Friday, September 14, 2012

New BMW Can Be Tinted Up With The Touch Of A Button

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/bmw-concept-features-cool-shade-roof-2012-9

bmw active tourer tint glass

For drivers who can't decide if they want tinted or clear glass, BMW has an answer. The auto maker's Concept Active Tourer, to be presented at the Paris Motor Show in a few weeks, features a "Cool Shade" roof that can change brightness at the touch of a button.

It's based on SPD-SmartGlass technology, designed by Research Frontiers Inc. The molecular structure of the glass is changed via electrical impulses, altering how much light is allowed through.

The result is a new level of control over the lighting, glare, and temperature of the car's interior, with the added benefit of UV protection.

The Concept Active Tourer is the first to use the technology, but Research Frontiers predicts it will be adapted in other cars, planes, boats, and buildings.

If applied to car windows and the windshield as well as the roof, the feature could make driving safer: no more impaired vision when driving into sunlight. Greater control over temperature would limit the need for air conditioning, improving fuel economy.

On top of the practical benefits, the ability to go from clear glass to a fully tinted ride by pushing a button would just be plain cool.

Now see all the lavish features packing into Bentley's new SUV >

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Intel's Core i3 NUC mini-system bares it all for IDF (hands-on video)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/14/intels-core-i3-nuc-mini-system-bares-it-all-for-idf-hands-on-v/

Intel's Core i3 NUC minisystem bares it all for IDF handson video

What's red or black, 4 x 4 inches and exposes itself shamelessly on the show floor at IDF 2012? If you answered Intel's Next Unit of Computing (NUC), you'd be right. The diminutive PC was on display at Intel's Developer Forum along with its motherboard and cooling assembly. It comes in two flavors, a consumer-geared model with a single HDMI connector and Thunderbolt (in red) and a more business-centric version with two HDMI outputs and Ethernet (in black). Both mini-systems feature a third generation (Ivy Bridge) Core i3 CPU, QS77 chipset, two dual-channel DDR3 SoDIMM slots, mSATA and mini-PCIe interfaces (for SSD and WiFi cards), five USB 2.0 ports (two back, one front, two internal) and a socket for an external 19V DC power supply. The company hopes to get the attention of OEMs and DYI-ers alike when it makes this small, light and simple computer design available in October for about $400. Check out the gallery below and our hands-on video after the break.

Continue reading Intel's Core i3 NUC mini-system bares it all for IDF (hands-on video)

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Intel's Core i3 NUC mini-system bares it all for IDF (hands-on video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Sep 2012 06:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG Optimus L9 saunters through FCC, asks for martini

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/14/lg-optimus-l9-saunters-through-fcc/

LG Optimus L9 saunters through FCC, asks for martini afterward

LG's latest L-series smartphone, the Optimus L9, has just breezed (elegantly) through the FCC's radio frequency trial-by-screwdriver. The dinner-jacket-white clad Android smartphone is part of the "L-Style design philosophy" from the Korean maker, which emphasizes budget panache over brute performance. As such, it's a handsome but plasticky device, with a 4.7-inch IPS screen, ICS, qtranslator language app, dual-core 1GHz CPU, 1GB of RAM, 2,150mAh battery and 5-megapixel shooter. Vodafone in Europe showed the price as €340 unsubsidized or €50 on contract, but a member of the L-series family has yet to cross the pond. However, a surprise peek of its Optimus L7 sibling as US Cellular's upcoming Splendor shows there's some hope for a stateside cameo.

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LG Optimus L9 saunters through FCC, asks for martini originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Sep 2012 05:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Superheated Steel Balls Make Water Boil Without Bubbles [Science]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5943153/superheated-steel-balls-make-water-boil-without-bubbles

Superheated Steel Balls Make Water Boil Without BubblesThis is really cool. Scientists have found a way to make water boil without causing any bubbles. How? Drop some superheated, nanoparticle-coated steel into the water.

The phenomenon is based on something called the Leidenfrost effect. That's where water coming in contact with a super hot substance will form a layer of vapor between it and the surface. In this experiment, scientists took steel balls and coated them in nanoparticles that gave them a rough surface. They then heated the balls to 400 degrees Celsius and dropped them into some water. That's where the cool part happens.

Instead of creating a bunch of bubbles around the balls, the layer of vapor created around the steel caused the bubbles that formed to stretch themselves around the ball's rough surface. That meant that the surrounding water was mostly undisturbed. It stayed that way all the way until the balls dropped back under boiling point.

So there you go, water boiling without bubbling up. Fun, mostly-useless-to-your-life, awesome science. [Nature via New Scientist]

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Helium-Filled Hard Disks: Less Drag, More Storage [Guts]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5943238/helium+filled-hard-disks-less-drag-more-storage

Helium-Filled Hard Disks: Less Drag, More StorageWestern Digital is planning to launch a range of helium-filled hard drives. Not to make them lighter or higher-pitched, though: with a density one-seventh that of air, the gas reduces internal drag, in turn boosting performance.

PC World reports that filling the drives with helium provides such a reduction in internal friction that they run four to five degrees cooler than today's 7200 rpm drives. As a result they use 23 percent less power and allow the engineers to fit in seven disk platters as opposed to five. That means they feature a 40 percent jump in capacity.

The technology has apparently been in development for some time, with the main issue being finding a way to reliably keep the helium from leaking out of the devices. That's a nut they've cracked, though, and apparently the hermetically sealed disks can be used in more extreme conditions as a result.

According to PC World, Western Digital expects the drives to be available next year. [PC World]

Image by Scoobay under Creative Commons license

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