Oct 10
telecommunication, QuantumCryptography, unbreakable encryption, UnbreakableEncryption, UniversityOfBristol, university of bristol, Quantum cryptography, bristol, security, europe, quantum, university, cryptography, Encryption, research
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Call us devilish, but we just can’t help but love these types of stories. Here we have yet another overly confident group of researchers grossly underestimating the collective power of the hacking underground, as gurus from all across Europe have joined together to announce “the first commercial communication network using unbreakable encryption based on quantum cryptography.” Interestingly enough, quantum cryptography has already been cracked in a kinda-sorta way, but that’s not stopping these folks from pushing this claim hard to government agencies, financial institutions and companies with distributed subsidiaries. We’ve no doubt this stuff is pretty secure, but the last time we heard someone utter a claim similar to this, we saw him uncomfortably chowing down on those very words merely months later.
[Via Physorg]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Darren Murph
written by
Sep 21
transporter, handicapped, disabled, wheelchair, AutonomousWheelchair, autonomous wheelchair, handicap, VoiceCommand, autonomous, medical, mit, university, voice command, transport, research
Filed under: Transportation
Oh MIT, do the wonders that come from your halls ever cease? Yet another remarkable development is emerging from the fabled institution, and this time it’s an autonomous wheelchair that can remember important places in a given building (read: the hospital ward, your house, the local arcade, etc.) and then take you there on command. In other words, the voice recognizing chair could understand phrases of direction, such as “head to the kitchen,” and it would take on the burden of navigating the halls while letting the rider chill. The researchers are implementing a system that can learn and adapt to the individual user, and in the future, they’d like to add in a collision-avoidance system and mechanical arms to help patients lift and move objects. Say, can regular joes / janes buy these? We’re totally feeling this over the Segway.
[Via medGadget]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Darren Murph
written by
Jul 02
Filed under: Robots
Robots teaching robots? Check. Robots teaching humans? Check. Robots learning things on their own accord? Um, terrifying? All kidding aside, the UMass Mobile Manipulator is one smart cookie. Put simply, this intelligent robot pushes objects around in order to identify how they move, and once that’s accomplish, it begins “manipulating them to perform tasks.” If this sounds awfully similar to something your infant does, that’s because the two are indeed very much related. UMan, as it’s so eloquently dubbed, packs its own wheels, battery pack, one-meter arm, three-fingered hand and webcam in order to interact with the world, and sure enough, one researcher even mentioned the potential of it learning to operate a pair of scissors. Great, what’s next — a BFG?
[Via CrunchGear]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Darren Murph
written by
Jun 01
pacemaker, OsakaUniversity, muscle, fibrillation, OpticalPacemaker, optical pacemaker, Osaka University, science, heart, japan, medical, health, university, laser
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Around 1.5 years ago, we got wind of researchers in the UK working up a battery-free pacemaker. Fast forward to now, and we’ve got yet another breakthrough in the field. Purportedly, a crew of Osaka University scientists have created the “world’s first optical pacemaker,” and in an article published in Optics Express, the team details how “powerful, but very short, laser pulses can help control the beating of heart muscle cells.” In theory, this discovery provides the means for dictating said cells within a controlled setting, which could help researchers “better understand the mechanism of heart muscle contraction.” As amazing as we’re sure this is to the science world, throwing “lasers” and “heart” into the same sentence just doesn’t elicit warm / fuzzy feelings.
[Via Primidi]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Darren Murph
written by
Apr 18
mind, BrainWaves, cyborg, invasive, thought-controlled, thought, brain waves, brain, surgery, medical, health, university, OsakaUniversity, Osaka University, japan
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Researchers at Osaka University are redefining “thought-controlled” limbs. Hailed as the first endeavor to dabble in the world of bionic phalanges by requiring open-skull surgery, the research is seeking to develop “real-time mind-controlled robotic limbs for the disabled.” Of course, it’s not the goal that’s striking, but the means. Essentially, gurus working on the project are hoping to place electrode sheets directly on the surface of the brain in order to “obtain a more accurate signal,” and amazingly enough, they’re currently working to sign up willing subjects that are already scheduled to have brain electrodes added to deal with “monitoring epilepsy or other conditions.” Maybe the bionic beings really aren’t that far off, eh?
[Via Pink Tentacle]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Darren Murph
written by
Mar 18
CranfieldUniversity, Cranfield University, h3, hummer h3, HummerH3, hummer, university, vehicle, RemoteControl, rc, remote controlled, RemoteControlled, remote control
Filed under: Transportation
After this, you’ll never have the same mental image when hearing “remote controlled car” again. Ever. Resident engineer and all around madman Dr. James Brighton took a break from his rigorous teaching duties at Cranfield University and whipped up a RC Hummer H3 — as in, the man converted an actual Hummer H3 into a remotely controlled toy. Amazingly, the conversion was completed in just a month, and it’s reportedly able to “climb a 407-millimeter vertical wall, traverse a 40-percent side slope and operate in up to 610-millimeters of water.” Hit up the read link for a few more images of this guy having the time of his life.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Source: Darren Murph
written by
Mar 12
blindness, MacularDegeneration, macular degeneration, pigmentosa, restore sight, sight, RestoreSight, blind, prosthesis, health, mit, medical, university, science, retina, ocular, research
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
We’ve seen initiatives all over the globe created in an attempt to beat blindness, but researchers based at MIT are feeling fairly confident that their development is within a few years of being able to “restore partial sight to people who have slowly gone blind because of degenerative diseases of the retina.” The bio-electronic implant, which is about the size of a pencil eraser, would actually sit behind the retina at the back of the eyeball, and images would be transmitted to the brain “via a connector the width of a human hair.” As it stands, an FDA grant application is already in the works, and the scientists are hoping to have it implanted in an animal as early as this summer. Still, the solution only works for folks who “were once able to see and have partially intact optic nerve cells” — those who were blind from birth or suffer from glaucoma are unfortunately ineligible for the procedure.
[Thanks, Rusty]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Source: Darren Murph
written by
Jan 28
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Sure, we’ve got fairly sophisticated methods of curbing asthma attacks, but a new pocketable device could hold the key to unlocking more about the relationship between “asthma symptoms and the air a sufferer breathes.” Reportedly, this device could allow researchers to look back after an attack has occurred and see exactly what was happening environmentally beforehand. Gurus at the Georgia Tech Research Institute have already been able to help one individual out, as they discovered a “pollutant pathway” from the volunteer’s basement into the living room that was allowing vehicle exhaust and gasoline fumes to infiltrate the house. From here, the creators are hoping to downsize the device even further and make it more sensitive, but we’ve no idea if the current iteration will ever be used commercially.
[Via NewScientist]
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Source: Darren Murph
written by