New Robot Shifts ShapeNew Robot Shifts ShapeNew Robot Shifts Shape 04/13/2005 01:43 AM Space.com Apr 13 2005 5:53AM GMT This is a GrokNews Entry: (what is grok?)New Robot Shifts ShapeGrok Headline matches for New Robot Shifts ShapeRobot Navigation Shifts GearsRobot Navigation Shifts Gears 05/12/2004 05:46 AM The not-so-Grand Challenge in the California desert exposed some holes in the search for an autonomous vehicle, so Darpa wants to try something else -- building cars that learn. By Noah Shachtman. A Running Robot Or A Rolling Robot?A Running Robot Or A Rolling Robot? 12/18/2003 12:58 PM It took years for researchers to figure out how to make a robot be able to stand and walk on two legs. In fact, it's so complicated, that some researchers are giving up on that idea and using Segway balancing technology on their robots instead of legs. However, the folks at Sony seem to have taken the concept of the upright walking robot one step further: they've figured out how to make a robot run. That's right, it actually leaves the ground at points while jogging along. It apparently needs a bit of a walking start to get up to speed, and even at running speed, it's more of a slow jog - where it's feet barely leave the ground. Still, it's a start, and with some more work, they believe they can really make the robot run. The Shape of InformationThe Shape of Information 07/23/2002 05:54 AM Google Gets in ShapeGoogle Gets in Shape 07/02/2004 09:52 AM Search Engine Lowdown Jul 2 2004 2:28PM GMT 3G to take shape in 2005, says GSA3G to take shape in 2005, says GSA 01/02/2005 11:12 AM INQ7.net Jan 2 2005 3:35PM GMT Shape Up Your Data!Shape Up Your Data! 03/08/2004 11:20 PM Offerings make finding content for compliance easier. Shape Shifter 1.0Shape Shifter 1.0 05/18/2004 09:03 PM Drag shapes into matching shape cutouts. Clear the screen before time runs out. The Ship ShapeThe Ship Shape 10/29/2003 01:15 AM Up on The New Yorker site, you can find Our Perfect Summer, a new story by David Sedaris. We actually heard Sedaris read this story back in April when he made a stop at the San Francisco Opera House during his last book tour. Then, the story was called "The Ship Shape," (I think this is a better name) and immediately after hearing it, it rose to the very top of my Sedaris personal favorites lists. I, of course, have been anxiously awaited the print version since then. It was especially great to hear him read this story live since it's so terribly bittersweet and he does an incredible job delivering it. It's moving without being over-the-top sentimentality (this is still Sedaris, after all) and the amount of humor in the piece is just right. No one plays the fool; instead it's a story about hope and disappointment amidst the sort experiences we all have as a kids. It's a great piece and definitely worth the read. We also met Sedaris at the signing he was doing before the event. He was sitting at a table, alone, sort of behind a pillar. Us being us, we made some horrible small talk and I embarrassed myself fully. As we were leaving, I put my hand out to offer a handshake and then quickly pulled it back, not knowing if he even likes to be touched. (Based on his books, who'd think he'd like strangers touching him?) After I asked if it was alright to shake, he laughed and probably thought I was a nutcase. This is why you should never meet the people you admire. Link via Kottke. What shape will the next iMac take?What shape will the next iMac take? 07/30/2004 10:30 AM reader feedback Apple's mum on what its next-generation desktop will look like, but News.com readers offer their suggestions. The Shape of Pharrots to ComeThe Shape of Pharrots to Come 10/28/2003 11:08 PM John Coggeshall mentions that the PHP on Parrot project has been named "Pharrot" by the php-con conference attendees. Here's my take on things. Now I don't have any inside info, so the following is entirely guesswork, and any resemblence to reality is entirely your imagination: Although Sterling and Thies are very modest, given the fact that they were given the closing keynote and the amazing performance improvements - Pharrot will probably be PHP 6. The speed of the JIT means that PHP will become a general programming language. A high performance application server written 100% in PHP becomes practical. A high performance anything becomes practical in PHP. The tribes using Parrot will probably include Python, PHP and Perl. Code sharing between different programming tribes will become a reality. This does not mean that there will be full interoperatability between all languages, because (a) there is no common runtime library (yet), (b) and no consensus on what will be the default PMC's (Parrot's language extensions) installed. There will be battles fought over the run-time. In PHP4/5, after execution, we throw away the opcodes together