From Wired Top Stories: Danger Awesome: How Two MIT Grads Launched a Badass Maker Shop

You’ve heard of startups fueled by ramen noodles. But what about tech companies whose daily bread is toast? Meet Danger Awesome, a laser-cutting design shop founded by MIT grad students Ali Mohammad and Nadeem Mazen. The duo got their start after?convincing indie rock YouTube darlings OK-Go that an animated music video composed of thousands of pieces of laser-etched toast was a good idea. The band got their video and Mohammad and Mazen got promotion for their new company that went viral.

 

from Wired Top Stories

From Ars Technica: Augmented reality tank can blast holes in real surfaces

Wow, even the shadow is right.

An augmented-reality military tank that we can control from our iPhones to blast holes in real-world walls? Don’t mind if we do. This demo shown at the Agumented Reality Event 2012 (created by Ogmento, a game development company) lets users blow through surfaces in the augmented-reality environment with the tank’s cannon.

The application uses a system called Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) in real time to project and render the tank from all perspectives in new and unknown environments. The demo video below shows how the demonstrator is able to walk around the tank and see it from different angles without using a special environment or background for the app to work with. According to Ogment, SLAM “is typically used by robots and autonomous vehicles to build up a map within an unknown environment… while at the same time keeping track of their current location.” Applying the system to AR games allows users to drop digital environment elements into any space.

Ogment is billing the tank as having “x-ray vision”—that is, when the tank spins its cannon and fires a shot at a detected surface, the AR application will display a “hole” showing “what’s behind” that surface. In the demo video, a hole blasted in the tablecloth where Will Wright and Bruce Sterling are sitting shows bottles of booze and pantless legs (though if this were real and serious AR, it would show two bloody stumps instead). Oriel Bergig, vice president of research and development at Ogment, told Ars that other pre-loaded X-ray vision themes will include “scenery” and “urban.”

 

from Ars Technica

From Engadget: NYC’s Made in New York Digital Map lets you see who’s hiring in the tech field

NYC's 'Made in New York Digital Map' lets you see who's hiring in the tech field

You can’t deny Mike Bloomberg’s often coming up with different ways to involve New Yorkers in tech-related bits. On this occasion, Mayor Bloomberg & Co. have introduced a novel way for citizens of The Big Apple — and others who plan on making the move — to find jobs in the technology sector. Dubbed “Made in New York Digital Map,” the service aims to make it easier for folks to see which tech companies are seeking engineers, designers, developers, etc. At the moment there’s more than 325 looking for new hires, with over “thousands of jobs” being up for grabs. Mayor Bloomberg says this is only the beginning and he’s encouraging startups to set up shop here in the City, as he believes this “is the place to be if you’re a growing tech startup.” You can take a tour of the Digital Map now via one of the source links below.

 

from Engadget

From Technology Review RSS Feeds: Antimatter Propulsion Engine Redesigned Using CERN’s Particle Physics Simulation Toolkit

Latest simulation shows that the magnetic nozzles required for antimatter propulsion could be vastly more efficient than previously thought–and built with today’s technologies

Smash a lump of matter into antimatter and it will release a thousand times more energy than the same mass of fuel in a nuclear fission reactor and some 2 billion times more than burning the equivalent in hydrocarbons.




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