Futurist Foresight - Applied Technotopia

Scanning the ever changing global environment and examining the leading trends in business management, strategic foresight, robotics, space (government and commercial), energy, the digital landscape and other emerging technologies today, in order to better understand tomorrow.


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Interesting 3d printed jewelery, here a brass pendent.

pookasde:

The circle of life: eating and being eaten.

Brass pendant, manufactured via i.materialise 3D printing service

(via seattle-gadgets)

This poses an interesting “What if” scenario - here “What if Earth had rings”.

the-science-llama:

If Earth Had Rings

First off, they would be really pretty to look at. They would also dominate the sky in both night and day at exactly the same place as they would never rise nor set. And at night you would see the Earth’s shadow swing across the rings, like in the 4th photo here.

However, life would be very different on Earth if this were the case. Nocturnal animals would have a hard time being nocturnal, as the light reflecting from the rings would illuminate the night.

Because we are closer to the Sun than Saturn is, the rings would be more rocky than ice, making them less bright but still pretty bright. In fact, you would see far less stars at night (living anywhere other than the equator or the arctic circle) because of the light pollution and not to mention ruin most meteor showers because of that.

During the day the rings would block sunlight in certain regions of the planet creating wild weather cycles and effecting plant life as well. So basically, they would be definitely pretty to look at but they would also make a whole lot of things screwy.

Illustrations by Ron Miller // io9
— Click the photos for captions

(via zeitgeistrama)

Isn´t tech convergence just wonderful?

zeitgeistrama:

and add internet access to the outcome… 
the-promised-wlan
:

Amazing how much the speed of technological change has increased.. Just imagine what the next 20 years will bring!

This list offers a look at the apps currently available for Google Glass. I particularly like the news apps.

thisistheverge:

Google Glass apps: everything you can do right now

We test every Google Glass app so you don’t have to

(via futuresagency)

Congratulations to Paul and his team! Your blog has been an inspiration!
emergentfutures:

Just passed 200,000 followers here at Tumblr - Amazing
Thanks to all the fantastic followers who comment, engage and reblog our scanning stuff from here.
Eventful times with the sale to Yahoo - going to be verybinteresting to see how it plays out
Paul Higgins

Congratulations to Paul and his team! Your blog has been an inspiration!

emergentfutures:

Just passed 200,000 followers here at Tumblr - Amazing

Thanks to all the fantastic followers who comment, engage and reblog our scanning stuff from here.

Eventful times with the sale to Yahoo - going to be verybinteresting to see how it plays out

Paul Higgins

A spectacular moonrise as captured by the European Space Agency (ESA) craft, Rosetta.

“Tumblr Brand Will Remain — With Mostly “Hands-Off” Product Approach by Yahoo’s Mayer – AllThingsD” http://feedly.com/k/11PR04Y

MITs Cheetah shows just what robots can do on the track.

futurescope:

MIT’s Cheetah robot runs faster & more efficiently

Robotic Greyhound Races are closer than you think. From Engadget:

At the recent International Conference on Robotics and Automation, the Institute of Technology showed of its newest version, which reached a top speed of 13.7 mph. To accomplish this, the runner still needs parallel support bars to constrain movement in one dimension, reducing any roll, yaw — and the chances of a pretty expensive fall. The team says the new version’s cost of transport (COT is power consumption divided by weight, times velocity) is around 0.52. In comparison, Honda’s Asimo has a hefty COT of 2.

[read more] [MIT Biomimetic Robotics Lab]

(via emergentfutures)

“Yahoo’s Board Approves $1.1 Billion Purchase Of Tumblr (YHOO)” http://feedly.com/k/15YZgRv

A graphic look at rover distances traveled on extra-earth objects.

abcstarstuff:

NINE-YEAR-OLD MARS ROVER PASSES 40-YEAR-OLD RECORD

While Apollo 17 astronauts Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt visited Earth’s Moon for three days in December 1972, they drove their mission’s Lunar Roving Vehicle 19.3 nautical miles (22.21 statute miles or 35.74 kilometers). That was the farthest total distance for any NASA vehicle driving on a world other than Earth until yesterday.

The team operating NASA’s Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity received confirmation in a transmission from Mars today that the rover drove 263 feet (80 meters) on Thursday, bringing Opportunity’s total odometry since landing on Mars in January 2004 to 22.22 statute miles (35.76 kilometers).

Cernan discussed this prospect a few days ago with Opportunity team member Jim Rice of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. The Apollo 17 astronaut said, “The record we established with a roving vehicle was made to be broken, and I’m excited and proud to be able to pass the torch to Opportunity.”

The international record for driving distance on another world is still held by the Soviet Union’s remote-controlled Lunokhod 2 rover, which traveled 23 miles (37 kilometers) on the surface of Earth’s Moon in 1973.

Opportunity began a multi-week trek this week from an area where it has been working since mid-2011, the “Cape York” segment of the rim of Endeavor Crater, to an area about 1.4 miles (2.2 kilometers) away, “Solander Point.”