Raspberry Pi gets Ice Cream Sandwich up and running, sounds delicious

Raspberry Pi gets Android 40 up and running, embarrasses large corporations

Work on Raspberry Pi just doesn’t stop, and the latest news from the programming box’s official blog is that its already got Google’s (second) newest Android iteration running on the tinker toy. While this early version is reportedly working smoothly, with hardware-accelerated graphics already in place, a developer is still working on adding support for AudioFlinger, Android’s native audio software. This Raspberry-flavored Ice Cream Sandwich apparently runs on both a kernel and VideoCore binary image that’s currently not publicly available. The team is still looking into whether the two code lines can be wrapped into a single entity before it offers up the source to its users. See how the experimental pairing fares in a quick video runthrough after the break.

Continue reading Raspberry Pi gets Ice Cream Sandwich up and running, sounds delicious

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Raspberry Pi gets Ice Cream Sandwich up and running, sounds delicious originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Aug 2012 11:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CarBot lets you settle those grudges with battle mode

CarBot CarBot lets you settle those grudges with battle mode

If you prefer your robots a little more terrestrial, there’s Desk Pets’ CarBot, a buggy that can do tricks, navigate mazes, and race with — or fire on — your buddies. The cars can be controlled by a free app installed on any iOS or Android Device, and allow up to four players to duke it out in multiple play modes. For mayhem lovers the most popular may be “battle,” allowing you to fire on rival cars to disable them, along with a personality mode for freestyling and a drift ‘n’ race option. There’s even a maze mode, in which the tiny wheeled bots use their infrared sensors to avoid objects with “military precision,” according to the company. The built-in battery will give you 25 minutes of playtime for every 45 minutes of USB-based juicing, and each CarBot will set you back $30. Check out the PR and video after the break to let the rolling deathmatch commence.

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CarBot lets you settle those grudges with battle mode originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Aug 2012 11:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cubify’s 3D-printed toy robots take cues from Lego, sport interchangeable parts

Cubify's 3D-printed toy robots takes cues from Lego, sport interchangeable parts

If the urge to create a robot petting zoo of your own hasn’t subsided since Maker Faire, 3D Systems’ new Cubify toy robots might help fill that void in your droid-loving heart. The 3D-printed bots may not boast electronic innards, but their LEGO-like swappable parts allow for some Frankenstein-inspired customization. Ready-made robots start at $4.99, while 3D source files ring up at 99 cents apiece, in case you’d rather extrude them using your own Cube hardware. Yearning to make a personal automaton army entirely of your own design? The company’s new beginner-friendly CAD tool, Cubify Invent, should help you craft that unique plastic platoon.

Continue reading Cubify’s 3D-printed toy robots take cues from Lego, sport interchangeable parts

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Cubify’s 3D-printed toy robots take cues from Lego, sport interchangeable parts originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Aug 2012 09:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD poaches Apple’s platform architecture lead to head up CPU team

AMD poaches Apple's platform architecture lead

We suppose after a reasonably high-profile defection of one of AMD’s own to Apple, the Sunnyvale company had to exact revenge. That payback was announced today in the form of Jim Keller, the now former platform architecture head in Cupertino, who will be joining AMD as corporate vice president and chief architect of its microprocessor unit. In a statement, the company said that Keller will be leveraging his “low-power design expertise,” possibly as part of its oft-rumored ARM plans. Keller previously worked as VP of design at P.A. Semi before being brought into the Apple fold where he played an important role in the development of the processors inside the iPad, iPhone and Apple TV. With AMD struggling to keep pace with Intel in both the desktop and laptop space, a move into low-powered mobile chips could be a plan to stave off more dire days. Check out the PR after the break.

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AMD poaches Apple’s platform architecture lead to head up CPU team originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Aug 2012 08:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Power goes out in India, affecting 600 million

Power goes out in India, affecting 600 million

A power outage struck India’s northern and eastern electrical grids earlier today, hitting around 600 million people — that’s roughly half of the country’s population of 1.2 billion — cutting off electricity to businesses, transit and traffic lights, to name but a few. The power failure hit around 1pm local time “without warning” according to the electric company. The incident follows another major outage the day prior, which affected around 300 million people. Regions have taken to seeking out alternative energy sources such as hydro power, with local business utilizing backup diesel generators and the like, which have helped keep hospitals and airports in service.

[Photo by NASA]

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Power goes out in India, affecting 600 million originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Jul 2012 11:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Former NSA official says agency collects Americans’ web data, director denies charges

Former NSA official says agency collects Americans' web dataThe NSA director, General Keith Alexander, is coming under scrutiny after he told a crowd gathered at the Def Con hacker conference that the spy agency “absolutely” does not collect data from and maintain files on American citizens. A former official stopped just shy of calling Alexander a liar, accusing him of playing a “word game.” William Binney left the department in late 2001, when it became apparent to him that it planned to use the terrorist attacks on September 11th as an “excuse” to launch a data collection program that was already in the planning stages. Alexander for his part maintains that any data, be it web searches, Twitter posts or emails, collected from American citizens is merely incidental, and associated with intelligence gathering on foreign entities.

