May
13
2009
destinyland writes “Want to build a robot this summer? ‘Robot-loving Japanese are tinkering with screwdrivers and motors instead of heading to the beach,’ and this article identifies the stores and sites serving robot hobbyists. Several sites are actually selling leftover industrial robots, but there’s a variety of smaller-size robot vendors, from Tokyo’s Vstone Robot Center to Carl’s Electronics in Oakland (which sells sound-activated ‘Hydradzoids’ and solar-powered robots that crawl). Hasbro even sells their own functioning R2-D2 droid with real sonar navigation and a ‘voice recognition response module.'”
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Comments Off on For Building DIY Droids, It Helps to Live In Japan | tags: japan, japanese, robot | posted in technical news
May
4
2009
When Google Earth added historical maps of Japan to its online collection last year, the search giant didn’t expect a backlash. The finely detailed woodblock prints have been around for centuries, they were already posted on another Web site, and a historical map of Tokyo put up in 2006 hadn’t caused any problems.
Comments Off on Old Japanese maps on Google Earth unveil secrets | tags: google, japan, japanese, web | posted in technical news
May
3
2009
When Google Earth added historical maps of Japan to its online collection last year, the search giant didn’t expect a backlash. The finely detailed woodblock prints have been around for centuries, they were already posted on another Web site, and a historical map of Tokyo put up in 2006 hadn’t caused any problems.
Comments Off on Old Japanese maps on Google Earth unveil secrets | tags: google, japan, japanese, web | posted in technical news
May
2
2009
SpuriousLogic writes “Drinking water which contains lithium may reduce the risk of suicide, a Japanese study suggests. Researchers compared levels of lithium in drinking water to suicide rates in the prefecture of Oita, which has a population of more than one million. The suicide rate was significantly lower in those areas with the highest levels of lithium, they wrote in the British Journal of Psychiatry. And I was only worried about fluoridation affecting my precious bodily fluids before …”
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Comments Off on Lithium In Water "Curbs Suicide" | tags: japan, japanese | posted in technical news
May
1
2009
Hana table by Japanese designer Shige Hasegawa consists of five interlocking plywood legs that support the glass top without any screws or nails.
Comments Off on Amazing Interior Design Ideas | tags: japan, japanese | posted in technical news
Apr
28
2009
Less than a month after the announcement of Six Days in Fallujah , a video game based upon a real-life battle between US Marines and Iraqi insurgents in 2004, Konami has decided that it is too controversial, and abandoned plans to publish the game. The developer, Atomic Games, has not commented on Konami’s decision other than to say an announcement will be made soon. Konami told a Japanese newspaper, “After seeing the reaction to the video game in the United States and hearing opinions sent through phone calls and e-mail, we decided several days ago not to sell it.” While the game did receive a great deal of criticism, others were optimistic, including several outspoken veterans of the Iraq war. One of the major complaints was that in researching the battle, Atomic Games reportedly interviewed several insurgents. This prompted speculation that the insurgents were compensated for their help, though Atomic later denied that was the case. Konami’s decision also may have been influenced by the fact that they seemed to represent it as entertainment, whereas Atomic’s president, Peter Tamte, was more hesitant to describe it as “fun.” He said, “The words I would use to describe the game — first of all, it’s compelling. And another word I use — insight.”
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Comments Off on Konami Cuts and Runs From Iraq War Game | tags: Atom, developer, games, google, japan, japanese, news, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
22
2009
Ever find yourself with a water-soaked low-battery phone? Sharp and Japanese network KDDI have a solution: the world’s first solar-powered waterproof cell phone.
Comments Off on The World’s First Solar-Powered Waterproof Cell Phone | tags: cell phone, japan, japanese, network, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
Comments Off on Thai protests disrupt Asian summit – CNN International | tags: google, japan, japanese, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
destinyland writes “A Japanese company is preparing limited mass production of a cybernetic bodysuit which dramatically increases user strength up to ten times. The “Hybrid Assistive Limb” suit synchronizes movements of a mechanical exoskeleton to biological nerve signals detected by biopads on the body. (Originally envisioned for people with disabilities, the suit also has industrial applications, and the company is planning annual production of 400 units at ,200 apiece.) Its battery life is five hours, according to the company’s web site, which promises they’re also opening a EU branch to begin sales outside of Japan.”
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Comments Off on Robot Body Suit To Be Marketed In Japan | tags: google, japan, japanese, robot, web | posted in technical news
Apr
9
2009
supersloshy writes “I’m a user of Ubuntu Linux and I have been for a little while now. Recently I’ve been trying to copy DVDs onto a portable media player, but everything I’ve tried isn’t working right. dvd::rip always gets the language mixed up (for example, when ripping ‘Howl’s Moving Castle,’ one of the files it ripped to was in Japanese instead of English), Acidrip just plain isn’t working for me (not recognizing a disc with spaces in its name, refusing to encode, etc.), Thoggen is having trouble with chapters (chapter 1 repeated twice for me once), and OGMRip has the audio out of sync. What I’m looking for is a reliable program to copy the movie into a single file with none of the audio or video glitches as mentioned above. Is there even such thing on Linux? If you can’t think of a decent Linux-based solution, then a Windows one is fine as long as it works.”
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Comments Off on Decent DVD-Ripping Solution For Linux? | tags: google, japan, japanese, linux, program, ubuntu | posted in technical news