Mad scientists figure out how to write memories to brains, take over Earth

Call us crazy, but we’re guessing one Gero Miesenböck of the University of Oxford has been watching just a wee bit too much Fringe. Gero here, along with a few of his over-anxious colleagues, has seemingly figured out a way to actually write memories onto a fruit fly’s brain using only a laser pen and three-fourths of a Ouija board. We know what you’re thinking, and we’re thinking the same. But all terrifying thoughts aside, what if boffins could burn memories of hard lessons learned into our minds without us having to suffer through them first? You know, like upgrading to Snow Leopard.

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Mad scientists figure out how to write memories to brains, take over Earth originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Oct 2009 21:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Green laser for microprojectors developed, microraves soon to follow

Japanese company QD Laser has apparently developed a green laser which could up the ante in the HD pico projector market. The laser — which is just 5.6mm in diameter and outputs a 532 nanometer, pure green light — was shown off as a working prototype at CEATEC. QD says their green laser (the hardest type to make) will be well-suited to gadgets like cellphones and laptops because of its low power consumption and wide operating temperature. Mass production is seemingly planned for next year, with the hopes that each little laser will run $10, cheaper than the one currently available, which is manufactured by Corning. You know what we always say: rave on.

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Green laser for microprojectors developed, microraves soon to follow originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Oct 2009 20:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microvision’s laser-based SHOW WX pico projector shines at CEATEC

Microvision just struck a deal to start shipping its PicoP-based SHOW WX pico projector in Asia, and while the size may not blow any minds, the image quality just might. With a native 848 x 480 resolution (WVGA), this one pumps out more pixels than pretty much any other pico projector on the market today, and with enough darkness, it can actually spit out an image that’s around 100-inches in size. We stopped by the company’s booth here at CEATEC in order to have a look at what makes the world’s first laser-based pico PJ so special, and we can honestly say the picture was pretty stunning (considering the device we’re talking about). We got a lecture on just how amazing the innards actually are (hear for yourself after the break), but it’s the estimated $500 price tag and 2010 US ship date that really had us intrigued.

The company also confessed that it’s toiling away in an effort to miniaturize its PicoP engine even further, and while it wouldn’t come right out and say it, we got the feeling that it was jonesing to get that very device into all sorts of other gizmos in the near future. In the meanwhile, you can expect the SHOW WX to ship with support for pretty much any input via a composite adapter, while an iPod / iPhone connector is apt to be bundled in as well. There’s also a 3.5 millimeter audio passthrough, 10 lumens of brightness, a 60Hz refresh rate (trust us, the lines you see in the video aren’t seen by the naked eye) and a built-in battery good for two hours on a charge. Oh, and this thing doesn’t even have to refocus as you move it closer and farther from the wall — pretty swank!

Continue reading Microvision’s laser-based SHOW WX pico projector shines at CEATEC

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Microvision’s laser-based SHOW WX pico projector shines at CEATEC originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Oct 2009 08:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boeing’s air-to-ground laser test a success, and we have the video to prove it

Fans of future wars, heads up! What might at first blush look like a poorly placed roman candle is actually proof positive that Boeing’s Advanced Tactical Laser (ATL) is ready to do some damage. Sure, when we heard last month that the company’s tests at the White Sands Missile Range were a success, we responded the same way that we always do: “video or it didn’t happen.” But now that we’ve seen it in action, we have one more question: When will its big brother, the 747-mounted ABL, get its day in the limelight? We’ll keep you posted.

[Via The Register]

Continue reading Boeing’s air-to-ground laser test a success, and we have the video to prove it

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Boeing’s air-to-ground laser test a success, and we have the video to prove it originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 04 Oct 2009 18:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bell Labs uses 155 lasers to beam ridiculous amounts of data over 7,000 kilometers

Bell Labs uses 155 lasers to beam ridiculous amounts of data over 7,000 kilometersLet’s say you have a monumental collection of data at your place. Like, say, everything ever posted to the Pirate Bay. And let’s say the Feds are beating down your door and you need to dump that data to a secure off-site storage facility right now. Who do you call? A lawyer, of course, because currently there’s no practical way to do such a thing. But, in the not too distant future you might call up Bell Labs, a company whose scientists managed a monumental 100 Petabits per second per kilometer transmission rate using 155 lasers at different optical frequencies. If you take distance out of the equation you’re looking at 15.5 Terabits per second, more than ten times faster than the last laser transmission test we reported on. Naturally, this was conducted in conditions that don’t quite equate to the real world at large, and it’s going to be a long time before we have fiber pipes like that beaming data into our homes. So, hands up chum, and make that one call count.

