Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Control any device -- from mobile phones to television sets -- with just a wave of your hand

ScienceDaily (Oct. 8, 2012) ? Forget the TV remote and the games controller, now you can control anything from your mobile phone to the television with just a wave of your hand.

Researchers at Newcastle University and Microsoft Research Cambridge (MSR) have developed a sensor the size of a wrist-watch which tracks the 3-D movement of the hand and allows the user to remotely control any device.

Mapping finger movement and orientation, it gives the user remote control anytime, anywhere -- even allowing you to answer your phone while it's still in your pocket and you're walking down the street. (Watch a video on the university's YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G98zYMMEDno)

Being presented this week at the 25th Association for Computing Machinery Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology, 'Digits' allows for the first time 3-D interactions without being tied to any external hardware.

It has been developed by David Kim, a MSR funded PhD from Newcastle University's Culture Lab; Otmar Hilliges, Shahram Izadi, Alex Butler, and Jiawen Chen of MSR Cambridge; Iason Oikonomidis of Greece's Foundation for Research & Technology; and Professor Patrick Olivier of Newcastle University's Culture Lab.

"The Digits sensor doesn't rely on any external infrastructure so it is completely mobile," explains David Kim, a PhD student at Newcastle University.

"This means users are not bound to a fixed space. They can interact while moving from room to room or even running down the street. What Digits does is finally take 3-D interaction outside the living room."

To enable ubiquitous 3-D spatial interaction anywhere, Digits had to be lightweight, consume little power, and have the potential to be as small and comfortable as a watch. At the same time, Digits had to deliver superior gesture sensing and "understand" the human hand, from wrist orientation to the angle of each finger joint, so that interaction would not be limited to 3-D points in space. Digits had to understand what the hand is trying to express -- even while inside a pocket.

David adds: "We needed a system that enabled natural 3-D interactions with bare hands, but with as much flexibility and accuracy as data gloves."

The current prototype, which is being showcased at the prestigious ACM UIST 2012 conference today, includes an infrared camera, IR laser line generator, IR diffuse illuminator, and an inertial-measurement unit (IMU) track.

David says: "We wanted users to be able to interact spontaneously with their electronic devices using simple gestures without even having to reach for them. Can you imagine how much easier it would be if you could answer your mobile phone while it's still in your pocket or buried at the bottom of your bag?"

It's All About the Human Hand

One of the project's main contributions is a real-time signal-processing pipeline that robustly samples key parts of the hand, such as the tips and lower regions of each finger. Other important research achievements are two kinematic models that enable full reconstruction of hand poses from just five key points. The project posed many challenges, but the team agrees that the hardest was extrapolating natural-looking hand motions from a sparse sampling of the key points sensed by the camera.

"We had to understand our own body parts first before we could formulate their workings mathematically," Shahram Izadi explains. "We spent hours just staring at our fingers. We read dozens of scientific papers about the biomechanical properties of the human hand. We tried to correlate these five points with the highly complex motion of the hand. In fact, we completely rewrote each kinematic model about three or four times until we got it just right."

The team agrees that the most exciting moment of the project came when team members saw the models succeed.

"At the beginning, the virtual hand often broke and collapsed. It was always very painful to watch," David explains. "Then, one day, we radically simplified the mathematical model, and suddenly, it behaved like a human hand. It felt absolutely surreal and immersive, like in the movie Avatar. That moment gave us a big boost!"

Both the Digits technical paper being presented at UIST 2012 and accompanying video present interactive scenarios using Digits in a variety of applications, with particular emphasis on mobile scenarios, where it can interact with mobile phones and tablets. The researchers also experimented with eyes-free interfaces, which enable users to leave mobile devices in a pocket or purse and interact with them using hand gestures.

"By understanding how one part of the body works and knowing what sensors to use to capture a snapshot," Izadi says, "Digits offers a compelling look at the possibilities of opening up the full expressiveness and dexterity of one of our body parts for mobile human-computer interaction."

By instrumenting only the wrist, the user's entire hand is left to interact freely without wearing data gloves, input devices worn as gloves, most often used in virtual reality applications to facilitate tactile sensing and fine-motion control. The Digits prototype, whose electronics are self-contained on the user's wrist, optically image the entirety of the user's hand, enabling freehand interactions in a mobile setting.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Newcastle University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/technology/~3/xKgQerb2OIA/121009093034.htm

lawrence lessig time magazine person of the year 2011 time magazine person of the year 2011 new orleans jazz fest new orleans jazz fest louis ck michelle duggar

Best Ecommerce Mobile Apps - Work On the Internet

Miscellaneous Written by Anonymous ??Wednesday, 10 October 2012 03:04 Most of us are aware of the importance of a properly designed website for any business to flourish in the World Wide Web. This is particularly true in the case of companies using the internet as the medium for their sales and marketing activities. A portal designed with good graphics will not only nable businesses to make their presence felt in the World Wide Web, but they can also enable them to reach a wide range of intended audience. Even though, there are graphic design templates, only a professional designing firm at Los Angeles can offer the right kind of service for people looking for graphic web design services in LA.

