The Titans

Power To Dream and Strength To Achieve

Thursday, 3 November 2011

Wonderful Bicycle Styles By Carlos Rolon


Technology |Wonderful Bicycle 
Styles By Carlos Rolon| Carlos Rolon is generally known as Dzine, he came to be in Chicago in 1970,   he’s master in creating sculptures of various kinds that should be so attractive and mind-blowing and many of them are extremely little so peoples just thing how its made, lolllzzz, He’s also artist of  installations, his illustration is completely awesome, eye catching. However today we just presented here beautiful his mad sculptures of bikes. Lately he’s created something really unusual. It’s a number of custom bikes encrusted with gold, platinum and crystals with all the author’s engravings and drawings

Tuesday, 1 November 2011

A Versatile Touch Sensor

 A new system adapted from a technology used for underwater cables could lead to touch sensors in clothes and coffee tables.
A Versatile Touch Sensor
A Versatile Touch Sensor

Technology | Technologies | We live in an increasingly touchy-feely tech world, with various ways for smart phones and tablet computers to sense our finger taps and gestures. Now a much cheaper type of touch technology, developed by researchers at the University of Munich and the Hasso Plattner Institute, could lead to touch sensitivity being added to everyday items such as clothing, headphone wires, coffee tables, and even pieces of paper.
The new touch technology relies on something called time domain reflectometry, or TDR, which has been used for decades to find damage in underwater cables. TDR is simple in theory: send a short electrical pulse down a cable and wait until a reflection of the pulse comes back. Based on the known speed of the pulse and the time it takes to come back, software can determine the position of the problem—damage in the line or some sort of change in electrical conductance.
Patrick Baudisch, professor of computer science at the Hasso Plattner Institute, says engineers noticed in the 1960s that the technology could be used to indicate a touch of a wire. Recently, the ability to sense the short time delay over very short distances has gotten more accurate, which made it possible to use TDR for interactive applications.
The TDR implementation is straightforward, according to Raphael Wimmer, a student at the University of Munich who developed the new approach with Baudisch. For one demonstration, he taped two parallel strips of copper to a piece of paper. Metal clips connect the copper strips to a pulse generator and detector. Pico-second-long electrical pulses are sent out, and if there's any change in capacitance between the two strips of copper—produced by a finger close to or touching the wires, for instance—part of the pulse is reflected back.
An oscilloscope shows the changing waveform produced by the reflected pulse, and software on a connected computer determines the position of the touch. The current setup is a bit clunky, Wimmer admits, but he says it should be feasible to shrink the pulse generation, detection, and position calculation onto a chip.
To make a surface touch-sensitive requires only two wires (or metal traces of conductive ink), which can be configured in various patterns to get the necessary coverage. In contrast, a capacitive touch screen like the one in the iPhone uses a matrix of wires coming out of two sides of the screen. "You have to route them to a controller in special ways, and that's quite complicated," says Wimmer. TDR avoids the engineering challenges of a traditional capacitive touch surface, he says.  
"Wimmer's application of TDR to touch is very clever," says Jeff Han, founder and CEO of Perceptive Pixel, a company that is developing large multi-touch displays. He suspects that it could provide new ways of detecting user input like touch sensing along an unmodified headphone cable, something that would be difficult to do with traditional sensors.
Over the next couple of months, Wimmer says, the researchers will be testing ways to shrink the TDR system design into a chip. He says he's also exploring the possibility of using light pulses in fiber optics as well as electrical pulses in cables because light would be immune to the electrical interference common in capacitive touch systems.

Monday, 31 October 2011

Version of software is installed on your Apple iPhone, iPad, or iPod

iPhone 5
Technology|Version of software is installed on your Apple iPhone, iPad, or iPod|You can determine which version of software is installed on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod by navigating to the About screen:

iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch

  1. From the the Home Screen, tap Settings > General > About.
  2. The software version of your device will be listed on this screen.

Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium Announced


Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium Announced Camera Gadget
Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium 
Technology | Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium Announced | When it comes to digital cameras, most people stick to the more popular brands such as Sony, Nikon, Canon, Kodak, Fujifilm, and perhaps even Samsung. Well, what about Leica? This is certainly an old school brand from Germany that has stood the test of time, and in their latest iteration of the highly successful D-Lux line, the German company decided to roll out a special edition of the Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium.
Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium Announced Camera Gadget
Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium 

This will be a 10.1-megapixel shooter that will sport silver-grey styling that is impressively elegant in terms of design, and it sure helps that high-quality materials are also used in its construction to further reinforce its refined appearance. If you are a collector of digital cameras that come in different editions (ala the Nintendo DS Lite), then you would be pleased to have the Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium in your sights.
Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium Announced Camera Gadget
Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium 
After all, you surely cannot argue the fact that each purchase comes with a premium titanium-colored leather case as well as the latest Adobe Photoshop Lightroom professional image-processing software, helping cement the D-Lux 5 Titanium set’s position as an all-inclusive package for discerning photographers – in addition to being an object of desire for lovers of stylish products and exquisite accessories.
Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium Announced Camera Gadget
Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium 
Apart from the aesthetic upgrades of this special edition, all the advanced technical specifications of the standard model Leica D-Lux 5 will remain similar, making it an ideal tool to deal with a wide range of photographic opportunities. For instance, the D-Lux 5 Titanium will incorporate a fast zoom lens with a focal length range from 24 to 90 mm (35 mm equivalent focal length), delivering a 1/1.63รข€ CCD image sensor that can be said to be unusually large for a compact camera.
Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium Announced Camera Gadget
Leica D-Lux 5 Titanium 
It also has a wide viewing angle and 460,000 pixel resolution, where the camera monitor will show off extremely high quality images both before and after capture. It has clearly laid-out functions and straightforward operation so that even newbies are able to take it up and start composing their shots right away without having to leaf through a really thick manual. If you want to record High Definition video with this puppy, that too, can be arranged.


