Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Rethinking the origins of the universe
I understood that it was common to post the paper to arxiv when it was in the process of being peer reviewed by a journal. The problem is the extended lag time between submission and final publication with most journals which pre-print archives like arxiv try to solve. Do people really just "submit to arxiv" and then that it? I didn't know that, but its not common in my field to use arxiv so I have not kept up with all practices.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: New RFID technology helps robots find household objects
Cool! I'm glad to see RFID and localization being merged together like this. I think this really shows that RFID is a much more suitable technology for this type of application than a computation-heavy CV algorithm.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: IoT Radio – Batteryless very cheap radios
There was an article the other day posted on this. It operates at 24 and 60 ghz whereas most RFID is in the UHF (900 MHz band). This radio harvests energy to run an oscillator and actively transmits data whereas RFID only reflects back power (no active rf transmission). Also, this device require a fairly massive (42 dBm / ~20 watts rf) for a few cm operating distance compared to RFID which achieved several meters of distance using 36 dBm / 4 watt transmitters. The biggest achievement is the size reduction. In the previous HN thread, someone poured out that this is academically very interesting, but probably practical.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Stanford engineer aims to connect the world with ant-sized radios
45 dBm is crazy! Do you know the FCC limitations for that frequency? For the ISM bands its +36 dBm EIRP maximum. I'm not familiar with the rules for the higher GHz frequencies.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Stanford engineer aims to connect the world with ant-sized radios
Maybe you can describe this a bit more. The Great Seal Bug was used for wireless audio recording in the 40's, but this operated by using a microphone/cavity to modulate the load of an antenna; thereby embedding audio in the reflected fields.
Bell did a similar demonstration in the 1890s using a mirror to embed reflections in ambient light and demonstrated wireless audio transmission over 200 meters.
However, I'm not sure why audio would cause a frequency shift in a radio circuit. Perhaps you are meaning the antenna will be perturbed and that could possibly be recovered? I'd be interested to know.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Stanford engineer aims to connect the world with ant-sized radios
Its far-field, so it couples completely differently than NFC tags. Also, NFC communicates by reflecting signals, this device communications by active transmission (according to the article, I haven't read their paper yet).
What's new? Its tiny, and I'm very curious how they got that an oscillator to work at extremely low powers. But, it is really just an extension of RFID/NFC/IoT miniaturization work. But then again, just about everything starts out that way.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Steep learning curves you wish you’d climbed sooner
Its a like to a blog on compressive sensing pointing out that sensing (or rather sampling) is mathematically equivalent to using the identity matrix. It goes on as an introduction to compressive sensing.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Changing temperature powers sensors in hard-to-reach places
The UW research is actually using a device from enocean, it seems.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Could a newborn baby walk and run by wearing an exoskeleton?
I do see your point but still, a newborn cannot support their head by themselves. Having the muscle ability to be able to hold ones head up is a fairly good prerequisite for being able to walk.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Helmhurts: Placing a WiFi router with the Helmholtz equation
Not for any practical measurements. This would work in say an anechoic environment – save for the wall under test – but you'd end up sampling multipath constructive/destrictuve interference instead of the wall reflections.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Helmhurts: Placing a WiFi router with the Helmholtz equation
>I'm hoping for precise indoor navigation, Google and Apple are currently working on that. All you'd have to do is walk around with your phone, measuring signal strength and then visualize that.
I'd wager there are _a lot_ more folks that that looking the problem. Its difficult to just use signal strength as this is heavily multi path dependent and time-varying as anything (e.g., moving your phone and hand around) within the environment changes.
There are results in the literature floating around that show some basic success, but nothing at all like the dreams of indoor GPS we're all hoping for. It's a fun problem space, but still in its infancy.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Scientists have developed a method to control moths using electrodes
Maybe I'm reading the article wrong, but it seems they are only describing a way to record EMG signals --- and not a way to `control' anything. I've previously worked in neural/EMG recording of flying insects and a major issue to overcome is the effect of the recording apparatus on normal behavior. For instance, a tiny coin-cell battery can have a significant impact on the flying ability of a small insect (we targeted dragonflies). This work described in the article seems to use a very large structure attached to the insect which the insect cannot lift (they describe being held aloft with electromagnetics). I'm definitely curious to see where they go with this though. I'd love to get back into 'insect cyborg' work.
