Wednesday 20 February 2013


The Scuddy electric folding scooter stands up, sits down and trolleys 

 

The Scuddy is made in Germany  

 

The Segway never actually changed the way cities are built – or anything else for that matter – but to a certain segment of commuter, a small, light, zero-emissions mode of transportation remains quite attractive. The Scuddy is a German-built electric scooter that fits the bill. It folds up for easy transport, allows riders to sit or stand, and provides an attractive alternative to cars, bikes and motorcycles ... and Segways. 


The Scuddy can be ridden in seated or standing positions Accessory baskets adds some room for cargo 

The Scuddy can be ridden in seated or standing positions The Scuddy has LED head and tail lights 

 The Scuddy can be ridden in seated or standing positions 

 

Tuesday 19 February 2013

 

Swiss bionic hand offers true sensations through the nervous system  

 

 

Swiss bionic hand offers true sensations through the nervous system

Those wearing bionic hands and similar prostheses often suffer a frustrating disconnect when they can touch an object but can't feel it, even if they're using direct neural control. The École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne and allies in Project TIME have developed a hand that could clear that psychological hurdle. The design implants electrodes directly in key nerves that not only allow motor input, but deliver real sensory feedback from the artificial appendage -- including needle pokes, much to the test subject's chagrin. An early trial (seen above) kept the enhanced hand separate from the wearer and was limited to two sensations at once, but an upcoming trial will graft the hand on to a tester's arm for a month, with sensations coming from across much of the simulated hand. EPFL hopes to have a fully workable unit ready to test in two years' time, which likely can't come soon enough for amputees wanting more authentic physical contact.

Saturday 16 February 2013





Asteroid fly by came closer than TV satellites




 

A newly discovered asteroid nearly half the size of a football field passed closer to the Earth than TV satellites.

 

 

 

 

Friday 15 February 2013

 

Bump app now allows transfers of any file between phone and computer.

 

Bump app now allows file transfers between phone and computer

We've seen the Bump app evolve from just a way to transfer contacts to a version that allows for mobile payments and one that lets you share photos between your phone and your computer. Now the company has expanded its feature set to transferring files of all kinds, be they photos, videos or Word documents. Simply enable the location feature in your browser, tap the files you want to move over, slap that space bar button with your phone and the files will be on their way. They'll actually head over to Bump's servers and not your desktop, but you can still easily download them if you so choose. The updated app is available on iOS and Android today, so you can start bumping your files over right now.