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Technology

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ELECTRONICS

NIST develops the world's first two-qubit programmable quantum computer

By Dario Borghino

19:55 November 17, 2009 PST

NIST postdoctoral researcher David Hanneke at the laser table used to demonstrate the firs...

In a paper recently published on Nature Physics, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) documented the implementation and verification of a two-qubit quantum computer that, according to researchers, is a truly general-purpose machine and could soon be used as a building block for much larger quantum computers. Read More

TELECOMMUNICATIONS

Video - The HMV type 905: pre-war television packs a killer punch

By Gizmag Team

21:33 November 2, 2009 PST

Bonham's Laurence Fisher talks us through the HMV type 905 table model television

In the latest installment of our video series looking at Michael Bennett-Levy’s collection of early technology, Laurence Fisher from Bonham's introduces us to a 1938 HMV type 905 table model television and wireless that was a wonder of engineering for its time. The exterior of the HMV model 905 television is a three-quarter figured burr walnut veneered case with molded edge housing a 7-inch screen. Click through for a closer look at this fascinating slice of history which has been restored with authentic pre-war era components and is in complete working order... and there's also a word of warning to those interested in dabbling in pre-war televisons - TV repair can be a lethal occupation. Read More

ECOGIZMO

Sharp sets highest solar cell efficiency

By Paul Ridden

05:39 October 27, 2009 PDT

Sharp's 35.8% efficiency triple-junction compound solar cell

The Sharp Corporation has developed a compound solar cell that has achieved a conversion efficiency of 35.8 percent. Developing a new base layer for its triple-junction compound solar cell has improved on Sharp's previous conversion efficiency by almost four percent. Read More

ELECTRONICS

Tag it: real-time location monitoring with the T301W Wi-Fi tag from Ekahau

By Paul Ridden

18:15 October 19, 2009 PDT

The T301W wrist tag from Ekahau offers simple two-way communication as well as an 'unprece...

If you need to keep track of customers, workers or even your kids, but don't fancy the idea of implanting a chip, then the familiar form offered by Ekahau's T301W may be of interest. The unobtrusive watch-like wristband tag enables real-time location monitoring over a Wi-Fi network. It's accurate to within a few feet, allows for simple two-way communication and, being waterproof, can be safely disinfected for re-use. Read More

TELECOMMUNICATIONS

A cheap way to increase capacity and improve download speeds of strained broadband networks

By Darren Quick

23:19 October 18, 2009 PDT

The principle of optical Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing (oOFDM)

A new technology that applies the same principles used by ADSL to improve the capacity of data transfer over copper and wireless broadband could potentially increase the data capacity of optical fiber cables tenfold. It’s creators say the technology, known as optical Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing (oOFDM), offers an inexpensive way drastically boost the capacity of increasingly strained broadband networks and improve download times around the world. Read More

AROUND THE HOME

Dyson ditches blades on Air Multiplier desk fan

By Paul Lester

14:45 October 15, 2009 PDT

The Dyson Air Multiplier

The humble desk fan wouldn’t be top of many people’s list when it comes to modern technology that needs reinventing, but James Dyson, who knows a thing or two about manipulating airflow, has decided that it’s time to do away with those pesky blades that would seem a fundamental part of any design. Read More

SCIENCE AND EDUCATION

Is there something in the hair? The tale of a solar cell made with human hair

By Paul Ridden

11:37 October 15, 2009 PDT

A close up of the solar cell created by the Trinity team - the dark hair can clearly be se...

Debate is good. Debate is healthy. Debate is currently raging after an article recently appeared on the UK's Daily Mail website announcing a revolutionary solar cell that's made using human hair. A group of teenage students from Nepal claim to have replaced expensive doped silicon used in conventional solar panels with cheap and readily available human hair to produce a cell capable of generating 9V (18W) of electricity. Curiosity got the better of Gizmag's Paul Ridden, who contacted one of the team to find out more. Read More

ECOGIZMO

France to spend US$2.2 billion on network of electric car charging stations

By Jeff Salton

19:15 October 11, 2009 PDT

Electric vehicle charging stations similar to this one are expected to populate parking lo...

