Monday, November 30, 2015

Footage surfaces of 'flying' cars in China

This is the bizarre moment three cars appeared to levitate in the air at a crossroads in central China.

In the video, which has baffled the internet, a van can be seen approaching a junction when the back end of it is lifted.

Although it's still unclear what exactly happened to the vehicles in the video, internet users have agreed on the theory that a wire on the road was to blame.

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Source: Footage surfaces of 'flying' cars in China

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Reinvention and flying cars: Your weekly reading list

Problem-solving by evolution and human creativity often take odd turns. Some solutions combine disparate elements, like armor and eyes, or driving and flying. Others follow more linear paths by redesigning the same concept over and over with minor changes.

This week, follow the reincarnations of NASA's latest research aircraft; meet the algae-infused salamander; travel in style with some flying cars; and watch the first controlled landing of the Blue Origin rocket.

Read this • Three high-flying birds soar together for the first time since the 1970s Martin WB-57 NASA | JSC

Capable of soaring above 60,000 feet, WB-57 planes fly for NASA to monitor hurricanes, study atmospheric effects of rocket launches and fulfill other high-altitude missions. NASA expanded the WB-57 fleet to three by completing the restoration and refit of a B-57, and celebrated by flying all three together at the Johnson Space Center.

Each of the WB-57s began life as a standard B-57 medium bomber, then were rebuilt during the 1960s into RB-57s with much larger wings and more powerful engines to fit a high-altitude reconnaissance role.

Retired by the military in the early 1970s, NASA modified a handful of the planes into WB-57s. Some of the RB-57s were mothballed in Arizona. The recently rebuilt WB-57 was in long-term storage from 1972 to 2013.

via Ars Technica

• This animal has a suit of armor with hundreds of built-in eyes

Unlike other mollusks that rely on complete armor — like clams — or squishy dexterity — like octopi — the chiton has gone the path of panoptic armor. It combines a hard, armoring shell with a network of primitive eyes with calcium carbonate lenses, allowing it to watch the sea around it through its shell.

via The Atlantic

• The long, weird history of the flying car

Ever since humans noticed birds in the sky, we've attempted to emulate them while bringing a bit of comfort, and style, to the skies.

Wings fold up in a demonstration of the Terrafugia "Flying Car" during the first day of press previews at the New York International Automobile Show in April 2012. Stan Honda | AFP | Getty Images file 2012

via Popular Mechanics

Watch this • Green grow the salamanders

An algae-supercharged salamander provides a road map to previously unknown symbiosis between organisms.

via American Museum of Natural History

• How Japanese honeybees cook a giant hornet

via Vox

• The reusable space rocket is nearly here with Blue Origin's first successful landing

The New Shepard rocket launched, deployed its payload AND managed a controlled return to the landing site this month. (Some sales-related CGI fills the spaces outside the view of actual cameras.)

via The Verge

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Source: Reinvention and flying cars: Your weekly reading list

Saturday, November 28, 2015

My Google Alert for "Hoverboard" Is Officially Ruined

My Google Alert for "Hoverboard" Is Officially Ruined

I have Google Alerts for everything. Whenever an article is posted with terms like "flying car," "time capsule," and yes, "hoverboard," I get a notification. But today I can call my Google Alert for "hoverboard" officially worthless. Just take a look at this story from The Irish News.

My Google Alert for "Hoverboard" Is Officially Ruined

How exciting! Inventors finally made the hoverboard we've all been waiting for! Too bad they got seized at the border going into Ireland. But I'm sure it's all part of some big misunderstanding. Those hoverboards will be zipping lucky Irish people around in no time once they get through customs!

But then I started reading the article:

MORE than 1,000 Back To The Future-style hoverboards have been turned away from Ireland over fears they could burst into flames.

The consignment of two-wheeled hands-free electric scooters, which are a big hit on Christmas wish-lists, was seized at Dublin Port.

The self-balancing gadgets, used by celebrities like Lily Allen and Jamie Foxx, can cost upwards of €350 and have already been banned in a number of cities worldwide.

While they haven't been outlawed in Ireland, authorities grounded 1,400 so-called Smart Balance Wheels over "significant safety concerns".

I had to triple check that The Irish News wasn't a parody site. Because even though it's not at all funny, sometimes the business model of some garbage sites out there is the dissemination of fake news.

But, alas, this one was legit. The term "hoverboard" is officially just what we're going to call these things now. They're essentially Segways without handlebars, and cities are scrambling to figure out how to regulate them.

