Sidewalk wifi

Deploying any wifi network requires a multitude of wifi base stations…where do you place them?  Street lamps?  Ceilings?  Now there’s another choice…the sidewalk.  These 16×16″ tiles can be installed about 66 feet from one another to create a wifi mesh network (which doesn’t seem all that great when you consider the 1kW power consumption).  However, they do require power to be hardwired to them…too bad they can’t take advantage of the footsteps above to generate the necessary power.

The product name…well I have a hard time typing this, for they’ve jumped on the ‘i’ bandwagon that I’m so sick of by now.  Yeah.  This product is ‘iPavement‘.  There, I said it.  Yes, they’ve even worked in the more modern buzzword, in their iCloudPavement management software (no, two wrongs do not make a right).  Poor product names aside, it does provide a nice way to deploy a broad urban wifi network (apart from the high power consumption per device).

(via Gizmag)

Super glass

Glass is one of those things that gets better the less you see it, and researchers at MIT have found a way to make it pretty awesome.  By creating a precise surface pattern of nanoscale cones on it, they’ve produced a material that is extremely clear, while also being anti-reflective, anti-glare, and superhydrophobic (water beads up on its surface, so it’s like an anti-fog coating).  About the only thing it doesn’t talk about is impact strength, but if you apply this surface treatment to something like Corning’s Gorilla Glass, you have a formula that’s sure to be a hit in any portable electronics application.

Bleak outlook for Earth

Things aren’t looking good for this planet.  The well-respected group of scientists known as the Royal Society is concerned about the combination of excessive consumption and population growth, and is suggesting increased birth control and global redistribution of wealth to combat that.  Two things that are politically untouchable in this country at least.  This is the problem I see…scientists look at the path we’re on and have recommendations for how to fix it, but the political and social reality is not guided by science, it is guided by other influences.  Scientists, in general, just don’t seem to get this…they keep talking about what should be done to solve the world’s problems, without recognizing what can be done.  We don’t need talk about ideal solutions, we need talk about practical, realistic solutions.  Changes that you can possibly expect might be implemented.  You can read more about the Royal Society’s position on these issues in Scientific American.  And no, I don’t have the answer…I’m just really pessimistic about global governments’ abilities to enact change, and get frustrated when the best answer I hear from scientists is to let global governments solve these problems.  It’s not going to happen, we need new ideas.

In separate, but related, news, the executive director of the International Energy Agency is warning governments around the world that, globally, fossil fuel consumption is increasing and we need to shift our focus to renewable energy sources.  On our current path, we’re looking at a global temperature increase of 6C by the end of the century, triple the international ‘goal’ of 2C (though I’d argue that the goal should be zero!).  We’re just nowhere near where we need to be, and there’s no real drive for change.

Bleak news, but then, it’s not really news…it’s just more of the same.  We recognize the problem but instead of taking responsibility for our actions, we’ll pass this off to the next generation and make them deal with it.  This is our legacy, but I hold out hope that we can find technological solutions to these social problems before it’s too late.

Mining Asteroids

So, it comes to this.  Natural resources are becoming scarce enough that people can have serious conversations about mining ASTEROIDS and be taken seriously.  Not that it can’t be done, but wow…we are so far from living in balance with this planet that we need to exploit other areas of the solar system to sustain our lifestyle?!  Although, it may not be as bad as it first sounds.  Rather than bringing those resources back to this planet, it’s far most cost effective to use them to supply spaceships and colonies on the moon or Mars and that seems to be the main intent of Planetary Resources Inc.  Which makes so much more sense considering we struggle to get enough public support for a mere six person orbiting space station.  Maybe capitalism will succeed where every world government has failed…

25GB Skydrive upgrade for free

I’m a huge fan of Dropbox, so when I heard that Microsoft released new apps for accessing its Skydrive service (which is really just a lot like Dropbox) I was a bit ho-hum, but then I found out that you can get a free upgrade from the baseline 7GB of storage to 25GB!  Well OK, that did it.  I signed up, not sure if I’ll use it for anything but at least this way it’s reserved for future potential use.  Follow the links above if you want to sign up.

If you’re not already using one of these services, I highly recommend you check them out.  It basically just creates a folder on your computer that you treat like any other…drag and drop files to it, whatever.  The key is, whatever is in that folder is also replicated on a server elsewhere.  Not only does this create a backup for you, but where it gets really cool is when you have more than one computer (or devices, like iPads).  You’ll see that same folder on each device you set up.  Add a file to that folder on one computer, and it almost instantly appears on that same folder on your other computers.  Sharing files with family and friends also becomes easier; Dropbox allows you to share a folder (you can create a new one within your main Dropbox folder) with other Dropbox users.

Microsoft posted a pretty good comparison chart that shows how SkyDrive stacks up against iCloud, Google, and Dropbox.

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