As France’s car-makers push their plans to increase sales and give motorists more electric and hybrid-powered vehicle choices, the French Government has added its support by announcing it intends to spend €1.5 billion (about US$2.2 billion) on creating a battery-charging network for electric vehicles across the country. Part of its spend will also go towards further encouragement of clean vehicle technology and battery manufacturing. Read More

MOBILE TECHNOLOGY

Fujitsu announces winners of Mobile Phone design competition

By Paul Ridden

03:04 October 7, 2009 PDT

Grand Prize winner Gesture by Jin-gwon GO  (Images: Fujitsu Limited)

In May of this year, Fujitsu called on the imagination of the public to help the company come up with some mobile designs for the future. Offering budding designers the choice of being realistically practical or wildly imaginative, the company received around 2000 entries over the Summer and has just announced the winners at the CEATEC technology trade show in Japan. Read More

ECOGIZMO

Helix looking to use mobile phone towers for wind energy generation

By Paul Ridden

02:03 October 3, 2009 PDT

Mobile towers in the future could be self sufficient if wind turbines are used to power th...

Later this month, Helix Wind Corporation will deliver its first test wind turbines to Eltek Network Solutions Group for installation at two test sites in Nigeria. Sites in the US are also set to take delivery of test modules. The turbines will provide a clean energy solution for mobile phone towers and if tests prove successful, could see wind power being rolled out to hundreds of sites over the next few years. Read More

AUTOMOTIVE

Drawing power from the road

By Darren Quick

19:59 October 1, 2009 PDT

The electric car of the future will “refuel” while driving or parked, complete...

It’s starting to look like roads will become much more than simple thoroughfares made of concrete and asphalt in the not too distant future. As we’ve seen, work is already underway to embed them with solar panels and piezoelectric generators to generate electricity. Now engineering company Ingenieurgesellschaft Auto und Verkehr (IAV) is looking to embed them with electrical conductors that would “refuel” the electric cars of the future while they are driving or parked. Read More

CAMERAS AND IMAGING

DEMO: Xerox 'Color By Words' uses simple language to get great pictures

By Jeff Salton

19:22 September 24, 2009 PDT

Karen Braun, Xerox color research scientist, helped develop a natural language that allows...

If you’re not a graphic designer, you may have struggled in the past to get your personal photos looking their best when relying on your printer’s color adjustment settings. Complex color wheels, sliders, brightness and contrast editors, and highlight tools all look handy – until you try to use them. Xerox has devised Natural Language Color Editing technology that allows you to adjust the colors in your printed documents by accessing plain English phrases. A drop-down Color By Words menu on your computer offers phrases like: ‘Make the blues a lot more vibrant’, which will then do just that across the entire document or image. Combining words can form thousands of different phrases to deliver the results you want. You can watch the demo video below or test drive the technology for yourself via the link at the end of this story. Read More

ECOGIZMO

Envion Oil Generator turns plastic waste into oil

By Paul Ridden

17:12 September 21, 2009 PDT

The Envion Oil Generator, a new technology that converts plastic waste into oil, at the Mo...

The ground-breaking Envion Oil Generator (EOG) gave its first public performance at the Montgomery County Solid Waste Transfer Station in Derwood, Maryland recently. The EOG can be fed almost any petroleum-based waste plastic and will convert it into synthetic light to medium oil for less than USD$10 per barrel. As with crude oil, the synthetic oil can then be processed into commercial fuels or even back into plastic. Read More

PERSONAL COMPUTING

A touchy subject: the new maXTouch chip from Atmel

By Paul Ridden

16:27 September 16, 2009 PDT

Atmel's new maXTouch mXT224 touchscreen controller chip

Atmel has just announced that its highly anticipated maXTouch mXT224 capacitive touchscreen controller chip is now ready for production release. Atmel representatives are positively bubbling with excitement about this product, which supports an unlimited number of simultaneous screen touches, looks out for unintentional touches and delivers smooth visuals with refresh rates of up to 250Hz - all on one tough, tiny, low-power chip. Read More

ECOGIZMO

First Suncatcher solar dishes to be used in Arizona

By Paul Ridden

15:56 September 2, 2009 PDT

Suncatcher technology has recently achieved the highest sun-to-grid conversion efficiency

Tessera Solar and Salt River Project have just announced that they'll partner to construct a 1.5 megawatt solar generation installation in Peoria, Arizona. The proposed output from the Maricopa Solar LLC project might not sound too impressive, but when combined with the news that the 60 dish installation represents a template for much bigger operations to come and will be the first commercial plant to use Suncatcher technology - things just got interesting. Read More

RESEARCH WATCH

Sound could be the key in building tomorrow's nanostructures

By Dario Borghino

19:55 September 1, 2009 PDT

'Acoustic tweezers' enable flexible on-chip manipulation and patterning of cells using sta...