EDIT: And after looking a bit more, it seems that the actual paper describes the surgical process for implanting the electrodes such that the rebuilding of the moths tissue actually makes them be a part of the moth. Cool!
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: The color of every photo on the internet blended together is orange
The article addresses that and intentionally chooses non-human subjects such as walls of graffiti. These still show his `emergent orange' effect.
At first I assumed it was his averaging technique, but I'm more apt to believe it has to do with the spectrum of light which is being `sampled' by the selection of photos.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Could a newborn baby walk and run by wearing an exoskeleton?
While I agree with you, its worth noting that newborns do exhibit a walking reflex (that usually disappears after a few weeks). I would not completely rule out the possibility of a newborn walking with an exoskeleton -- the problem seems to be that their muscles cannot support weight or balance.
Cheesy example video, but the first after a quick search: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJIcKkxx7wg
Edit: and now I see that someone has already mentioned this in the other comments.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Spin-It: Optimizing Moment of Inertia for Spinnable Objects
What then is the research barrier they need to cross? I'm genuinely curious. This seems more "researchy" than a lot of other items I've read (such as optimizing a planar antenna geometry with included matching network et. variants) to me, but I'm perfectly fine with a very blurry engineering/research line.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Engineer invents safe way to transfer energy to medical chips in the body
To be fair, any animals that use body language (i.e. dogs wagging tails) or sight are communicating electromagnetically (reflected light) in the same we humans communicate electromagnetically. We're not generating our own EM signals, but using tools.
I had a discussion about this a while ago with a friend. There's a really interesting video of a HAM guy who has built a system such that he yells into a microphone which then uses the audio energy to generate an RF pulse that travels out the antenna. All RF energy is generated by the vocal energy. By yelling in pulses, Morse (or whatever) coding can be generated. I think he had used to the communicate between Massachusetts and somewhere in Florida.
Our conclusion as to why don't animals communicate with their own RF energy was your answer that you can't build good antennas from organic material. Evolutionarily, though, it seems like a great advantage!
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Poll: What OS do you use on your primary computer?
>The most irritating thing was the keyboard which could not be mapped in the "standard" PC way (i.e. Ctrl Super Alt in the bottom left).
That's funny. After using a mac for several years, that's my biggest gripe about working on most linux boxes. OS X separates text viewing and editing functions (C-f, C-k, C-a, etc in eamcs parlance) from system functions (S-c :: copy, S-v :: paste, S-w :: close window). In Linux, ctrl-A will either get you a cursor at column one, or select everything. I wish it were easier to define these actions system-wide the way OS X does.
Stwerp
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11 years ago
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on: Mac keyboard shortcuts
This is actually one of the biggest reasons I am still in Mac OS. Are there any *nix builds or distributions that have this separation out of the box? I.e.: C-b, C-a, etc (emacs commands) including C-v for scroll (and not system paste) and S-c for copy, S-v for paste (where S is super key or win logo or something similar).
Stwerp
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12 years ago
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on: I Hunt Sys Admins
Thank you for posting the PDF link. For the life of me, I have NO IDEA why sites still try to push hacked together PDF viewers on us when there are tools already on my system. I really thought this site was just broken.
Stwerp
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12 years ago
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on: Wireless electricity? It's here
From what I've seen of their demos (going off memory), they focus on power transfer to a single device. Their efficiency drops to near 0% when multiple devices are being powered.
I have a hard time getting excited about these guys' work, but will readily admit they are excellent about generating publicity. There is a lot of _very_ closely related work in resonant energy transfer and use of time reversal or lensing currently being looked at around academia. Hopefully one day it will pan out, but it is never going to be as efficient as running a wire. For some applications wireless power is a great enabling technology, but powering a light or a tv in your home? That's a hard sell for the "convenience" of moving your tv versus the extra costs in energy inefficiency.