Archive for March, 2009

Honda Research Institute and Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute have co-developed a brain machine interface (BMI) system that allows a person to control a robot through thought alone.

The system builds on previous work announced three years ago towards a possible future where devices can be controlled by thought. In 2006 Honda and ATR researchers managed to get a robotic hand to move by analyzing brain activity using a large MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scanner like that found in hospitals.

JAPAN HONDA ROBOT

The latest work is a step more advanced and measures the electrical activity in a person’s brain using electroencephalography (EEG) and blood flow within the brain using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to produce data that is then interpreted into control information. It requires no physical movement.

Brain activity measuring device

Check out this video that shows the technology in action.

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Talk about invasion of privacy. Check out how Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags can affect our future.

Part 1

Part 2

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Miniatur Wunderland Hamburg is one of the most successful permanent exhibitions in Northern Germany. It’s billed as the world’s largest model train set — a miniature world that snakes along seven and a half miles (12 kilometers) of track, amid fields, cities, even the snowcapped Swiss Alps.

And it’s quickly becoming one of Germany’s biggest tourist attractions.

Twin brothers Frederick and Gerrit Braun, 41, have turned their boyhood passion for model railroads into a lucrative private museum called Miniatur Wunderland that has kept adding track since its 2001 opening and drew 1 million visitors last year.

Learn more at Munatur Wunderland’s site.

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Commercialization of nurse robots seen in 5 years

Toshiba introduces its prototype housekeeping robot “ApriAttenda”
Robots designed to provide day-care and nursing services will be put into practical use at Japanese households in as soon as five years, a government panel said Wednesday. Based on the projection, the government and the private sector will accelerate their efforts to formulate common safety standards for nurse robots in the years ahead, industry ministry officials said.

To create a new robot market, the officials said the establishment of safety standards by a third party in a neutral way will be essential. The New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization, a government-backed entity, will launch a new five-year project in April that has a strong focus on improving safety technology and standards of the next-generation robots, they said.

Japan’s view is that robots will play a key role in supporting the country’s rapidly aging population.

As about 7% of industrial robots in the world are made by Japanese companies, the government is hoping that expansion of the industry will also lead to a promising source of economic growth.

In Japan alone, the robot market is expected to total around 6.2 trillion yen in 2025, of which 4.2 trillion yen will likely be linked to day care and nursing, according to the officials.

Source: JapanToday

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Samsung has decided to enter the fray of ebook readers that are bringing more competition to Amazon’s Kindle. They are launching a touchscreen e-book reader in Europe and Korea this June and it’s anticipated that it will eventually make its way to the US market. The device will feature a stylus for touching the screen and 512MB of on-board memory for storing content; there is no support for an SD card.

Samsung debut Touchscreen Ebook 8

It claims to be more than an eBook; it has a memo pad, calendar, task list, calnedar, world clock, diary, calculator, and a contact list as well… And, as seems to be apparent by the pictures, must be available in different colors.

Samsung debut Touchscreen Ebook 6

See more images at Pocket-Lint.

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A Shandong carpenter named Peijia Wu has created a bicycle made entirely out of wood.

woodenbike_shandong.jpg

The 55-year-old from Nanzhuang village, near Qingdao, took three months to build the two-wheeler. It has no metal parts whatsoever – the joints were fixed with small wooden bungs and the chain mechanism was replaced by a rod-crank system that rotates the wheel.

As it turns out, this isn’t a first. 16 year-old Marco Facciola built this completely wooden bike for a school project. His version even has a chain and gearing made of wood, held together with wooden joints and glue. The detail in the free-wheeling ratchet and spacers between the chain links, pinned with tiny dowels, is amazing.

Source: ShanghaiList, Gizmodo

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Fictionwise, Inc. announced a beta version of eReader for BlackBerry devices that is now available for evaluation. The new BlackBerry version includes the ability to change font sizes, bookmark pages, and perform text searches on your document.

For your convenience, you can copy and paste this URL in an email and open it on your BlackBerry. The URL is: http://www.ereader.com/bb-beta.xjad

You can navigate ebooks using the…

Trackball: You can scroll the trackball up to go to the previous page and down to advance the page.

Keyboard: Pressing “Space” will advance the page and “shift+Space” will go to the previous page.

Touchscreen (where supported): Clicking the screen on the bottom half or right side will advance the page. Clicking the screen on the top half or left side will go to the previous page. You can also swipe the screen to the right to go to the previous page and swipe the screen to the left to go to the next page.