We can scream all we like about how they're not hoverboards. But that's what people call them. There's no sense in fighting it anymore. News articles are even claiming that these two-wheeled self-balancing boards are Back to the Future-style. Which, of course, is false. Not to mention the fact that hoverboards don't show up until the sequel, so if you're going to say they're from Back to the Future, you should be more specific (*snorts, pushes up glasses by the bridge with two fingers*). But none of that matters now. What matters is that we fully surrender to the term.

That Back to the Future II-style hoverboard you've been waiting on since 1989 isn't coming any time soon. Just climb aboard the unstoppable freight train that is our modern lexicon. You can lay down on the tracks all you want, but that train — a train likely filled with hoverboards that don't hover and will be banned by countless municipalities before Christmas — is just going to run you over.

RIP hoverboards. Long live hoverboards.

My Google Alert for "Hoverboard" Is Officially Ruined

(Top image: Christopher Furlong/Getty; Bottom: AP Photo/Kathy Willens)


Source: My Google Alert for "Hoverboard" Is Officially Ruined

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Transport Ministry predicts drones, self-drive cars and a car butler in future

The Ministry of Transport has released new videos of exciting possibilities in the future.

Are we finally close to getting the flying cars from The Jetsons or, even better, the teleportation machine from Star Trek?  

Will planes become so fast that you can fly to Australia in an hour? What if we could reduce the number of road accidents a year to almost zero?

The Ministry of Transport has created a vision of what the future of New Zealand's transport system might look like, with the goal of being prepared if or when transport changes dramatically.

Flying cars and teleportation are unlikely, but computer-driven smart cars are bound to feature. In fact, they might be central to all of your transport needs, transport ministry chief executive Martin Matthews said.

The visions were based on a unknown date in the future when drivers might be banned from all roads, a virtual butler might arrange your transport life, airships could carry you across cities and there was no congestion in Auckland.

Drones could be used to deliver packages, freeing up trucks for heavier items.

Drones could be used to deliver packages, freeing up trucks for heavier items.

It suggests that New Zealand could have dedicated freight corridors where the railway tracks are now, with heavy trucks running alongside trains, rather than on highways. 

Drones would deliver parcels around cities, freeing up trucks and cars for heavier items.

All transport options would be "driven" by computers, reducing the death toll on roads from 300 a year to 30, because human error would be taken out of the equation, Matthews said.

"It's not an attempt to exactly predict the future, it's about exposing people to ideas of what the future could be like.

"Sometimes we see things at an early stage, but we cannot possibly imagine how they will change the world that we live in.

"We know this from mobile technology and the way it's altered our lives."

The Aerion AS2 supersonic business jet that can get from New York to London in four hours. Will this be the future of air travel?

The Aerion AS2 supersonic business jet that can get from New York to London in four hours. Will this be the future of air travel?

The first combustion engine car arrived in New Zealand in 1989, and 30 years later commercial flights started, but no-one at the time thought that one day there would be three million passengers arriving at our airports each year.

The transport ministry was not going far into the realm of science fiction, Matthews said.

The predictions were based on trends in technology, and some inventions that were already being made.

"Some people might look at some of the ideas as far-fetched and probably wrong, but if I was to predict anything about what we have written it will be that it will fall short of reality.

"It will go further and be faster than we are imagining."

Self-driving cars seem inevitable and this what they may look like.

Self-driving cars seem inevitable and this what they may look like.

AIR TRAVEL

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The ministry predicts that a growing demand for flight will result in two advances: the return of supersonic flight for the wealthy and a slower, but much more comfortable and environmentally friendly, option for the rest.

A 12-seater plane that can travel from London to New York in four hours is already being developed by Aerion.

Could scenes like this be a thing of the past, with technology changing the way we get from A to B?

Could scenes like this be a thing of the past, with technology changing the way we get from A to B?

Domestic air travel will also be more frequent and as easy as catching a bus. This could see the rise of regions as people live a 40-minute sky-taxi flight away from work, rather than a 40-minute drive in traffic.

A similar system is already taking off in Portugal.

FREIGHT

Highways in the sky, or on the sites of our existing rail corridors, could cater for all freight needs, moving heavy trucks off public highways.

All ships, trains, trucks and even drones will be connected so the goods are passed from one to another seamlessly without wasted journeys or the wrong size vehicle being used.

