From Engadget: NVIDIA outlines Kai platform, hopes to make good on quad-core $199 tablet promise

NVIDIA outlines Kai platform, hopes to make good on quad-core $199 tablet promise

When NVIDIA’s Jen-Hsun Huang talked of $199 Tegra 3 tablets, we were nothing but skeptically hopeful. Now, it seems those were more than just words. During a recent stockholder meeting, VP of Investor Relations, Rob Csongor, revealed the firm’s strategy to deliver on this budget quad-core promise. Announcing the “Kai” platform, Csongor stopped short of giving specifics, but implied that the architecture or hardware borrows much of the “secret sauce” from Tegra 3, and will enable lower-priced higher-performance devices. Jump on the source link, and listen in from about 33 minutes, if you want the full spiel.

NVIDIA outlines Kai platform, hopes to make good on quad-core $199 tablet promise originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 May 2012 07:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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from Engadget

From Discover Magazine: NCBI ROFL: The physics of tossing pizza dough. | Discoblog

Rotating bouncing disks, tossing pizza dough, and the behavior of ultrasonic motors.

“Pizza tossing and certain forms of standing-wave ultrasonic motors (SWUMs) share a similar process for converting reciprocating input into continuous rotary motion. We show that the key features of this motion conversion process such as collision, separation and friction coupling are captured by the dynamics of a disk bouncing on a vibrating platform. The model shows that the linear or helical hand motions commonly used by pizza chefs and dough-toss performers for single tosses maximize energy efficiency and the dough’s airborne rotational speed; on the other hand, the semielliptical hand motions used for multiple tosses make it easier to maintain dough rotation at the maximum speed. The system’s bifurcation diagram and basins of attraction also provide a physical basis for understanding the peculiar behavior of SWUMs and provide a means to design them. The model is able to explain the apparently chaotic oscillations that occur in SWUMs and predict the observed trends in steady-state speed and stall torque as preload is increased.”

Photo: flickr/Jeff Kubina

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Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Does pizza cause cancer?

from Discover Magazine

From Autoblog: Report: Man stranded in desert builds motorcycle out of his broken car

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Citroen 2CV motorcycle

According to Merriam-Webster, ingenuity can be defined as “skill or cleverness in devising or combining” or “cleverness or aptness of design or contrivance.” We’d say that’s an apt description of a Frenchman named Emile who reportedly found himself stranded in the deserts of Northwest Africa after breaking a frame rail and a suspension swingarm underneath his Citroën 2CV.

What to do? Why, disassemble the broken hulk and build yourself a motorcycle from its pile of parts, of course! As the story goes, Emile was able to use the inventive machine to escape the desert, though not before convincing the local authorities that he wasn’t an insurgent and paying a fine for importing a non-conforming vehicle…

Since Emile was the only soul in the area, nobody has been able to confirm the veracity of the events that led to the little French runabout’s conversion into a makeshift motorcycle. That said, judging by the images you can see here (apparently from the March 2003 issue of 2CV Magazine), this Citroën-bred two-wheeler does indeed exist, and it was definitely fashioned from parts scavenged from an old 2CV.

Emile, wherever you are, we take our hats off to your real-life MacGyver skills, sir.

Man stranded in desert builds motorcycle out of his broken car originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 23 May 2012 14:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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from Autoblog