Of course, Binney rejects this claim and testimony from Qwest CEO James Nacchio regarding the NSA’s wiretapping program would seem to contradict it. ACLU attorney Alex Abdo, who was on the panel with Alexander, cast further doubt on the director’s denial. He noted that loopholes in the law allow the NSA collect vast amounts of information on Americans, without them being the “target” of the surveillance. Since the agency can hold on to any data collected, it can retroactively build dossiers on citizens, should they eventually become the focus of an investigation. For a few more details, hit up the source link.

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Former NSA official says agency collects Americans’ web data, director denies charges originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Jul 2012 14:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft seals Perceptive Pixel deal, welcomes PPI team to the Office Division

Microsoft seals Perceptive Pixel deal, welcomes PPI team to the Office Division

In case you haven’t noticed, Microsoft’s been in a blissful shopping mood lately — and while we already knew the company had snatched up the creator of that enormous 82-inch touchscreen, today’s the day a more formal introduction is taking place. Via its Official Microsoft Blog, the Redmond-based outfit is suitably welcoming the Perceptive Pixel team aboard the Office Division, also announcing that PPI’s Founder, Jeff Han, will be joining as a “general manager” and reporting to Kurt DelBene. Naturally, we’re still wondering what exactly the acquisition will bring to the table, but if Perceptive Pixel’s previous doings are any indication of what’s to come, we can expect some more delightful novelties to come out of Microsoft’s HQ in the hopefully-not-so-distant future.

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Microsoft seals Perceptive Pixel deal, welcomes PPI team to the Office Division originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Jul 2012 13:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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US soldiers to wear blast sensors in Afghanistan, collect shock data

US soldiers to wear blast sensors in Afghanistan, collect shock data

Starting next month, around one thousand frontline personnel in Afghanistan will begin testing the Soldier Body Unit, a sensor kit for recording the effects of explosions on the human body. While that’s not the most pleasant of subjects, the blast sensors have been rushed out to collect as much data as possible before soldiers head home in 2014. The US Army’s Rapid Equipping Force and the Georgia Tech Research Institute, which developed the sensors, hope to gather info on concussions and traumatic brain injuries to improve aftercare. This will also be used at source to stop super-soldiers heading back out after a concussion and increasing the probability of an even worse injury. Further sensors will be carried on military vehicles, to help measure the effects of IED blasts on passengers. Adding two pounds in extra equipment probably won’t make the Soldier Body Unit too popular, but it’s thought the kit could weigh in at half a pound once it’s been refined.

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US soldiers to wear blast sensors in Afghanistan, collect shock data originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Jul 2012 07:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Ubergizmo  |  sourceMilitary News  | Email this | Comments

3D printer cuts vinyl, mills, draws, fits comfortably inside a briefcase, is generally fab

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Is there anything this tool from MIT’s Ilan Moyer and collaborator Nadya Peek can’t do? Probably, but that list seems likely to be shorter than the list of those it can. So far, Popfab has been shown doing a little printing during a brief video, but Moyer has promised a lot more to come, telling Core 77, “we also have toolheads working for vinyl cutting, milling and drawing,” all of which promise to show up in subsequent episodes. The tool (which has other fans) has apparently already made its way around the world in the form of carry-on luggage, helping fulfill its creators desire to support “the nomadic designer” — just a briefcase, a power source and a dream.

Continue reading 3D printer cuts vinyl, mills, draws, fits comfortably inside a briefcase, is generally fab

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3D printer cuts vinyl, mills, draws, fits comfortably inside a briefcase, is generally fab originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 16:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google confirms it still has a ‘small portion’ of Street View WiFi data, apologizes

Google confirms it still has a 'small portion' of controversial Street View data, apologizes

It has seemed like Google was close to putting its Street View snooping controversy behind it a few times now, but one thing or another keeps bringing it back to the forefront. Today, it’s an admission from Google that it hasn’t deleted all of the so-called payload data in question after all. That revelation comes in a letter from Google Global Privacy Counsel Peter Fleisher to Steve Eckersley, head of enforcement at the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office (or ICO), in which Fleisher says that Google is still in possession of a “small portion of payload data collected by our Street View vehicles in the UK.” Fleisher adds that Google “apologizes for this error,” and says that the data was discovered after an extensive review of its Street View data that it has been conducting in recent months. For its part, the ICO has acknowledged that it received the letter, and notes that the data was supposed to have been deleted in December of 2010, adding that “the fact that some of this information still exists appears to breach the undertaking to the ICO signed by Google in November 2010.” You can find both statements in full at the ICO link below.

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Google confirms it still has a ‘small portion’ of Street View WiFi data, apologizes originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 13:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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