Saturday, April 24, 2010

Robot taxis, car service in the future


Taxi, the travel by a car serves both convenient and must not drive a car by oneself and taxi in the future use robot control replace driver, it will make easy go

This is robot taxi concept does away with the driver all together, replacing them with a computer operated vehicle. The robot taxis can seat two passengers with hand luggage and are ideally suited for large cities filled with congestion. If you need use them, a rider would call the operator, who would dispatch a taxi to their location. Once inside, the rider would enter their destination into the on-board computer and voila.

Designer team believes that design could travel at speeds up to 90 km/h and run for 20 hrs using two electric motors.

Designer: petr kubik




If you liked this vehicle, you would also be interested in:
www.kubikdesign.cz

Friday, April 23, 2010

"V Lock" can open the door within seconds

Many times at you come back to arrive at a house at night and must open lock the door with key. But, you fail to see a key hole, it is become dark!! .Try several times until take long times more than found key whole and can open it. Though, it should not get into trouble difficult. But, this problem can improve easily, unbelievable that it simple until miss idea like this

Good idea like this to be doing lid or which part at key hole is "V Lock" Which, the V Lock it’s got a V. You put the key in the V. You open the door. Perfect?

I think you'll understand this concept in basically 0 seconds and can open the door within 0-1 seconds

Designer: Junjie Zhang



If you liked this product design, you would also be interested in:
www.yankodesign.com

Site model on CTools

The Rhino site model is up on CTools, in a new folder within "Resources" called (appropriately) "Rhino Site Model." The file "compiled_model.3dm" is what you want, but it's just an empty file that loads all the individual parcels as linked block references. So, in order to view the whole model, you'll need to download all the other .3dm files and keep them in the same folder as the "compiled_model" file. Originally I had imported everything into one single stand-alone file, but that grew to 60MB with only 14 parcels, so I couldn't imagine trying to deal with it once all 78 parcels were in there.

Also, I updated the link for the VRML version of the model of the site. It is viewable, but it's rather wonky. See the addendum to my last post for a more detailed explanation of that wonkiness.

Site model on CTools

The Rhino site model is up on CTools, in a new folder within "Resources" called (appropriately) "Rhino Site Model." The file "compiled_model.3dm" is what you want, but it's just an empty file that loads all the individual parcels as linked block references. So, in order to view the whole model, you'll need to download all the other .3dm files and keep them in the same folder as the "compiled_model" file. Originally I had imported everything into one single stand-alone file, but that grew to 60MB with only 14 parcels, so I couldn't imagine trying to deal with it once all 78 parcels were in there.

Also, I updated the link for the VRML version of the model of the site. It is viewable, but it's rather wonky. See the addendum to my last post for a more detailed explanation of that wonkiness.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Book Review: "The Warded Man" by Peter V. Brett


"There's our friend again," said Gaims, gesturing into the darkness from their post on the wall.

"Right on time," Woron agreed, coming up next to him. "What do you s'pose he wants?"

"Empty my pockets," Gaims said, "you'll find no answers."

The two guards leaned against the warded rail of the watchtower and watched as the one-armed rock demon materialized before the gate. It was big, even to the eyes of the Milnese guards, who saw more of rock demons than any other type.

While the other demons were still getting their bearings, the one-armed demon moved with purpose, snuffling about the gate, searching. Then it straightened and struck the gate, testing the wards. Magic flared and threw the demon back, but it was undeterred. Slowly, the demon moved along the wall, striking again and again, searching for a weakness until it was out of sight.

Hours later, a crackle of energy signaled the demon's return form the opposite direction. The guards at the other posts said that the demon circled the city each night, attacking every ward. When it reached the gate once more, it settled back on its haunches, staring patiently at the city.

Gaims and Woron were used to this scene, having witnessed it every night for the past year. They had even begun to look forward to it, passing the time on their watch by betting on how long One Arm took to circle the city, or whether he would head east or west to do so.

"I'm half tempted to let 'im in just t'see what he's after," Woron mused.

"Don't even joke about that," Gaimes warned. "If the watch commander hears talk like that, he'll have both of us in irons, quarrying stone for the next year."

His partner grunted. "Still," he said, "you have to wonder..."