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Bell Labs uses 155 lasers to beam ridiculous amounts of data over 7,000 kilometers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Oct 2009 11:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Roman Abramovich’s Eclipse has anti-photo ‘laser shield’


If you ask a young boy to spec out his ideal boat, you might hear of helipads, swimming pools, missile-proof hulls, mini-submarines and laser shields. Well, Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich is one of those people with the time and money to listen to his inner child, and he’s gone and put all of the above together inside a $1.2 billion 557-foot vessel of luxury and excess. The Eclipse will attempt to repel paparazzi with a laser system that is said to “detect CCDs” (we suspect they mean it detects the autofocus light), and responds with an intense beam of light that precludes unwanted photography. We don’t know how well the automatic system will work, but it must be fun to manually point the lasers at the paps and go “pew pew!

[Via Fark]

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Roman Abramovich’s Eclipse has anti-photo ‘laser shield’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 04:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Scientists set lasers on cells, end up playing Pong

Researchers have devised plenty of innovative ways of viewing living cells, but their options are a bit more limited when it comes to actually manipulating cells without, you know, destroying them. Scientists at the University of California, Los Angeles have now come up with one promising new possibility, however, using lasers instead of the fixed electrodes more commonly used today. Those, as you might expect, don’t hit the cells directly, but are rather used to shine light on a “high-tech Petri dish,” which has a grid of light detectors built into its floor and sets of transparent electrodes on the top and bottom. When lit up in a pattern of a circle or square, the cells can then be isolated and moved about at will or, conceivably, even be used for a game of Pong. Check out the video after the break to see for yourself.

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Scientists set lasers on cells, end up playing Pong originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Sep 2009 19:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HDI concocts 100-inch laser-based 3D HDTV, calls rivaling technology child’s play

Look, we’ve seen an awful lot of HDTVs in our day — one lap around the average CEDIA show floor makes your local Best Buy look awfully small — and to this day we’ve yet to put our peepers on a more stunning set than Mitsubishi’s LaserVue HDTV. Sure, it’s fat, ugly and expensive, but the image is otherworldly. Before Mitsu can even take the logical next step, a California startup has arisen to introduce what it calls the world’s first laser-based 3D HDTV. We’re talking 1080p 3D like you’ve never seen before, with CTO Edmund Sandberg noting that this production is smoother than RealD, Dolby, film and pretty much every other 3D solution. The secret here is in the speed; this set is so fast that the image “no longer needs to flash from one eye to the other,” and no flashing should equate to no headaches. Too bad there’s no planned release date, but we’re still cautiously optimistic for a sneak peek (in addition to the video past the break) at CES 2010.

[Via OLED-Display]

Continue reading HDI concocts 100-inch laser-based 3D HDTV, calls rivaling technology child’s play

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HDI concocts 100-inch laser-based 3D HDTV, calls rivaling technology child’s play originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Sep 2009 08:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Blu-ray laser from Sharp burns triple, quad layer discs but can’t cut red tape (yet)

Sharp stepped up at the 70th Autumn Meeting of the Japan Society of Applied Physics to promote its new 500mW Blu-ray laser that is reportedly production ready and waiting to churn out triple and quad layer (100GB) discs at 8x speed. The only thing holding it back from release now is the lack of an official spec from the BDA. Geeking out over details of the aluminum oxynitride film that enabled this breakthrough (pictured above) continues beyond the read link.

[Via Blu-ray.com]

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New Blu-ray laser from Sharp burns triple, quad layer discs but can’t cut red tape (yet) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Sep 2009 16:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boeing’s airborne laser finally blows something up

It’s been a long haul marked by funding cuts and some important but rather unexciting tests, but it looks like Boeing’s much-ballyhooed airborne laser has now finally actually blown something up, real good. According to Boeing and the US Air Force, that happened over the White Sands Missile Range on August 30th, when an C-130H aircraft equipped with the Advanced Tactical Laser (or ATL) locked on to an unspecified ground target and fired the 12,000lb high-power chemical laser to make the target disappear from the face of the Earth. That successful test seems unlikely to change the laser’s place in the Defense Department’s arsenal, however, which has already been scaled back significantly from the earlier, more ambitious plans for a whole fleet of aircraft equipped with the weapon.

[Via Slashdot]

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Boeing’s airborne laser finally blows something up originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Sep 2009 17:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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