthetics, which basically act as springs. Others feared that this could set a dangerous precedent for the entry of bionics into athletic competition, but the ruling was rather tightly worded, and if related cases come up they will be tried individually. Of course, Oscar still has to qualify, and his personal best in the 400 is about a second off the qualifying time for Beijing. Even if he can’t make it, he plans try for the world championships and the London Olympics in 2012.

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Oscar Pistorius free to qualify for Olympics on prosthetics

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Good news for the cyborgs in the crowd: the ruling by the International Association of Athletics Federations that barred double-amputee sprinter Oscar Pistorious from a shot at the Olympics has been overturned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Detractors from Oscar’s entry into the Olympics have cited a suspect study that says Oscar could be using as little as 25% of the energy of other sprinters, thanks to the mechanical advantage of his “Cheetah” prosthetics, which basically act as springs. Others feared that this could set a dangerous precedent for the entry of bionics into athletic competition, but the ruling was rather tightly worded, and if related cases come up they will be tried individually. Of course, Oscar still has to qualify, and his personal best in the 400 is about a second off the qualifying time for Beijing. Even if he can’t make it, he plans try for the world championships and the London Olympics in 2012.

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