You can also use the “Table of Contents” and “Go To Page” items in the menu to jump to any section of the eBook.

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Following is a portion of a post by Mark Wilson on Gizmodo…

Ford continues their push for tech-friendly vehicles with a new announcement to put computers with Sprint 3G connections into the dashboards of 2009 F-Series trucks and E-Series cargo vans.

As of now, this “Ford Work Solutions” system seems aimed at construction workers who need on-site computer systems to track inventory and schematics. While the system’s screen seems a bit small, Ford promises that one can “review and edit graphically-rich blueprints” from the cab of their truck.

Read the entire article on Gizmodo.

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Writers today need to understand how to diversify by writing for different markets, including personal blogs, websites and for technical assignments. This emphasis on versatility means that no matter what your major’s focus was in college or what your writing background is, you’ve got a lot to learn if you want to continue to succeed in the writing world. Luckily, you don’t have to waste time or money going back to school. This list of 100 free open courseware links can help you improve your essay-writing, fiction, blogging, and even managing your own small business.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Paralegal Schools posted the following 15 frivolous lawsuits…

In this increasingly litigious society, it takes an astounding mix of talent and gall to make headlines with a lawsuit, but here are 15 examples of frivolous lawsuits that will make you mad enough to sue.

Tomas Delgado1. Man Sues Family of Boy He Ran Over
January 2008: Spanish businessman Tomas Delgado sued the family of the 17-year-old boy he’d hit and killed for the damage that the boy’s body did to his Audi. Delgado was speeding at the time, but since the boy was cycling alone at night without reflectors or a helmet, the driver wasn’t charged with anything other than being a complete jerk. Under public pressure, he later dropped his lawsuit.

2. Sleeping Student Sues Teacher for Waking Him Up
March 2008: In Danbury, Connecticut, 15-year-old Vinicios Robacher sued his teacher for slamming her palm on his desk to wake him up during class — an action that he claimed caused him ear damage.

AllenHeckard3. Man Sues Michael Jordan for Looking Like Him
July 2006: Portland, Oregon resident Allen Heckard sued former basketball star Michael Jordan and Nike founder Phil Knight for $832 million, claiming that they have made Jordan such a recognizable figure that he has suffered personal harm from being repeatedly mistaken for the basketball player. Within a month, Heckard had dropped the suit.

4. Mayor of Batman, Turkey Sues Batman
November 2008: The mayor of a city in Turkey called Batman sued Warner Brothers and The Dark Knight director Christopher Nolan for using the name without permission. Either it took the town’s residents 70 years to realize the superhero’s existence or they just wanted to cash in on The Dark Knight‘s billion-dollar box office take. You be the judge.

Kar Kemp5. Man Sues Homeless for $1 Million
January 2007: Karl Kemp, owner of a ritzy antiques store on Manhattan’s Madison Avenue, sued four homeless people who congregate in front of his shop because they scare off potential customers. The amount of the suit: $1 million, payable apparently in shopping carts full of aluminum cans.

6. Inmate Sues Himself
April 1995: Chesapeake, Virginia prison inmate Robert Lee Brock was upset at himself for getting arrested for breaking and entering and grand larceny, so he decided to make himself pay — by suing himself for $5 million. Stating that he violated his own religious beliefs by committing the crime, he sought payment for a civil rights offense. Of course, since he didn’t have $5 million to pay himself, he asked that the state pay on his behalf. His suit was thrown out.

Christoper Roller7. Magicians Sued for Stealing God’s Powers
June 2005: Reality-challenged Minnesota resident Christopher Roller sued magicians David Copperfield and David Blaine for using Roller’s “godly powers” without his permission to perform their acts. Roller, by the way, claimed to be a god. He also claimed that the movie The Truman Show was based on his life and that he was married to both Katie Couric and Celine Dion, with whom he planned to father 1 million babies.

8. Shooter’s Mom Seeks Workman’s Comp
October 2003: After Jonathon Russell went on a shooting spree at the manufacturing plant where he worked, leaving three dead and five injured, his mother filed for workman’s compensation benefits on his behalf, citing his “death by gunfire while on company clock.” She was denied.

Richard Batista9. Man Sues Wife for Donated Kidney
January 2009: After Long Island doctor Richard Batista was slapped with divorce papers from his cheating wife, he decided he’d had enough and sued her for the return of a gift he’d give her eight years prior: a kidney. If that wasn’t feasible, he’d “settle” for $1.5 million. You’re welcome.