with the bath water, or store them in shared memory. Parrot gives you more choices. See the end of Dan Sugalski's Parrot internals presentation (ppt). The Zend API is dead - big deal. Parrot is a big opportunity for companies with skill and resolve. The tools market for open source programming languages suddenly becomes much larger because you are able to support so many more languages effectively. My prediction: the first beta of Pharrot will be out in 2006. PS: Selkirk was prescient about parrot. Smart chap. The shape of the InternetThe shape of the Internet 09/16/2004 08:40 PM Hanan Cohen points us to DIMES (Distributed IUnternet Measurements and Simulations), a distributed project similar to SETI@home that runs on your machine during slow times, pinging sites and reporting what it finds back to a central server: "What we ask is not so much your CPU or bandwidth (which we hardly consume), but rather, your location." It's a project of Evergrow, a consortium of 20 universities. The management is not responsible for any problems you may encounter... — The Management... The Shape of SongThe Shape of Song 07/15/2004 08:29 AM The Shape of Song from Turbulence. Taking shapeTaking shape 06/08/2004 07:29 AM USA Today Jun 8 2004 11:53AM GMT Easy Shape 0.1Easy Shape 0.1 05/30/2004 09:12 AM A Web-based bandwidth manager and traffic grapher. The shape of the two-man raceThe shape of the two-man race 02/18/2004 04:08 PM Animating with Shape TweensAnimating with Shape Tweens 03/14/2005 06:17 PM Morph the shape or color of one graphic into another with this fun-to-use Flash feature. Plastic that changes shape with lightPlastic that changes shape with light 04/14/2005 03:48 PM David Pescovitz: Shape memory alloy, materials that change shape based on a temperature increase, are old news for roboticists. But MIT scientists have developed a new plastic that shapeshifts in response to light. From the MIT News Office: Link The Shape of Blogging's FutureThe Shape of Blogging's Future 11/10/2003 11:15 PM Dave writes: Weblog software is going to be like mail servers. Lots of ways to deploy, every niche filled. For the masses, services like Yahoo, MSN and AOL. Blogging servers for corporations, inside and outside of the firewall. For schools, for the military, specialized systems for lawyers, librarians, professors, reporters, magazines, daily newspapers. The next President will have a blog. Writing for the Web, the prevailing form of publishing in the early 21st Century, will come in many sizes and shapes, flavors and styles. It won't be one-size-fits-all. Open formats and protocols will make this possible. I'd bet on the... Plastic That Changes Shape In LightPlastic That Changes Shape In Light 04/15/2005 06:16 PM Next Xbox Starts to Take ShapeNext Xbox Starts to Take Shape 03/14/2005 06:17 PM Microsoft gives scant details on its next-gen console, but alpha development kits hint at more. Security 2004: How it will shape upSecurity 2004: How it will shape up 01/07/2004 01:54 PM Security watcher Jon Oltsik says customers will face myriad new challenges in the next 12 months. The Shape of Things to Come: 5 CentsThe Shape of Things to Come: 5 Cents 03/22/2005 04:43 PM This last Saturday, I was on a panel at the SXSW Music Festival entitled The Shape of Things to Come. On the panel were some industry legends including Sandy Pearlman and Peter Jenner (former manager of Pink Floyd). The panel somehow converged around the idea of a 5 cent download, and how it would be a better model both economically, and socially. I wonder if anyone has drawn the demand curves to see where there's more money. If marginal cost is close to zero, then you could have 1 million people buying songs for 1 dollar, versus 25 million people buying songs for 5 cents - maybe the lower price wins? It did get me thinking that maybe we (or someone) should build a Creative Commons 5 cent download site. It could be a good test case, and it would also help artists get compensated. Of course, since all the works would be CC licensed, tracks could probably be legally traded noncommercially. However, if there was one central place with a good recommendation engine and user interface (not to mention good musicians), I bet people would go for it. Any takers? US economy still in fragile shapeUS economy still in fragile shape 04/30/2004 02:49 PM Factory output is bouncing, but consumer sentiment remains gloomy, as investors speculate on next week's interest-rate decision. Google, Distorting the Shape of the WebGoogle, Distorting the Shape of the Web 03/11/2003 01:22 AM "I had a reciprocal link exchange that I requested of a complementary site turned down because my Google page rank was not high enough according to an e-mail reply from the other site. " Soon, robots will be able to change
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