Saturday, October 23, 2010

Amazon announces 14-day lending feature for Kindle books, newspapers and magazines for Kindle apps


users can already lend ebooks they've purchased to others, and it looks like Kindle users will soon be able to do the same. Amazon has just announced that it will be offering a similar feature "later this year" that will let folks lend books they've purchased to other Kindle users for a 14-day period, during which the person that actually purchased the book won't be able to read it themselves. That feature won't be available for all ebooks, however, as it will be up to individual publishers and rights holders to enable it for a particular book. What's more, Amazon has also announced that Kindle newspapers and magazines will soon be readable on the various free Kindle apps available for other devices -- look for that feature to launch in the "coming weeks."

Astronaut Posts First Foursquare Check-In from Space

It was bound to happen sooner or later. A NASA astronaut has become the first person to check-in to a social-networking service from space.

Commander Douglas H. Wheelock of Expedition 25 checked into the International Space Station on Friday, unlocking the new NASA Explorer Badge. He used Foursquare's mobile site aboard the ISS's orbiting laboratory, NASA said.

"You are now 220 miles above Earth traveling at 17,500 mph and unlocked the NASA Explorer Badge," the badge notification said. "Show this badge and get a free scoop of astronaut ice cream."

"Check-ins from around the world have been cool, but this blew my mind! We're psyched to partner with NASA to help users explore the space program and the universe," Dennis Crowley, chief executive and co-founder of Foursquare, said in a statement.

"We are very grateful to JESS3 and NASA for making this all happen. In the near future, explorers on earth who visit space-related places can also unlock the badge while learning about NASA history and the space program," Eric Friedman, head of business development at Foursquare, wrote in a blog post.

Wheelock's check-in is part of partnership between NASA and Foursquare to connect its users to the space agency. When Wheelock returns, users back on earth can check-in and earn the NASA Explorer Badge at places like the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida, the space shuttle Enterprise inside the McDonnell hangar in Virginia, the U.S. Space and Rocket Center in Alabama, and more. Details are available on Foursquare's NASA page.

A customized NASA homepage will also provide official tips and information about the nation's space program in locations throughout the United States.

"When Expedition 26 docks later this year, we'll be excited to welcome Commander Scott Kelly to the ISS, where he'll be competing for perhaps the most elusive mayorship on Foursquare," Friedman wrote.

Wheelock left for the ISS on June 15 and assumed command of the orbiting laboratory and Expedition 25 on September 22. During his time in space, he and astronaut Tracy Caldwell Dyson conducted three spacewalks to replace a faulty cooling pump module on the station's backbone, known as the truss, NASA said. Wheelock, Dyson, and crew members are also working on more than 100 microgravity experiments in human research, biology and biotechnology, physical and materials sciences, technology development, and Earth and space sciences.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

CO-RIDE CONCEPT

This concept was made possible thanks to Kars's input on TAT's open innovation site www.tat.se/openinnovation. This experiment will be open until June 18th 2010. The concept aims to increase people-per-car density with a hitchhiker service, using recommendations to make it safer.

Future of Screen Technology

Capacitive screens has now become a commodity for touch screen devices. Screen technology is now taking the next leap and the coming years imagination is the only thing stopping us. We will soon have dual screens, malleable screens, screens built into wifi connected mirrors, desks or backside of gadgets clothed with e-ink screens, tactile feedback, color screens with great contrast in sunlight, holographics/stereoscopic screens, color e-ink touch screens, or screens actually knowing where they are in relation to other screens thanks to ultrasonic emitters and microphones.

We want to show some of these things in an "experience video", that shows a normal day in a couple of years when all these technologies are affordable enough to be used everywhere. This video is the result of our experiment with open innovation, read more about our experiment here. Big thanks to all the people from TAT and around the world who helped out and sometimes shared their ideas and sometimes gave us homework on our own ideas.