Researchers from Penn State University have found a way to precisely manipulate tiny objects using sound rather than optical instruments with a quick, energy-effective and technologically-simple technique that could have important applications in the fields of nanotechnology and biological research. Read More

AROUND THE HOME

Visions of the future with Electrolux Design Lab

By Paul Ridden

18:49 September 1, 2009 PDT

The Electrolux Design Lab finalists

Every year home appliance giant Electrolux throws down a design gauntlet to students from all over the world and challenges them come up with some novel ideas for household gadgets of the future. The company has just announced this year's eight Design Lab finalists and extended an invitation to the public to get involved to choose a favorite. What sort of gadgetry do young designers think will be available to us over the next 90 years? Read More

ELECTRONICS

Kodak flexible OLED display gets its feet wet

By Darren Quick

20:20 August 30, 2009 PDT

Some Playmobil people enjoy the underwater flexible OLED display

Flexible Organic Light Emitting Diode (FOLED) technology has opened the door to a range of new lighting and display applications, such as roll-up displays and displays embedded in fabrics or clothing. Unfortunately OLED displays are notoriously moisture sensitive, so underwater applications haven’t really been an option – until now. Kodak has dunked their latest FOLED displays under water to provide a virtual aquarium for a group of assembled Playmobil people. Read More

ELECTRONICS

Liquid-OLED design could boost lifetime for OLED displays

By Dario Borghino

17:36 August 27, 2009 PDT

The liquid-OLED structure, with an enhanced view of the liquid semiconductor layer.

Researchers from the Center for Future Chemistry at Kyushu University in Fukuoka, Japan, have been exploring a new kind of organic light-emitting diodes that use a generated liquid to transfer electrical charge, addressing problems such as flexibility and quick degradation in standard OLED technology. Read More

RESEARCH WATCH

Tunable electromagnetic 'invisible gateway' brings science closer to fiction

By Dario Borghino

17:30 August 26, 2009 PDT

The structure of the invisible electromagnetic gateway is comprised of two perfect electri...

Harnessing the unique properties of metamaterials, researchers in China have recently published a work detailing the implementation of a thin air, broadband and remotely controllable 'invisible gateway' that is able to shield all types of electromagnetic waves while letting through all other physical objects. Read More

MUSIC

Let Concert Hands teach you to play piano

By Paul Ridden

18:56 August 25, 2009 PDT

The Concert Hands track and wrist guides in front of a piano, waiting for you to start lea...

Have you ever dreamed of playing piano but the thought of committing yourself to years of grueling lessons fills you with dread? Then you just might be interested in the Concert Hands system, where your hands are gently guided back and forth along a track positioned just in front of the keys, and pulses prompt your fingers as each note is displayed on a screen in front of you. According to the developers, the technology will have you playing fluently in a few short days. Read More

RESEARCH WATCH

Newly theorized active cloaking could achieve broadband invisibility

By Dario Borghino

18:41 August 24, 2009 PDT

With active cloaking, three devices placed around an object neutralize and later rebuild t...

Mathematicians at the University of Utah have recently announced they have elaborated an innovative way to shield two-dimensional objects from all types of waves, from electromagnetic to those caused by natural events like earthquakes and tsunamis, leading the way to a completely new approach to achieving invisibility. Read More

ECOGIZMO

Not your average solar panel: The SRS solar roof tile

By Paul Ridden

18:35 August 23, 2009 PDT

The Solé Power Tile is the first building-integrated photovoltaic roofing product and...

Thanks to a system created by SRS Energy and offered exclusively as an upgrade option to customers of US Tile (the largest manufacturer of clay tile in the United States), those wishing to benefit from rooftop solar energy will no longer have to worry about any panels being stuck on the side of the roof and spoiling the aesthetics. The Solé Power Tile system is the first building-integrated photovoltaic roofing product designed to blend in with curved roof tiles commonly found in the Pacific West and Southwest of the United States. Read More

ECOGIZMO

Korean electric vehicle solution

By Paul Ridden

00:08 August 20, 2009 PDT

KAIST Online Electric Vehicle uses non-contact magnetic charging to draw its power needs f...

Researchers at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) have developed an electric transport system where the vehicles get their power needs from cables underneath the surface of the road via non-contact magnetic charging. As well as potentially saving Koreans a lot of money by reducing crude oil imports, widespread adoption of the technology also offers the potential of improving air quality in currently polluted cities. Read More

ECOGIZMO

Entech Solar energy hybrid has hopes for bright future

By Jeff Salton

02:44 August 14, 2009 PDT

The new prototype ThermaVolt II - improved technology delivering more energy at a reduced ...

Renewable energy technology company Entech Solar has completed a preliminary design review and prototype of its next-generation concentrating solar product, ThermaVolt II, which combines concentrating photovoltaic and thermal (CPVT) technology. The company says its product delivers four to five times the amount of energy compared to traditional photovoltaic systems and costs less to produce. Read More

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