This post over at Hack N Mod is titled 'World's Most Stunning Data Centers.' In point of fact, only two are mentioned, but the photos are pretty stunning. Shown uppermost, the Skynet system core Microsoft Chicago Data Center (of which more and better pictures are available here), and immediately above, the Stockholm facilities of Bahnhof, one of Sweden's largest ISPs, which are located in a Cold War-era underground nuclear shelter. A video tour is available here.
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Data center pr0n
Friday, December 11, 2009
MIT gestural computing makes multitouch look old hat
Ah, the MIT Media Lab, home to Big Bird's illegitimate progeny, augmented reality projects aplenty, and now three-dimensional gestural computing. The new bi-directional display being demoed by the Cambridge-based boffins performs both multitouch functions that we're familiar with and hand movement recognition in the space in front of the screen -- which we're also familiar with, but mostly from the movies. The gestural motion tracking is done via embedded optical sensors behind the display, which are allowed to see what you're doing by the LCD alternating rapidly (invisible to the human eye, but probably not to human pedantry) between what it's displaying to the viewer and a pattern for the camera array. This differs from projects like Natal, which have the camera offset from the display and therefore cannot work at short distances, but if you want even more detail, you'll find it in the informative video after the break.
[Thanks, Rohit]
Continue reading MIT gestural computing makes multitouch look old hat
MIT gestural computing makes multitouch look old hat originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Dec 2009 05:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | MIT | Email this | Comments"Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Process Hacker v1.7 Released – Process Viewer & Memory Editor
Key Features
Viewing, terminating, suspending and resuming processes.
Restarting processes,...
Originally Posted by darknet.org.uk
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Seeing RFID on the cheap
Immaterials: the ghost in the field from timo on Vimeo.
The folks at BERG developed this neat method for visualizing the sensitivity of an RFID reader. Rather than using an expensive set of test equipment to measure the magnetic field intensity, they just hooked their reader up so that it lit an LED every time their card was detected, and then captured it using a camera. This is pretty similar to the technique used to make the Roomba art. They were also able to show that (due to polarization) the orientation of the card with respect to the sensor changes how it responds. Fascinating!
New hacker hang out in Seattle
This Thursday, Oct 15, Metrix Create: Space will open its doors in Seattle (at 623A Broadway East). It's hackerspace meets an indie coffee house. They'll have tools and equipment for building projects, 3D fabbing machines, classes on various types of high-tech makery, coffee and snacks. They even have a vending machine that'll dispense Sun Chips, M&Ms, Clif Bars, and Arduinos, breadboards, jumper wires, etc. How cool.
More:
Monday, October 5, 2009
Use TinEye to Find Source Images for Desktop Wallpaper [Image Search]
It turns out that TinEye, the image search engine, is good for more than simply finding carbon-copy matches of pictures. You can also use it to go from a screenshot of a desktop to the source image.
While reviewing the TinEye Firefox extension last week, we noted that results were rather precise in nature and that variations on an image were often excluded. While that is true to an extent, reader TheLostVikings pointed out a way he uses the database and that it wasn't quite as narrow in scope as we initially believed:
Note on the 'surgically precise' comment. I routinely use TinEye to find the actual background image when people post pictures o their desktops (complete with open windows, taskbars, docks, etc) and tineye will usually be able to locate the original picture.
To test this approach out we fired up Firefox with the TinEye extension and headed over the Lifehacker Desktop Show and Tell Pool. Chalk it up to luck or the popularity of the images people were using for their desktop background, but we were able to find 8 out of 10 of the source background images using TinEye.
The next time you see a capture of someone's desktop and you're dying to know where they got the cool background, give TinEye a shot at finding it for you. Thanks TheLostVikings!
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Make a Desk Out of Concrete [DIY]
You don't need to spend big bucks to own a desk with some heft to it. Through the miracle of concrete and a little elbow grease, you can work on a surface with a stone-like finish.
Instructables user hivoltage wanted a unique computer desk and wasn't afraid to bust out the power tools to get it. The most distinct feature of his desk is the surface. Taking a cue from the popularity of concrete countertops, he used poured concrete to make his desktop.
It's certainly not as easy as buying some extra counter pieces from the local kitchen shop or throwing a door across two file cabinets, but the end result is quite impressing. Check out the full tutorial to see how he goes from a plywood form to a polished final product.