Some of you might get a doubt as to what is included in a graphic web design and the clarification to this doubt is that it can include a wide range of elements inclusive of sketches, images and videos and even flash as well. For any business at LA, it is essential that a good designing firm should be selected for effectively making use of graphic designs in their website. In the case of free templates, their quality and performance cannot be assured. But, when a professional designing firm or designer is selected, the website owner need not worry. Most of us might have come across some form of websites, where loading will be very slow and this is due to the inefficient usage of graphics in these portals. To overcome such an issue, it is essential that a professional firm experienced in using the right kind of graphics at the right page of the website in such a way that the website can also load at a faster pace without irritating the visitor.

There are professional Graphic web design services in LA for offering the right kind of service to businessmen and individuals belonging to this part of the city. Since these firms are well-aware of the method of efficient usage of graphics in a website, they can offer the right kind of graphic design services to the website of their customer in such a way that the customers can achieve the object of brand popularity. Graphical images and flash images are wisely used by these designers in such a way that not only the website of their customers, but also their product or service gets popular among the intended audience. After all, attracting more customers is the main objective of any business. Isn't?

LAV1 is an interactive marketing agency which provides bulk email marketing services and creative graphic web design services in la. We also provide best mobile ecommerce app. For more details, please visit us.

Article Tags :

Last Updated on Wednesday, 10 October 2012 03:04

Source: http://www.workoninternet.com/business/reviews/miscellaneous/219200-article.html

Snooki Baby terrell owens terrell owens neil armstrong chris christie little league world series us open tennis

Microsoft backs free Boingo WiFi in NYC and San Francisco, hopes you'll see Metro on the metro

New York City subway stop

Microsoft is about to launch a giant media blitz for Windows 8, and it wants to guarantee that even those of us heads-down in our laptops and smartphones take notice. It's sponsoring Boingo's WiFi, making it free at popular locations in New York City and San Francisco through the holidays to pitch both its new OS and the Windows Store. The San Francisco locations are already active and mostly cover signature locations such as Fisherman's Wharf and Union Square, but Microsoft is going all-out for the New York City campaign starting November 1st: the free WiFi will reach over 200 locations in Manhattan as well as the six NYC subway stations offering underground wireless. While some might not enjoy the hard sell on Windows 8 while they're checking into Foursquare, we'd say it's at least relevant that Microsoft pushes its urban sign UI in the city that was arguably the software's major inspiration.

[Image credit: pspyro2009, Flickr]

Continue reading Microsoft backs free Boingo WiFi in NYC and San Francisco, hopes you'll see Metro on the metro

Filed under: , ,

Microsoft backs free Boingo WiFi in NYC and San Francisco, hopes you'll see Metro on the metro originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Oct 2012 01:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/09/microsoft-backs-free-boingo-wifi-in-nyc-and-san-francisco/

apple store down apple live blog ohio primary cell phone jammer g8 summit netanyahu aipac

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Open Source Lives in Polyglot Programming

The prominence and pervasiveness of open source software in cloud computing is something I've researched and written about quite a bit. I've also discussed how open source software is a key component and catalyst for the devops trend that blends application development and deployment via IT operations.


Source: http://ectnews.com.feedsportal.com/c/34520/f/632000/s/24482d9e/l/0L0Stechnewsworld0N0Crsstory0C763430Bhtml/story01.htm

wilt chamberlain joe arpaio cat in the hat green eggs and ham wiz khalifa and amber rose oh the places you ll go blunt amendment

Negative effects of computerized surveillance at home: Cause of annoyance, concern, anxiety, and even anger

ScienceDaily (Oct. 8, 2012) ? To understand the effects of continuous computerized surveillance on individuals, a Finnish research group instrumented ten Finnish households with video cameras, microphones, and logging software for personal computers, wireless networks, smartphones, TVs, and DVDs. The twelve participants filled monthly questionnaires to report on stress levels and were interviewed at six and twelve months. The study was carried out by Helsinki Institute for Information Technology HIIT, a joint research institute of Aalto University and the University of Helsinki, Finland.

The results expose a range of negative changes in experience and behavior. To all except one participant, the surveillance system proved to be a cause of annoyance, concern, anxiety, and even anger. However, surveillance did not cause mental health issues comparable in severity to depression or alcoholism, when measured with a standardized scale. Nevertheless, one household dropped out of the study at six months, citing that the breach of privacy and anonymity had grown unbearable.