Sunday, 30 October 2011

Microsoft and Nokia Deal


Technology|Microsoft and Nokia Deal|Microsoft is moving forward with a controversial deal that has the tech giant paying Nokia better than $1 billion in return for the handset maker to produce a wide array of Windows-based smartphones.
According to Bloomberg News, reports of Microsoft’s $1 billion “payoff” come from anonymous sources that are said to be close to the deal.

Thursday, 27 October 2011

Nokia Rolls the Dice with Windows Devices

Nokia Rolls the Dice with Windows Devices
Smart but tardy: This Lumia 800 is the high-end version of Nokia's new smart phone.
Nokia
With modest hardware, Nokia's new phones may struggle to stand out.



Troubled cell-phone maker Nokia today made a long anticipated move to recapture a share of the fiercely competitive smart-phone market with the launch of two handsets running Microsoft's Windows mobile software.
The Lumia 800 and the Lumia 710 are the first fruits of the Microsoft-Nokia alliance, a high-stakes gamble in a daunting battle with Apple, Google, and others for relevance in the fast-growing mobile-computing market.
Over the last five years, Nokia has experienced a dramatic reversal in fortunes. The company once dominated the high-end phone market with its Symbian-powered phones, but Apple's iPhone and devices running Google's Android have jumped ahead.

Nokia still sells many low-end phones, especially in developing countries, but this market could disappear as more powerful devices proliferate. Time is also running out. Amid fierce competition, sales of Nokia smart phones fell 34 percent in 2010, but sales of its low-end phones also fell 16 percent. The company's market value has halved since February, and third-quarter results showed its smart-phone sales down 38 percent compared with last year.
The new Windows phones were unveiled during company CEO Stephen Elop's keynote speech at the Nokia World event in London. "We are signaling our intent right now, here today, to be today's leaders in smart-phone design and craftsmanship," said Elop, a former Microsoft executive who signed the partnership deal with Microsoft in February.
In a swipe at other manufacturers, such as HTC and Samsung, that have already launched Windows phones, he added: "Lumia is the first real Windows phone."
The hardware unveiled by Nokia offered few surprises, however. The Lumia 800 design is identical to that of the Nokia N9. Inside it is a 1.4-gigahertz processor and 512 megabytes of RAM, which lags behind the dual-core chips boasted by the iPhone 4S and Samsung Galaxy 5. The Lumia has a 3.7-inch AMOLED 800-by-480 screen that sits under curved glass to give it a raised effect, and an eight-megapixel camera with an f2.2 aperture lens that will let in more light than most other phones, although the lack of a front-facing camera may put off those who use video calling. The phone is 12 millimeters thick, which is bulkier than the latest Android phones.

Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Researchers Couple Printed Logic with Printed Memory

Researchers Couple Printed Logic with Printed Memory
Print out: The printed transistors on this sheet, made by PARC and Thinfilm, can address an array of printed memory cells.
Thinfilm

The device processes only small amounts of data, but at a very low cost.

Printed electronics have been advancing in bits and pieces for years—a crude processor here, a basic memory device there.
Now researchers at the Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) and the Norwegian companyThinfilm Electronics have announced a printed electronic device that, for the first time, marries transistors with memory. The device provides a low-cost way to read, write, and process small amounts of data. In addition, the added logic increases the amount of data that can be stored.
Printed circuits, made of organic inks, operate far more slowly and with less memory capacity than their silicon counterparts, but they can be made for pennies. Printed circuits can also go where silicon currently cannot: wrapping around a child's toy, for example, or conforming to the curve of a soldier's helmet.
Earlier this year, Thinfilm showed off a handheld device capable of reading cards printed with circuits that store 20 bits of data. In May, the company announced engineering deals with two major toy manufacturers who plan to use its printable memory.


Adding logic to memory is crucial to increasing the storage capacity of the device, explains Janos Veres, manager of printed electronics at PARC. "We really needed to have a printed logic array that lets us address memory and increase bit count," he says. Memory arrays are split up into rows and columns. To select a row or column, you need a logic circuit, Veres says. "The power of this demonstration is we've shown that you can address rows and columns with this technology," he says. "The next step will be building bigger memory."
One of the major advances of this prototype is the development of printed logic circuits that are analogous to so-called CMOS circuits in silicon. CMOS stands for complementary-metal oxide-semiconductor—a combination of two key kinds of transistors, called an n-type and a p-type.