10. Insurance Company Sues 81-Year-Old Woman for Icy Driveway
February 2007: A “meals on wheels” program was delivering food to 81-year-old Anne Keipper in Brookfield, Wisconsin when the delivery woman — who wasn’t wearing boots — slipped on a patch of ice in the driveway and fell. Three years later, Keipper was notified that she was being sued by Sentry Insurance for the medical expenses it paid related to the delivery woman’s fall. The moral: senior citizens too frail to leave their house to get food should diligently shovel ice off their driveway.

cookie girls11. Girls Sued for Baking Cookies
July 2005: Two well-meaning teenage girls in Durango, Colorado decided one summer night to bake cookies for their neighbors. They packaged the baked treats in plastic wrap with a heart-shaped message wishing the recipients a good night. When they knocked at the door of Wanita Renea Young, however, the woman became so terrified that someone was outside her house at 10:30 PM that she suffered an anxiety attack and successfully sued the girls for $930 to cover a trip to the emergency room. Her request for money to cover pain and suffering was denied.

12. Student Sues to Get A+
March 2003: High school senior Brian Delekta was so distraught that he got an A in one of his courses that he sued the school system. He felt he deserved an A+. Delekta, who had the highest GPA in his class at the time, felt that a “mere” A would hurt his chances of becoming the valedictorian. The course in question, incidentally, was a work-study program at a law firm. His supervisor in the position lobbied for him to get an A+, but maybe that’s because she’s his mother.

Mike Batt13. Musician Sued for Copying Silence
September 2002: Music publishers for the late avant-garde composer John Cage sued musician Mike Batt for plagiarism after he included a silent song on his album. That’s right: silence. No music or vocals whatsoever. The publishers claimed that Batt’s song, entitled “A Minute’s Silence,” ripped off Cage’s “4’33″, which also contained no music or vocals. Despite the seeming insanity of copyrighting silence, Batt agreed to settle out of court by paying a six-figure amount.

14. Man Sues to Inherit the Money of the Mother He Killed
January 2008: In 1999, schizophrenic Joshua Hoge stabbed his mother and half-brother to death but was found not guilty by reason of insanity. Nine years later, as he sat in a mental hospital, he sued to inherit his mother’s estate, which included a $800,000 payment received from the state when a court ruled that a public-health clinic that failed to give Hoge his medication was partly responsible for the murders.

Jonathan Lee Riches15. Mr. Frivolous Lawsuit
January 2006 – present: South Carolina inmate Jonathan Lee Riches has become a celebrity of sorts by filing more than 1,000 frivolous lawsuits while in jail. Some highlights:

  • August 2007: Sued baseball player Barry Bonds for $42 million for, amongst other things, selling steroids to nuns, giving mustard gas to Saddam Hussien and bench-pressing Riches “to show off in front of his ball park buddies.” Hank Aaron’s bat, which Riches claimed Bonds used to crack the Liberty Bell, was also named as a defendant in the suit.
  • September 2007: Sued Elvis Presley for stealing his sideburns, selling him tainted poultry and being in cahoots with Osama Bin Laden. Riches also claims that rap producer Suge Knight hung him from a Econo Lodge balcony with Vanilla Ice and that Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch harbors Hitler’s army.
  • September 2007: Claiming that he is a model and actor who’s starred in movies like The Karate Kid, Pee Wee’s Big Adventure and the Paris Hilton sex tape, Riches sued rapper 50 Cent for $35 billion, charging that the musician stole his lyrics and forced him to harass ’80s groups Bananarama and Tears for Fears.
  • And the piece de resistance: in March 2006, Riches sued 57 pages’ worth of defendants — including President George W. Bush, Pope Benedict XVI, Bill Gates, Queen Elizabeth, the Gambino crime family, Three Mile Island, Burt Reynolds, Google, the Salvation Army, the Wu-Tang Clan, the Magna Carta, “tsunami victims,” the Kremlin, Nostradamus, the Lincoln Memorial, Nordic gods, Pizza Hut, the European Union, the Methodist Church, Viagra, “ninja samurai fighters” and the planet Pluto — for an unspecified dollar amount for an unspecified civil rights offense.

In March 2008, the Northern District of Georgia made it difficult for Riches to file such frivolous lawsuits by requiring him to agree to be prosecuted for false statements before he submits, but that hasn’t stopped him from filing wacky suits in other districts across the country.

Original article on Paralegal Schools

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