The surveillees' privacy concerns plateaued after about three months, as the surveillees got more used to surveillance. The researchers attribute this to behavioral regulation of privacy. Almost all subjects exhibited changes in behavior to control what the system perceives. Some hid their activities in the home from the sensors, while some transferred them to places outside the home. Dr. Antti Oulasvirta explains: -- Although almost all were capable of adapting their daily practices to maintain privacy intrusion at a level they could tolerate, the required changes made the home fragile. Any unpredicted social event would bring the new practices to the fore and question them, and at times prevent them from taking place.

The researchers were surprised that computer logging was as disturbing as camera-based surveillance. On the one hand, logging the computer was experienced negatively because it breaches the anonymity of conversations. -- The importance of anonymity in computer use is symptomatic of the fact that a large proportion of our social activities today are mediated by computers, Oulasvirta says.

On the other hand, the ever-observing "eye," the video camera, deprived the participants of the solitude and isolation they expect at home. The surveillees felt particularly strong the violation of reserve and intimacy by the capture of nudity, physical appearance, and sex. -- Psychological theories of privacy have postulated six privacy functions of the home, and we find that computerized surveillance can disturb all of them, Oulasvirta concludes.

More experimental research is needed to reveal the effects of computerized surveillance. Prof. Petri Myllym?ki explains: -- Because the topic is challenging to study empirically, there is hardly any published research on the effects of intrusive surveillance on everyday life. In the Helsinki Privacy Experiment project, we did rigorous ethical and legal preparations, and invested into a robust technical platform, in order to allow a longitudinal field experiment of privacy. The present sample of subjects is potentially biased, as it was selected from people who volunteered based on an Internet advertisement. While we realize the limits of our sample, our work can facilitate further inquiries into this important subject.

The first results were presented at the 14th International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing (Ubicomp 2012) in Pittsburgh, PA, USA.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Aalto University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/computers_math/information_technology/~3/IX9xOrVLvIU/121008101646.htm

notre dame football Steel Magnolias Niels Bohr orioles the Rumble 2012 snl Columbus Day 2012

BusinessSA's backflip on OHS laws carries short-term gain but long ...

Australian business associations have different perspectives on the need to harmonise occupational health and safety laws across Australia but BusinessSA has performed an?enormous?backflip in only a month on new Work Health and Safety Laws. ?In a letter (now a media release) to the industry association?s members, BusinessSA has called on the South Australian Government to defer the laws until a scheduled national review in 2014. ?The major points of the letter are discussed below.

Objections to the letter on some of the LinkedIn discussion forums have been voiced by some safety and legal professionals, the principle concern being that all state governments agreed to the?initiative?of the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) in 2008 to harmonise the OHS laws. ?Employer groups, unions and OHS?regulators?have been closely involved in the harmonisation process. ?Other parties, including BusinessSA made submissions. ?According to the 2008 submission, these were the six key issues:

  • ?Self-regulation: The appropriateness of the duty of care, consultative mechanisms, performance-based (as opposed to prescriptive) regulation, and education/training in facilitating an effective (self-regulating) OHS system.
  • Causality and uncertainty: Can, and should, governments attempt to regulate with respect to potential future hazards, given the enormous pace of technological change and uncertainty relating to that change and where causes of disease cannot be readily determined?
  • Cost-benefit: To what extent should (can) risk be eliminated regardless of cost? Should risk economics (the evaluation of risk management techniques based on?cost/benefit analysis) form the basis of OHS&W strategies and regulation? The issue and interpretation of ?practicability?.
  • Legislation/regulation: The implications of governmental intervention into OHS issues, trends in regulatory treatment of OHS&W and their effects of inconsistent legislation.
  • Enforcement: Strategies for ensuring compliance. Are punitive penalties appropriate and relevant?
  • Interaction of occupational safety and health with workers? compensation: How does compensation influence prevention?? (page 10)

On 8 June 2012, the Adelaide press reported that

?Business SA chief executive Peter Vaughan said the initial legislation ?created enormous uncertainty? as to who was ultimately responsible for safety outcomes in the workplace.

But through meetings with Industrial Relations Minister Russell Wortley, Mr Vaughan said changes had been made which meant Business SA could support the Bill.

?We are pleased that the Government has agreed to address the concerns of business regarding control (over workplace safety), while also retaining the current South Australian provisions of the right to silence (for people involved in an accident),? he said.?

According to the letter to?members?in October 2012, the concerns are:

  • ?The legislation is overly complex and difficult to interpret, which is likely to result in poor compliance or even non-compliance, albeit unintentional
  • The sheer volume and complexity of the proposed new codes of practice are unworkable. Some of the codes are up to 90 pages in length and the materials often do not reflect industry-relevant best practice
  • The proposed new, complex scheme would create an ?overload? of paperwork and administrative requirements which do not equate to safer workplaces. In fact, safety practices could be directly undermined by the huge distraction that will be presented by this administrative overload
  • Small business, which represents a large proportion of this State?s employers, would be forced to use already stretched management resources to meet compliance paperwork at the cost of actual time on site and on the shop floor directly supervising work place environments for the best safety outcomes.?

