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10 Posts tagged with the development tag
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Engineering On Friday Battlefield Invisibility Uniform by Cabe Atwell lw.jpg

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Combine the following:

The thermal cloaking concentric rings developed by Sebastien Guenneau at the Institut Fresnel in France.

The electromagnetic cloak cylinder from Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain.

 

Add them up, you get the Battlefield Invisibility Uniform (BIU) worn by all our future war fighters.

 

"You can't shoot what you can't see."

 

Cabe

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Engineering On Friday Electric Avenue by Cabe Atwell.jpg
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University of Belgium students created a touchscreen interface using CRT monitors. The system requires a glove laden with phototransistors to work. Cumbersome apparatuses to operate a defunked technology is not a winning combination, except for those with a lot of TVs.

 

I remember Montgomery Ward's Electric Avenue, it seemed like the future to my young eyes. It was the company's first entrance into the budding world of technology. Unfortunately, their last. Or is it?

 

Cabe

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See more Engineering On Friday comics in the Engineering Life group.

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Engineering On Friday robot jockey by Cabe Atwell.jpg

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Robot Jockeys replaced child riders in the United Arab Emirates camel racing circuit due to international human rights pressure.

 

Since then, several generations of the robotic riders have come and gone. The latest having arms used to manipulate reigns along with the riding crop.

 

There must be a Robot Jockey superstar in the camel racing world. Others tremble when they see him coming.

 

Cabe

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See more Engineering On Friday comics in the Engineering Life group.

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Engineering On Friday Time for a new job by Cabe Atwell.jpg

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The University of New South Wales has created an inexpensive, "perfect," single-atom transistor. The future of electronic devices for sure.

 

Hopefully no one will lose that atom...

 

Cabe

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Engineering On Friday CPU GPU a Toast to Us by Cabe Atwell b.jpg

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North Carolina State University researchers have come up with a way to get a 21% boost in computer performance by making the CPU and GPU work together like a single unit. Sponsored by AMD, The researchers efforts are sure to make it inside the next line of APUs.

 

Cabe

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engineering on friday kinectforwindows by cabe atwell.jpg

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As Kinect for Windows integrates itself into homes, how soon before we all start flailing our arms? I would say this is an accurate depiction of how one might look using the device. Inspired off of my inability to navigate the XBOX Netflix menus with Kinect.

 

Cabe

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Like South Korea, classrooms in Miami are starting to use computers to teach kids instead of teachers. A ‘facilitator’ is in the room to make sure students progress. That person also deals with any technical problems. These virtual classrooms, called e-learning labs, were put in place last August as a result of Florida’s Class Size Reduction Amendment, passed in 2002.

The amendment limits the number of students allowed in classrooms, but not in virtual labs. While most schools held an orientation about the program, some students and parents said they were not informed of the new class structure. Others said they were not given the option to choose whether they wanted this type of instruction, and they voiced concern over the program’s effectiveness. In response to parental confusion about virtual classes, the Miami Beach High parent-teacher association created a committee on virtual labs.

The panel works with the school toward “getting issues on the table and working proactively,” said Patricia Kaine, the association’s president. Uh-huh, so does this mean that we’re becoming so broke as a country that are student’s no-longer need a human to guide them through lesson plans? I know how this sounds and believe me I’m all for robotic teachers, but I noticed that some kids don’t even receive books anymore in some schools, they get ‘packets’ instead. I mean what’s next, will students receive DVD’s to learn from at home instead of ‘virtual classrooms’ because we could no-longer afford those? Is what Miami’s doing a good idea or a bad one? Let’s get a debate going. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/18/education/18classrooms.html?_r=2&pagewanted=1&hp


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