Trucks could be formed into electric road trains that run on concrete pads in New Zealand's existing rail corridor. The road would be equipped with special charging technology that charges the road-train as it runs, meaning it could travel the length of the country without having to stop.

Smart technology would also mean trucks, planes or skyships would not leave when overweight.

CARS

All drivers will be banned from public roads and most people will not own their own car. The size, shape and way they move will all be re-imagined. What will a car look like if it doesn't need a driver?

Technology like Netflix and Google already monitors your preferances and usage and tailors what you see to what you want. Imagine that applied to your transport.

The ministry imagines a "virtual butler" that knows what you want and when you want it. For example, ordering a one-person pod for you to take on errands around town, but selecting a cheaper ride-share option for your travel to and from work.

Computer-driven transport will also eliminate road accidents and infringements that are caused by human error or choices. Speeding will be impossible, because the computer could be programmed to never go faster than the limit.

SAFETY AND MAINTENANCE

Road sensors, cameras and new technology will take over the analysis of the transport network and will respond in real-time to what is happening. This could help ease congestions, because the computerised system could divert cars off certain routes or stop it occurring in the first place.

The road sensors could also flag up when any maintenance is needed. Instead of people carrying out an inspection of a car, tunnel, bridge or road. The asset would know when it needed fixing and alert the maintenance team. Cars would check into garages and be fixed while the world sleeps.

Police would have to change from policing traffic to policing software, because if all transport options are programmed correctly they would be incapable of breaking the law.

 - Stuff


Source: Transport Ministry predicts drones, self-drive cars and a car butler in future

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Liam Payne buys flying car featured in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

London, Nov 17: One Direction singer Liam Payne says he paid a six-figure sum to buy a flying car that featured in "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets". The 22-year-old is a "Harry Potter" fan, having celebrated his last birthday with a Hogwarts-themed bash, and has revealed the lengths his obsession has stretched to, reports femalefirst.co.uk.

Payne, who is the proud owner of the battered Ford Anglia 105E used in the 2002 film, said on a radio show: "I bought the Harry Potter car and I put it in my garden. "You know the blue car, the flying car? I bought one because I'm a bit of a geek." Payne also revealed he's a fully fledged member of Potter's famous school house, Gryffindor, after taking an online exam. (ALSO READ: Liam Payne absolutely devastated after Sophia Smith split)

"I did the test on the website. My friend got Hufflepuff and I got Gryffindor. He was so annoyed," he said.

Modified Date: November 17, 2015 7:16 AM comment
Source: Liam Payne buys flying car featured in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

The 10 Biggest Technological Advances Of The Last 50 Years That Are Taken For Granted Every Day

Silicon Valley

Everyday new and exciting tech gadgets are announced -- like the self-driving car or phone that you can wear like a watch (still no flying cars yet, unfortunately).

Once a week we receive high-resolution images from the edge of the solar system as well as cures for once fatal diseases.

These new and exciting discoveries are so innovative, fresh, and exciting that we've completely come to take for granted the countless inventions that were considered cutting edge just a short time ago.

The most interesting thing about this is that taking away any of the following discoveries would completely turn our lives upside down!

So lets take some time to revisit and once again appreciate these top ten discoveries from the last 50 years.

First up... keeping in touch...

Photo Credits: Wikimedia Commons; Dollar Photo Club; freeimages.com; © Hall/Pena, PacificCoastNews.com


Source: The 10 Biggest Technological Advances Of The Last 50 Years That Are Taken For Granted Every Day

Monday, November 23, 2015

Ford First to Test Driverless Cars at Fake Michigan City

Ford-Mcity

*When I was a kid, I'd sit and watch my grandmother while she sat and watched the microwave, marveling at its ability to heat a cold cup of coffee in one minute — WHILE THE INSIDE OF THE OVEN REMAINED COOL TO THE TOUCH, she'd say.

"Ma" would tell stories of being a kid in rural Illinois and heating things up over a fire while I thought "What kinda prehistoric world was THAT?" and I'd watch movies like Back To The Future II depict what "the future" would look like.

While we fell short of seeing Marty McFly's flying car, we're looking at a world where driverless cars aren't a "how" or an "if", they're a "when".  Ford is leading the way, testing driverless car technology in the faux Mcity, near Ann Arbor, Michigan.

While the Detroit manufacturer has been testing related technologies for about 10 years, their new testing program reflects their interest in moving self-driving cars from research to advanced engineering.

Read more at EURThisNthat.

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Source: Ford First to Test Driverless Cars at Fake Michigan City