By Electronic Enthusiast for Electronic Enthusiast.

Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Saturday, 19 September 2015

Fork that reminds you that you are eating too much

10:20 Posted by Unknown , , No comments

The fork is, well, a fork. But inside it has a capacitive sensor that knows how long it has been since you have taken your last bite. Say you take a bite of that piece of fish, chew it and then go for another bite within 10 seconds. The fork will know that and gently vibrate to tell you have been eating too fast.


Eating too fast leads to poor digestion and poor weight control. The HAPIfork, powered by Slow Control, is an electronic fork that helps you monitor and track your eating habits. It also alerts you with the help of indicator lights and gentle vibrations when you are eating too fast. Every time you bring food from your plate to your mouth with your fork, this action is called: a "fork serving".

 The HAPIfork also measures:
  • How long it took to eat your meal.
  • The amount of "fork servings" taken per minute.
  • Intervals between "fork servings".
This information is then uploaded via USB or Bluetooth to your Online Dashboard on HAPI.com to track your progress. The HAPIfork also comes with the HAPIfork and HAPI.com apps plus a coaching program to help improve your eating behavior.


You can now buy it online on Amazon
Thankyou cnet & abcnews for providing us with this information. And special thanks to HAPIfork for making an Intimate object judge me while eating as if my wife was not enough.

Wednesday, 8 October 2014

Japanese technologies could help feed future world of 9.6 billion

10:02 Posted by Unknown , , No comments
Magic Sand From Panasonic
"Magic sand" could be Panasonic's new big thing. This material, a byproduct of the company's induction heating cooking technology, can create an underground dam of sorts. Combined with a water recycling system, the dam makes agriculture possible even in arid regions. This in turn allows crops to grow faster than usual as fertilizers do not seep out.
 

     Using the technology, Panasonic produced 40% more tomatoes than usual this summer from a field at its research center in the city of Kyoto.
     

"We will endeavor to find new avenues to change our business portfolio," said Managing Director Mamoru Yoshida. The company has set the goal of commercial application for its magic sand by 2018, the company's 100th anniversary.
 

     Panasonic has already started sending officials to the Middle East and Africa to promote the high-tech farming method.

Seas in land

The world's population is forecast to reach 9.6 billion by 2050, and innovative ways to address potential food shortages are underway around the globe.
 
     On Sept. 24, a village in Cambodia began cultivating shrimp 200 kilometers from the sea. Seawater is usually used to grow young shrimp into high-priced seafood. The shrimp cultivation in the village uses a special kind of water developed by a Japanese researcher.
 
     Toshimasa Yamamoto, an associate professor at Okayama University of Science, discovered that both oceanic and freshwater fish can live in pure water if a small amount of powdered potassium, sodium and calcium is mixed in. This makes it possible to "readily cultivate oceanic fish in pure water in countries that have no sea," Yamamoto said.

     After working for a major metal processing company, Yamamoto managed a company that designs water tanks. Twelve years ago he was invited to join the university.
 
     The water he developed does not need to be changed due to the stability of components, which also helps make fish disease-resistant. It has already been used to cultivate blowfish and longtooth groupers. Eels raised in the water have become a popular dish at a Japanese restaurant in Tokyo's Nihombashi financial district.

     Yamamoto has consulted with a wide range of people interested in his technology, including Asian entrepreneurs and Middle Eastern royalty.
 

Healthy opportunities

Restrictions on fishing operations are becoming more widespread around the world, yet food consumption is rising fast in emerging economies. The World Bank and the United Nations forecast that farm-raised fish will account for 60% of all fish consumption in 2030.

     Methods developed by Japan to cultivate tuna, shrimp and other seafood could create a large number of business opportunities in this field. "We would like to eliminate metabolic syndrome from the world," said Kazuhiro Okuma, senior  managing director at Matsutani Chemical Industry.

     The Japanese starch maker, based in Itami, Hyogo Prefecture, west of Osaka, is pursuing this goal based on D-Psicose, a rare sugar which is about 70% as sweet as ordinary sugar but has zero calories. Clinical tests have shown that the substance is effective in combating high blood sugar and obesity.
 
Matsutani Chemical has already developed a method in a tie-up with Kagawa University to mass-produce D-Psicose from starch, and is conducting studies to apply the material to a variety of diets.
 
     The company was founded in 1919. Amid post-war food shortages, the company's proprietary technology of producing glucose from starch was instrumental in helping to feed people in Japan.
 
     "Obesity is not limited to developed countries, as people in developing nations often impair their own health by eating too much when they pull out of poverty," Okuma said.
 
     "Pioneering advantages are greater in untapped fields nobody is willing to challenge" than other areas, said Mitsumaru Kumagai, chief economist at the Daiwa Institute of Research.

     As the world struggles to address food-related problems, the more difficult tasks could yield the greatest rewards.

Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Toyota develops high-efficiency ‘free piston’

12:17 Posted by Unknown , No comments
Toyota develops high-efficiency ‘free piston’
Toyota's 'Free Piston'
There is probably no better chronicler into the full depth of American ingenuity than YouTube. Here one finds not just computer models for all manner of esoteric combustion engine designs, but actual working prototypes of them, often built by individuals. Big companies can also innovate here sometimes. A new free piston engine linear generator (FPEG) from Toyota Central in Maine is a case in point.

The piston is called “free” because there is no crankshaft. On its power stroke, the piston dumps its kinetic energy into the fixed windings which surround it, generating a shot of three-phase AC electricity. It can be run sparkless through a diesel cycle or run on standard gasoline. What has folks excited is the claimed thermal efficiency for the device — at 42% it blows away the engines used in cars today. Toyota’s demo engine, just 8 inches around and 2 feet long, was able to generate 15 hp. A two-cylinder model would be self-balancing and have much reduced vibration.

Not surprisingly, the valves are electrically operated and can therefore be better used to fine-tune the power delivery through the full range of the stroke. Speaking of strokes, the video indicates a two-stroke design, which might present a few problems for a road-worthy design. For one thing, emissions would be suspect. Nonetheless Toyota imagines that a twin unit design pumping out 20 kW could power a light electric vehicle at a cruise speed of 120 kph (75 mph).


Linear generators and linear combustion engines are nothing new. Shake-to-charge “Faraday” flashlights, smartphones, and even energy-harvesting backpacks are all standard fare, while single-acting direct power pistons have also seen action in applications as intriguing as power-assist boots for the Russian military. The trick is to get the two working efficiently in unison and that is the beauty of what Toyota appears has done. Considering that the piston is decelerated and re-accelerated at each end of the stroke, any mismatch between combustive power input and electromagnetic power extraction needs to be absorbed somewhere. Mechanical or air springs can help although there is still likely to be some efficiency loss.

At the risk of adding some confusion, the device is technically an alternator as it generates AC. As (most) electric cars use 3-phase AC induction or “AC-like” 3-phase brushless DC motors, they could potentially run directly from the output of this device, perhaps save for some intermediary voltage and current conditioning. However, like standard car alternators, there will likely be DC conversion to charge the battery pack — unless Toyota has also secretly perfected the AC battery. There is still plenty of room to innovate here. Linear alternators are similar in design to linear motors, but one does not simply reverse the cycle to swap one into the other — there are certain control functions that need to be imposed on how the coils are energized in a motor. However that does not mean a multipurpose linear electric power device could not be constructed.
While this concept would not immediately be in the same class as the 740-hp electric wheel hub motor designs, it could still have its niche. There is no reason the engine couldn’t be scaled up to a larger footprint and bolder performance.





Sunday, 21 September 2014

Japanese construction giant Obayashi announces plans to have a space elevator up and running by 2050

19:50 Posted by Unknown No comments
Japanese construction giant Obayashi announces plans to have a space elevator up and running by 2050
Space Elevator
Once the realm of science fiction, a Japanese company has announced they will have a space elevator up and running by the year 2050.

If successful it would revolutionize space travel and potentially transform the global economy. The Japanese construction giant Obayashi says they will build a space elevator that will reach 96,000 kilometers into space.

Robotic cars powered by magnetic linear motors will carry people and cargo to a newly-built space station, at a fraction of the cost of rockets. It will take seven days to get there.

The company said the fantasy can now become a reality because of the development of carbon nanotechnology.

The Space Elevator will transport people & cargo
The Space Elevator will transport people & cargo.

"The tensile strength is almost a hundred times stronger than steel cable so it's possible," Mr Yoji Ishikawa, a research and development manager at Obayashi, said "Right now we can't make the cable long enough. We can only make 3 centimeter long nano tubes but we need much more... we think by 2030 we'll be able to do it."

Universities all over Japan have been working on the problems and every year they hold competitions to share and learn from each other.

A team at Kanagawa University has been working on robotic cars or climbers Professor Tadashi Egami said tension on the cable will vary depending on height and gravity.

"We're studying what mechanisms are needed in order to ascend at differing altitudes and the best brake system," Mr Egami says.

A major international study in 2012 concluded the space elevator was feasible but best achieved with international co-operation and Mr Ishikawa from Obayashi agreed. "I don't think one company can make it, we'll need an international organization to make this big project," he said.

Experts said the space elevator could signal the end of Earth-based rockets which are hugely expensive and dangerous.Using a space shuttle costs about $22,000 per kilogram to take cargo into space. For the space elevator, the estimate is about $200.

Constructing the space elevator would allow small rockets to be housed and launched from stations in space without the need for massive amounts of fuel required to break the Earth's gravitational pull.

It is also hoped the space elevator could help in solving the world's power problems, by delivering huge amounts of cheap solar power or storing nuclear waste. It would also be a boon for space tourism.

