From Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now: With New Technique, Tiny Robots Can Be Mass-Produced Like Pop-Up Books

Building More Mobees Courtesy of Pratheev Sreetharan/Harvard University

A technique inspired by pop-up books could enable quicker production of tiny robots and other electrical devices, according to Harvard engineers. Usually, building a micro aerial vehicle – or any other robot – requires a painstaking assembly process, with each little wing or sensor folded and machined just so. Now it can come together in a single fold.

It works by combining all the robots’ component layers, sandwiching each piece of metal or carbon fiber into a single sheet. First each layer is laser-etched into the proper design, and the sheets are laminated together. The end result is a hexagonal sheet with a small assembly scaffold, with the whole thing the size of a U.S. quarter.

The entire assembly has 137 folding joints. The assembly scaffold, which has folds of its own, performs 22 origami-style folds, resulting in a fully formed robot you can pop out and turn on – in this case, it’s the Harvard Monolithic Bee, or Mobee.

“This takes what is a craft, an artisanal process, and transforms it for automated mass production,” said doctoral candidate Pratheev Sreetharan, who co-developed the technique. Before this, students were dipping tiny wires into superglue and using microscopes to ensure they aligned the parts correctly.

If this sounds like an obvious solution, it’s because it’s very similar to the process used to make printed circuit boards, in which electronic pathways are etched from successive layers of conductive material. So it would theoretically be pretty easy to convert this process for high-speed robot manufacturing, and even to automate it – you could have robots manufacturing other robots.

Why would you want lots of tiny robots? The Mobee project’s goal is to have a fleet of bio-inspired robots that can behave autonomously as a colony, for various research goals. This process dramatically speeds the production cycle, Sreetharan said.

The team is publishing a paper about this manufacturing style in the March issue of the Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering.

[via Science Daily]

from Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now

From Engadget: Renesas MP5232 SoC promises dual-core processing and LTE connectivity for less cash

Renesas' latest MP5232 SoC promises dual-core processing and LTE connectivity for less cash

There’s a trend underfoot to bring high-end smartphone capabilities down to a price that even Joe Sixpack is willing to swill. We saw evidence of this from MediaTek earlier in the week, and now the crew at Renesas is looking to join the race with its MP5232 system on a chip (SoC). This entrant touts a 1.5GHz dual-core CPU, along with HSPA+ and LTE radios on the same chip — much like offerings from competitors Qualcommand ST-Ericsson. Renesas estimates that with its SoC, a smartphone can be delivered to the customer for as little as $150 — mind you, carrier subsidies should be able to swallow the rest. Renesas is also pushing its chip to tablet makers, and expects products with its internals to reach consumers in as little as six to nine months. If you’re an OEM (or just wanna pretend), you’ll find the full PR after the break.

Continue reading Renesas MP5232 SoC promises dual-core processing and LTE connectivity for less cash

 

from Engadget

From Engadget: Ainovo Novo 7 Basic review

Just to add a note… this is the very FIRST Android 4.0-based tablet from the release!  And it’s $100 to boot!!  I hope the best for them!
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It’s a world’s first coming from a company you’ve never heard of — if you live outside of China, anyway. Taking Google’s newly minted OS and slipping it into an affordable chassis, Ainovo’s Novo 7 Basic could very well be a sleeper hit among the tech-obsessed masses. Sure, it may lack the brand equity and tidy content ecosystems that are part and parcel of Amazon and Apple’s offerings, but thanks to that $99 price, users may find themselves seduced by the temptation of Ice Cream Sandwich alone. Apart from a small fraternity of devices including the Galaxy Nexus and ASUS Transformer Prime, few devices have officially played host to Android 4.0, lending this 7-inch tab a distinct advantage over the more expensive, Gingerbread-packing Kindle Fire. With a 1GHz Ingenic JZ4770 mobile applications processor based on a MIPS XBurst CPU, an 800 x 480 LED display and VGA front-facing / 2-megapixel rear cameras, this no-frills slate could blaze a bargain trail past Bezos and Co. So, does it manage to hold its own against its well-known competitors? Or will all that corner-cutting reveal this low cost tablet to be just another below-the-bar offering? Follow on past the break as we deliver the answers to these and other burning questions.

From Droid Life: Video: Use Your Galaxy Nexus As A Desktop Computer

These are the types of tips and tricks we love to see. In this video, a gentleman has taken his Galaxy Nexus and turned it into a fully functional desktop computer. By using a few items that any consumer could purchase or likely already has, this guy just gave all Android nerds an idea to gobble up their entire weekend.

Using a Magic Trackpad and keyboard (both Bluetooth), he was able to easily emulate a computer experience through his phone. Gestures on the trackpad work, shortcuts on the keyboard work, and since it’s Android you can multi-task. This is seriously one of the cooler 8 minute videos around.

Via: Clove UK

from Droid Life

From Kotaku: Foxconn Hacked

A hacker collective named SwaggSec claims to have hacked Foxconn, the world’s largest electronic components maker. Foxconn assembles hardware for Apple as well as game consoles, such as the PS3, the Xbox 360, and the Wii. According to SwaggSec’s open letter, the hack appears to be retaliation for Foxconn’s notorious working conditions. More »

from Kotaku

From Engadget: Researchers get CPUs and GPUs talking, boost PC performance by 20 percent

How do you fancy a 20 percent boost to your processor’s performance? Research from the North Carolina State University claims to offer just that. Despite the emergence of fused architecture SoCs, the CPU and GPU cores typically still work independently. The University hoped that by assigning tasks based on each processor’s abilities, performance efficiency would be increased. As the CPU and GPU can fetch data at comparable speeds, the researchers set the GPUs to execute the computational functions, while the CPUs did the prefetching. With that data ready in advance, the graphics processor unit has more resources free, yielding an average performance boost of 21.4 percent though it’s unclear what metrics the researchers were using. Incidentally, the research was funded by AMD, so no prizes for guessing which chips we might see using the technique first.

 

from Engadget