Thursday, June 28, 2007
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Where are you?
Hi!
So...how is everyone doing? Are you enjoying the trips to France, and Asia, and everywhere else? I really hope that we'll all keep in touch- So, what are the updates!?
So...how is everyone doing? Are you enjoying the trips to France, and Asia, and everywhere else? I really hope that we'll all keep in touch- So, what are the updates!?
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
MS and Robotics
Seems we’re getting one of our first looks at what Steve Balmer and Bill Gates meant when they said Microsoft's future isn't in OS but in Robotics.

The video is particularly fun. All this multi-device human interaction in a tabletop; I have to assume this is the beginning of MS new direction.
No, it's not exactly Short Circuit 3 (excuse the 80s reference, I'm just proving my age here) but its a start in a new direction that doesn't include a box on your desk or kitchen counter. If the most important aspect of robotics is human interface & interaction design, this seems to go in the right direction.
Yes, we all see the iPhone's influence in the interface but MS and Apple have always been rival siblings of the same era. Neither one would be great if the other ceased to exist. Maybe that's why MS bailed out Apple with a 150mm deal back in 1997.
- Mediasurface Computing - from the Fallon Planning Blog
- The Microsoft Surface Website.

The video is particularly fun. All this multi-device human interaction in a tabletop; I have to assume this is the beginning of MS new direction.
No, it's not exactly Short Circuit 3 (excuse the 80s reference, I'm just proving my age here) but its a start in a new direction that doesn't include a box on your desk or kitchen counter. If the most important aspect of robotics is human interface & interaction design, this seems to go in the right direction.
Yes, we all see the iPhone's influence in the interface but MS and Apple have always been rival siblings of the same era. Neither one would be great if the other ceased to exist. Maybe that's why MS bailed out Apple with a 150mm deal back in 1997.
Friday, June 15, 2007
Talent! Searching for Talent
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Check this site
Yet another trendwatching site...yet WAY awesome!
http://www.trendcentral.com/trends/default.asp
http://www.trendcentral.com/trends/default.asp
Saturday, June 9, 2007
Friday, June 8, 2007
Charge iPods, light bulbs: wirelessly
Call it WiTricity, that's what MIT researcher Marin Soljacic calls it. Inspired by the annoying bleeps his cellphone made in the middle of the night when he forgot to charge it, Soljacic set out to find a way for a cellphone to charge itself, provided it was in range of a compatible signal.
And figure it out he did.
Here's your next generation of products, advertisers. A light bulb requires 30-40 watts of power and the minds at MIT made it happen with specially tuned magnetic fields. An iPod, by contrast, might take 2 or 3 watts to recharge.
Read that again. Yes, they lit a light bulb without wires and no one got tingly goose-flesh by sitting near it. It was done entirely with magnetic fields.
Apparently, it's time for consumers to start cutting the cords. The proof of concept is detailed in this month's Science Express. Take a moment and imagine the potential for clean energy in our city streets.
Holy cool, Batman.
And figure it out he did.
Here's your next generation of products, advertisers. A light bulb requires 30-40 watts of power and the minds at MIT made it happen with specially tuned magnetic fields. An iPod, by contrast, might take 2 or 3 watts to recharge.
Read that again. Yes, they lit a light bulb without wires and no one got tingly goose-flesh by sitting near it. It was done entirely with magnetic fields.
Apparently, it's time for consumers to start cutting the cords. The proof of concept is detailed in this month's Science Express. Take a moment and imagine the potential for clean energy in our city streets.
Holy cool, Batman.
Thursday, June 7, 2007
Sushi-view cam in a Japanese restaurant
There was something massively fascinating about this video... must be the planner in me. It's bounced around the planner blogsphere a few times over the weekend.
Is it just me, or is there something just brilliant about all those reactions to a camera on a sushi tray? Loved it.
F#$%%^%^E#Q#Q the Palm Treo
As many of you may know, I am now on my fourth Palm Treo in a year and a half. While I was waiting to receive my fourth one (after my third one was broken right out of the box), I wrote the CEO of Palm a letter and fired him (as well as the company) as my cell provider. It was a very personal letter about why it was so important to me to have it work (lifeline to my daughter). About two weeks later, I received a form letter from the customer service department saying that they wanted to help make this right by getting me a new phone if I needed too. Wrong! It wasn't a phone and a form letter I wanted, it was a real apology from the President (after all I took the time to write him) and an acknowledgment that I had been heard. Death to Palm.
Last night as I went to dinner with a friend of mine who was visiting from Virginia, my phone broke again (after one motnh of flawless operation). AGAIN! This will be the fifth one I have had. Now the iPhone comes out in a few weeks and I am wondering if maybe I should send the President of Palm a new photo... that of me holding up my new iPhone... It is such a feeling of helplessness to be locked in to a contract and a phone that I now hate. NEVER buy a TREO.
Last night as I went to dinner with a friend of mine who was visiting from Virginia, my phone broke again (after one motnh of flawless operation). AGAIN! This will be the fifth one I have had. Now the iPhone comes out in a few weeks and I am wondering if maybe I should send the President of Palm a new photo... that of me holding up my new iPhone... It is such a feeling of helplessness to be locked in to a contract and a phone that I now hate. NEVER buy a TREO.
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