It is acknowledged that the harmonisation process has developed over four years so variation from 2008 to now is, perhaps, understandable, but a change in position over a matter of four months should be of concern to the members of BusinessSA and the general community.

The new concerns also do not have credence. ?The Work Health and Safety legislation may be more complex but any law that is a revision from the same laws from 1986 will appear complex. ?Complex to one would be contemporary and applicable to another.

The accusation that the new laws? complexity may lead to non-compliance ignores the fact that most of the content of the laws is not new and has existed for over 30 years in South Australia. ?The duties to maintain a safe and health workplace have not changed, even though the holder of that duty has undertaken a name change to a PCBU.

Many of the new Codes of Practice are still in draft form and are being developed in consultation with whoever wants to be consulted. ?And few workplaces, if any, will have to apply all the Codes. ?The new Codes are associated with industry sectors or?specific?workplace hazards or provide guidance on basic OHS and risk management. ?Almost all the Codes are revisions of existing Codes or guidances. ?As with the content of the laws, most of the content is already familiar to South Australian businesses and industry associations.

BusinessSA raises concerns over red tape but not in that phrase. ?SafetyAtWorkBlog has countered this accusation in several articles over the last few years. ?The red tape issue is not only?occurring?in safety management and is part of the larger debate on productivity,?accountability?and due diligence.

The concern over the impact on small business seems recent as there is no mention of ?small business? in BusinessSA?s 2008 submission. ?Concerns about OHS in small?business?have existed for a long time but Elizabeth Bluff provided advice on how small?business?can use local business networks (dare we say, industry associations?) to?implement?OHS?improvements? ?Her?paper?is from 2003 but quotes research from 2001 and illustrates some advantages in addressing OHS matters.

?Walters (2001:375) suggests that there is a strong potential to provide the necessary support for OHS activity in smaller organisations from within their social and business environment, building support networks and establishing relationships with a range of parties that might include larger private enterprises, public sector agencies and local authorities, information agencies, training agencies, business advisers, general and community health care providers, business suppliers, clients and customers. This involves making use of dependency and contractual relationships between organisations and their clients, customers and suppliers as well as others with whom small businesses interact in daily business. Provided trusted relationships can be established to convey and reinforce information about OHS requirements, Walters (2001: 166) is optimistic that there are characteristics of smaller organisations that will facilitate attention to OHS. In particular, there is the potential for faster decision making, informal communication, understanding of practical issues which may facilitate consideration of OHS issues.? (page 42, emphasis added)

Bluff returned to the issue in her 2005 paper ?The Missing Link:?Regulating Occupational Health and Safety Support?.

In the letter, recent CEO, Nigel McBride, is also careful in his words about which States already have harmonised laws. ?He says Victoria has said no and that Western Australia is still reviewing their WHS Laws. He admits Queensland and Northern Territory have introduced new harmonised laws but fails to mention New South Wales or Tasmania or the Commonwealth or the Australian Capital Territory.

McBride states that

?It is also apparent that there will not be nationally harmonised laws in the foreseeable future.?

Most would agree that harmonisation has not met the national criteria first proposed in 2008 but the majority of Australian jurisdictions have introduced laws based on the Model Work Health and Safety Act (for which Safe Work Australia released a guidance in the last couple of days).

Some commentators have speculated that this radical switch is a purely?political?move but this is meaningless as OHS harmonisation has been a political beast since former Prime?Minister? John Howard, announced the need for such a process in the last years of his government.

Something has changed in South Australia very recently and BusinessSA has sniffed the wind and re-strategised. ?Some months ago the Federal and South Australian workplace relations Ministers were confident that new WHS laws would be introduced in each State only not to the original timetable. ?If their hopes are realised, BusinessSA will look silly.

BusinessSA?s call for a deferment to 2014 does not mean that laws will be introduced in that year. ?2014 is set for a national review of the Work Health and Safety laws. ?That?review?process and consultation will ?take months if not a year and will be exposed to further political lobbying. ?The statement may indicate a ?deferral? but, if the SA government agrees to this, South Australia will not see new laws for many years. ?This delay will lead to more controversial court prosecutions on outdated legal concepts ?like the Salvemini case and continued attacks on the operation of SafeWorkSA.

Kevin Jones

-37.716384 145.006665

Like this:

Be the first to like this.

Source: http://safetyatworkblog.com/2012/10/09/businesssas-backflip-on-ohs-laws-carries-short-term-gain-but-long-term-risk/

Olympic Schedule 2012 NBC Olympics NBC Olympics schedule Alexa Vega 2012 Olympics Chad Everett London Olympics

1st Annual 5K Run/Walk for Youth Justice | Arlington Sports ...