~Excerpt from The Warded Man by Peter V. Brett

Peter V. Brett has gained quite a following in the last year since the debut of "The Warded Man," and as a lover of good, solid fantasy writing I have to add my name to the list of reviewers who think Brett may prove to be an exceptional talent.

For hundreds of years humanity has been cowering in the dark against the relentless onslaught of the corelings-- demons who rise up through the earth as night falls and exist only to destroy human kind. As their numbers dwindle, the only defense people have against the corelings are magical wards that repel the demons. But the wards are often weak and the demons are relentless when it comes to pounding against the wards to get to their prey.

Arlen has never known life without the constant threat of the demons. As a young man he knows he doesn't like cowering in fear and desires to fight back. But the fear of demonkind is so ingrained, it isn't until a tragic series of events occur that Arlen has a chance to test his resolve.

"The Warded Man" follows the story of three main characters: Arlen; Leesha--a herb woman; and Rojer-- a young jongleur (minstral) who was maimed by the demons as a child. But "The Warded Man" is really Arlen's story and it's a coming of age story in many ways.

What Brett does in "The Warded Man" is take a simple idea and develop it to the fullest extent. The corelings are an implacable enemy that could be vague in less skilled hands, but Brett somehow finds a way to give mindless destruction a personality. And every character has a compelling story. Arlen, Leesha and Rojer don't cross paths until well into the story, though you know that Brett is building that narrative for a reason. Rather than bog the story down, it gives each story a chance to flourish.

But ultimately it's Arlen who intrigued me the most. Like most heroes in fantasy fiction he becomes a man with a legend and possibly a figure of prophesy. But Arlen isn't a character of convenient attributes or unusual magical talent. He's just a driven man who pushes himself harder than most would think humanly possible. And there's something really wonderful in that characterization. There are no shortcuts to Arlen's development and that makes him a particularly believable protagonist.

Everything about "The Warded Man" is well thought out. The corelings, the wards and the world of Brett's creation are all described in detail and there are no moments where you feel as if there are gaps in logic. Brett proves that fantasy doesn't have to be overcomplicated and it doesn't have to follow fantasy tropes of sword and sorcery. It's just a great book that has everything you want; good heroes, believable villains, suspense and solid world-building. "The Warded Man" easily slips onto my 'most recommended' list.

Site Model - compiling

We have a few parcels loaded into the full digital site model. Here's a first look:



Isn't it a better "first look" than the Digital Project site model from a few weeks ago?

Try the VRML model, too.

[Note: the link has now been updated to the WRL2.0 file. It works.... kinda.... it takes a LOT of zooming out/panning/rotating/moving to got into a position to see anything. Part of the problem is the ground plane, which is the same color as the background, so if you get
under the plane, everything becomes a sea of gray.

Another issue seems to be the viewing extents. Once I navigated to a point above the middle, I could see buildings that were near me, but others were obscured by the gray background. As I rotated around, they would melt in an out of this background. I did surround the entire model with a sphere so that a background image could be mapped onto it, but the sphere is plenty big enough that it shouldn't be obscuring any towers.

Yet another issue is that the Zoom and Slide buttons don't seem to work properly. Oh, and somehow the orientation of the model has tilted 90-degrees, so using the Straighten button really screws up the orientation. Hopefully all this can be sorted out by Monday, when it will be time to take the model across the street and set some views....]

Site Model - compiling

We have a few parcels loaded into the full digital site model. Here's a first look:



Isn't it a better "first look" than the Digital Project site model from a few weeks ago?

Try the VRML model, too.

[Note: the link has now been updated to the WRL2.0 file. It works.... kinda.... it takes a LOT of zooming out/panning/rotating/moving to got into a position to see anything. Part of the problem is the ground plane, which is the same color as the background, so if you get
under the plane, everything becomes a sea of gray.

Another issue seems to be the viewing extents. Once I navigated to a point above the middle, I could see buildings that were near me, but others were obscured by the gray background. As I rotated around, they would melt in an out of this background. I did surround the entire model with a sphere so that a background image could be mapped onto it, but the sphere is plenty big enough that it shouldn't be obscuring any towers.

Yet another issue is that the Zoom and Slide buttons don't seem to work properly. Oh, and somehow the orientation of the model has tilted 90-degrees, so using the Straighten button really screws up the orientation. Hopefully all this can be sorted out by Monday, when it will be time to take the model across the street and set some views....]