Items tagged: tech

Prodigy Deconstructed

Tuesday, 16 March 2010

Jim Pavloff has put up a couple of videos up on YouTube that re-create two Prodigy numbers in Ableton Live. He starts from a clean slate and gradually builds up the songs from samples and loops. It’s fascinating viewing.

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A Look At China’s Gadget Markets

Friday, 5 March 2010

Dan Chung (The Guardian and DSLR News Shooter) has shot a video of the Zhongguancun gadget city in Beijing. He shot the video to test his new Canon 550D cameras. But it is of interest to a geek audience because it shows what China’s gadget/electronic markets are like. They’re huge multi-floored malls in which you can get everything you need to satisfy your inner geek.

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Symbian Goes Open Source

Friday, 5 February 2010

When I wrote about the PsiXpda I made a snarky reference to the long time it was taking for Nokia to release Symbian as open source. Well, what do you know? As soon as I write about it they go open source. Apparently ahead of schedule - though that seems a bit arbitrary since (if I recall correctly) when they started there was no schedule. And the Symbian Source page says… “Not all of the code is yet available under open source licences.” Odd that.

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More On China’s Science And Tech Rise

Wednesday, 3 February 2010

China has been in the news a lot lately. Not all of it good. But here is some good news. The New York Times is reporting on China’s rise in renewable energy industries - already World leader in wind turbines and solar panels. And The Guardian is reporting that, in the wake of the US plans to scrap moon missions, China could be the only country remaining with the goal to place men on the moon. Good luck to ‘em it will be a marvellous achievement.

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Four Yorkshiremen and an iPad

Monday, 1 February 2010

After the introduction of the iPad last week a lot of hackers (in the Hackers and Painters sense) published a lot of blog articles bemoaning its closed nature - e.g. Tinkerers Sunset. They sound like the Four Yorkshiremen from Monty Python.

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China’s Scientific Rise

Friday, 29 January 2010

For someone who spent 14 years in a corporate research lab (seven of those in China) I don’t write much about research. Perhaps I should. One of the things that was obvious to me went I came East was that, given the scale of investment and the determinism and hard work going on, China would soon be catching up with the West in research. The numbers seem to be suggesting this will soon be true.

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Psion Lives on in the PsiXpda or the e-King S515

Wednesday, 27 January 2010

My first PDA was a Psion Series 3c. A classic. This was followed by a Series 5. Even better. And then a slightly mis-judged Series 7. Probably one of the World’s first netbooks; released in 2000. These machine were well designed and some what ahead of their time. In classic British fashion Psion managed to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory and gave up the PDA market. They now live on as a supplier of industrial handhelds called Psion Teklogix. The Psion operating system (EPOC) was also ahead of its time: small, realtime, embedded.…

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Gallery Of Vintage Computers

Wednesday, 23 December 2009

Pingdom have put together a nice gallery of pictures of early computers starting from 1944 (Colossus and Z4) to 1964 (Univac 1108). Lovely.

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Radio 4, Lego and Calculus

Monday, 12 October 2009

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Bijin Tokei: A Clock By Any Other Name

Friday, 18 September 2009

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