Showing posts with label Smart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smart. Show all posts

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Lego Blocks Plus Smartphone Equals Super Smart Petri Dish [Video]

By Kristen Philipkoski Oct 11, 2011 6:40 PM 7,946 14

Lego Blocks Plus Smartphone Equals Super Smart Petri Dish
Caltech engineers built an ingenious Petri dish from Lego blocks that uses a cell phone image sensor and a smartphone light to send pictures of what's happening inside the dish directly to scientists' laptops.

Here's how it works (see it in action above): Scientists place a sample on an image-sensor chip, which uses an Android phone's LED screen as a light source. They then place the whole device in an incubator and connect the chip to a laptop with a cable. Software on the laptop organizes the images.

Lego Blocks Plus Smartphone Equals Super Smart Petri Dish

It sounds so simple and looks like a toy. But it could significantly (and inexpensively!) streamline cell culture experiments (which means any cells, from bacteria to stem cells, grown in a controlled environment) in several ways:

1. Because the device sends images directly to a laptop, scientists don't have to move the cells they're studying to look at them under a microscope, which means less chance of contaminating the sample.

2. Scientists can observe many samples at once, rather than checking out one at a time under a microscope.

3. The image sensor snaps hundreds of pictures of the cells growing in real time. Then they're stitched together on the laptop, creating a high resolution image. So researchers get see the big picture of what's happening in the dish, rather than focusing on a tiny part with a microscope.

The scientists say number three will be particularly interesting for studying stem cells, which move around a lot and transform into various types of cells. And they report that the resolution is similar to a traditional microscope-you can make out the inside of cell nuclei.

The CalTech researcher published details on the prototype in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. [Technology Review via BoingBoing; Image: Guoan Zheng, California Institute of Technology]

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Thursday, September 15, 2011

Facebook's Rolling Out Smart Lists and Summaries for People with Too Many Friends [Facebook]

Facebook's Rolling Out Smart Lists and Summaries for People with Too Many FriendsFacebook's doling out new features to the masses this week. Their Google-Plus-alike Smart Lists will help you divide up the friends you care about. And their new email summaries will mush together the thousands of notifications you get from friends you don't.

Smart Lists, as you know, allows you to cull through your friends and divvy them up according to how they relate. That's not all that smart, so they'll automagically create lists for you based on associations—college, workplace, etc. You can also determine how you see them in your feed. Select your Work list, and you'll see your work buddies in your feed. Meanwhile, put someone in the Acquaintances list, and you'll simply see them less.

Facebook's also reportedly testing out new summary emails for those of you who didn't turn off all email notifications a long time ago. People who get bombarded with emails about people commenting on how much they loved True Blood can now expect emails digesting all the comments into one simple place. That's nice of them... but I kind of don't want the emails at all. [Facebook Blog, Inside Facebook via Geekosystem]

Screengrab via @NickStarr

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Thursday, September 8, 2011

Is Our Lack of a Good Smart TV About to be Solved by... Chumby? [Video]

Is Our Lack of a Good Smart TV About to be Solved by... Chumby? Last we heard of Chumby, it was getting all growed up with an 8-inch screen. But now our dear Wi-Fi widget hub's been shot with the Godzilla ray or Rick Moranis or something, and its interface has been humongified to fit on your television. And that might be really good for the future of the smart TV.

The Chumby NeTV connects in-line to your TV and overlays the Chumby interface on top of your picture. You can use an Android phone to control it, which will let you browse and get SMS and email notifications on your TV; but the NeTV also comes with a seven-button remote.

TVs with apps have been underwhelming, to be kind. And it's too early to know how good the NeTV's going to be, but a third party platform that doesn't rely on a specific brand's hardware might be the booster the horribly fragmented, rightly-ignored smart TV arena needs. Developers will get the NeTV next month, but there's no word on a release date or pricing just yet. [Engadget]

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Friday, August 19, 2011

Smart String: A New Standard for Tape Measure

by Mark R - on August 18th, 2011

I once received a freebie from my bank that was a combination tape measure, calculator, and notepad with an included pen. I thought that was cool until I saw the Smart String.

The Smart String is like a tape measure but without the tape. In its place is 50 feet of 20 pound strength string. The string is not as wide as traditional measuring tape, which means you can get more in less bulky space. It also enables the user to measure less than straight shapes, like the circumference of a ball, for example.

The digital readout means that the user is no longer looking at tick marks, and the reading is accurate to three decimal places. Once the user has his or her measurement, he or she can use it on the calculator. The built-in calculator can store 3 measurements within its memory, in case you need to do a real-life story problem.

All this, plus a flashlight as well as a level bubble. Clearly, the Smart String is the way of the future for tape measure, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it is a new standard. One day, we might look at traditional tape measures like we look at rotary phones.

You should be able to get the Smart String for $11.99 on ThinkGeek now.

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