Obayashi is working on cars that will carry 30 people up the elevator, so it may not be too long before the Moon is the next must-see tourist destination.


Elevator to Heaven?

 

 Reference: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-09-21/japanese-construction-giants-promise-space-elevator-by-2050/5756206

Wednesday, 17 September 2014

Samsung unveils robot sentry that can kill from two miles away

18:15 Posted by Unknown , , No comments

South Korean forces have installed a team of robots along the border with North Korea. The machine-gun wielding robots, built by a subsidiary of Samsung, have heat and motion detectors to identify potential targets more than 2 miles away.

The SGR-1 has a 5.5mm machine gun and a 40mm grenade launcher - although needs a human operator to give it the go ahead to fire.



Samsung unveils robot sentry that can kill from two miles away
The sentry robot in action in Cheonan, 92 kms south of Seoul. The weapons-grade robot can detect, raise the alarm and provide suppressive fire.
The system was first trialled in 2006.
"Human soldiers can easily fall asleep or allow for the depreciation of their concentration over time." Samsung Techwin spokesman Huh Kwang-hak said at the time.


"But these robots have automatic surveillance, which doesn't leave room for anything resembling human laziness.They also won't have any fear (of) enemy attackers on the front lines."


'The SGR-1 can and will prevent wars.'
The robots work side-by-side with soldiers in the Demilitarized Zone (referred to as the 'DMZ'), the 160 mile long, 2.5-mile wide strip of land separating South Korea from North Korea.
 

It is believed each unit costs $200,000 - although it has not been revealed how many are in use.
When it detects a potential threat, it notifies the command center. The operator can then use the robot's video and audio devices to communicate remotely before deciding to open fire.



 'The SGR-1 is essentially a protection technology which will serve and protect our human soldiers against enemy attackers in their dispatched danger zones,' said Kwang-hak.
'The SGR-1 can and will prevent wars'....well only TIME will tell.







Reference: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2756847/Who-goes-Samsung-reveals-robot-sentry-set-eye-North-Korea.html



Tuesday, 16 September 2014

World's first 3D printed car

18:07 Posted by Unknown , No comments
Strati: World's first 3D printed car
Strati: World's first 3D printed car
Making car as per your requirement is now not just a dream. Local Motors a Phoenix, Arizona based manufacturing firm reveled the world’s first 3D printed car electric car “Strati” at International Manufacturing Technology Show 2014 in Chicago. What’s more it just took them 44 hours to build this car from scratch. Conventional vehicle which has more than 20,000 components but this car has less than 50 components (40 to be precise) then the non-printable parts such as the engine, lights and glass windshield were added.

The chassis and the body of the car are printed using a giant 3D printer but the tires, seats, wheels, battery, wiring, suspension, electric motor and window shield were made using conventional methods.  The battery-powered, two-passenger car is made of layers of black plastic and reinforced with carbon fiber. Strati’s top speed is 40 miles per hour, and it can travel about 120 miles on a single charge.


First 3d Printed car in chicago
Credit: WGN

Local Motors CEO John Rogers told the Wall Street Journal: ‘We are the first company to make a 3D-printed car using carbon fiber reinforced thermoplastic. ‘The seats, body, chassis, dash, center console and hood will all be 3D printed.’ The company hopes to offer 3D-printed cars for between £11,000 to £18,000 ($18,000 to $30,000) each, depending on the types of optional features buyers will want.

Well few years from now you can actually download a car ;)

Monday, 15 September 2014

India is launchpad for Android One

12:55 Posted by Unknown , , , No comments
Android One Launchinf In India
Android One
When it comes to launching big products India has been sidelined by almost all the big companies. This is going to change this afternoon i.e. on 15th September 2014 Google will be launching Android One in India. In a few hours from now Google will be launching first set of Android One Smart phones which will give Mobile phone users all across India a higher end experience on smartphone for a very reasonable price to price conscious Indian users.

Google is targeting the developing world and it has started with Indian Smartphone Manufacturers like Karbonn, Spice and Micromax. India which is one of the biggest markets for smartphones will soon turn into a battle ground for Google Android One.

Android One Basic FeaturesAndroid One will have the basic hardware features that are needed in India i.e.dual-SIM, microSD card slot etc working on Google developed software. Google aims to extend the reach of Android into emerging markets, especially India where only 29% of about 920 million mobile phone users own smartphones, offering a far higher potential than markets like China or the US where smartphone penetration is nearing its peak.

Google also revealed a couple of specifications for Micromax’s smartphone. It will feature a 4.5-inch display, MediaTek processor, dual-SIM card slots and a removable SD card. With the search giant providing the hardware and software guidelines, the Android One smartphones from all the three smartphone vendors are likely to have similar specification. They are expected to retail exclusively on Amazon, Snapdeal & Flipkart they will go on sale at 3:30pm. Today!!!

So Hold your breath for something amazing coming your way!!!!

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