L'optique des fibres remplacera-t-elle le lightbulb ?

« Le Solon, Ohio-basé compagnie a proposé une manière de combiner des lampes d'industriel-catégorie avec la technologie de fibre optique pour créer les systèmes de d'éclairage intérieur qui consomment loin moins d'énergie que les ampoules fluorescentes ou incandescentes traditionnelles. Une lampe à décharges à haute intensité haloïde en métal simple de 70 watts de Fiberstars lié au système de la fibre de la compagnie peut fournir autant éclairage que huit ampoules incandescentes de 50 watts. »
par l'intermédiaire de cnet
, Shows, ShowsPlay Starcraft via a touch screen!
Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode
Here’s a Linux powered touch screen Startcraft via wine.
Wine let’s you run windows program in Linux.
FYI: VMWare can do it too.
via techeblog
Supersize Your TV for $300: Build Your Own XGA Projector!

Yes, now you can build your own…
via denguru
SAMSUNG is Set to Demonstrate 4th Generation Mobile Technology
“Jeju, Korea � August 30, 2006 : Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. announced its plan to demonstrate 4th Generation (4G) mobile technology at the annual Samsung 4G Forum in Jeju Island, Korea for the first time in the world. Demonstration will take place at the specially designed bus in mobile circumstances reaching 100 Mbps data transmission as well as at the display area inside forum venue to show speeds of 1Gbps of data transmission.
via samsung
Greenpeace slams Apple, Motorola and Lenovo for toxic chemicals

Flickr google photo tagging

Here’s a cool way that you can check out pictures of certain locations before going somewhere…
(Hey check it out! Zedomax.com headquarters (or garage) is on there, see Lincoln Park?)
via make
Google Book Search for free e-books!
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low res video to high res video technology

Hmm…this is good technology we need this for youtube…”Motion DSP is creating a simple web based interface that will significantly enhance low resolution camera phone video into surprisingly high quality stuff. It started off in 1998 as a U.S. military funded project at UC Santa Cruz. In January 2005, Professor Peyman Milanfar, the primary researcher behind the technology, co-founded Motion DSP.”via techcrunch

























