Archive for the ‘Best of’ Category

Dimensions: The Best Math Film You’ve Never Seen

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Actually, given hypios’ fan-base, you probably have seen it.

I myself hadn’t heard about the Prix d’Alembert-winning Dimensions until reading about it last week on (Equalis co-founder) Carmine Napolitano’s blog, Conjecture.  The movie, created by engineer, imageer, animator, Jos Leys in partnership with French mathematician Étienne Ghys and Aurélien Alvarez, is undoubtedly  the new math cult classic (the old cult classic is, of course, Eames’ 1968 Powers of 10).

Since Dimensions release in June 2008, through the Creative Common liscense, the film has been translated into nine languages and viewed by over 800,000 people. You can watch it and download it free.  Or, they’ll send you a copy for 10 euros.

Leys tells Napolitano that, though his training’s in mechanical engineering ( “only like half of a math degree,”) his real passion “is using math to create computer generated, geometric imagery.”  You can tell.  His images and animation are used to explore and explain mathematical “objects” like fractals and Poincare’s Disc.  In fact, he met Dimensions co-creator Etienne Ghys when the latter approached him about using his images in a conference paper on “knots and dynamics.”  You can see the fascinating results of their first collaboration are here. As Napolitano reports, even Field’s Medalist Terence Tao was impressed.

As for the movie: it’s “nine chapters, two hours of maths, that take you gradually up to the fourth dimension. Mathematical vertigo” [and pure delight] guaranteed!  Background information on every chapter is available on the site (see “Details“).  For the ultimate geek-out, join the Dimensions fanclub at Equalis.

Enhanced by Zemanta

This Week in Cool: Folding Bicycles, Solar Planes and Meat Houses

Monday, July 12th, 2010
Solar Impulse 4 motors airplane inflight
Image via Wikipedia

I don’t know if, as Inhabitat puts it, “design will save the world,” but it will, give you meat houses, bendy, thieve-repelling bikes, and solar-cell powered airplanes.  All things that might make your dreams a little bigger or a little riskier this week.

And yes, that was meat houses you just read. But according to designer M. Joachim, it’s a matter of victim-less meat.

The Second Golden Age of Flight

After the remarkable success of last Thursday’s overnight flight, (proving that solar-powered airplane can fly in darkness), the next step for Bertrand Piccard’s Solar Impulse airplane will be a repeat of Lindbergh’s 1927 feat, the transatlantic flight.

Solar Impulse is a propeller plane with nearly 12,000 solar cells on its 207-foot lightweight carbon-fiber wings. Last week’s test flight showed that the cells stored enough energy between a morning takeoff and nightfall to get pilot André Borschberg through the night at an altitude of 28,000 feet.

Solar powered planes might not save the world but they should help end the jet-set’s guilt over its carbon “bigfoot.”

Bendy-Bike

Kevin Scott recently won runner-up in a UK Young Designers competition for a bike you can fold (around a lampost for instance) for easy and secure lock-up (you can pass a single lock through the frame and the wheel).  K. Scott, just add a built-in go-go-gadget lock and you’ll win my eternal admiration.

Living in Meat Houses

From Inhabitat, THE purveyors of “Design will save the world” optimism, the story of house made of in vitro pig meat.

Designer/Visionary, Mitchell Dr. Joachim says of his home:

It is intended to be a ‘victimless shelter’, because no sentient being was harmed in the laboratory growth of the skin.” He envisions a wall in which tissues, skin and bones replace insulation, siding, and studs respectively. For fenestration, or openings of windows and doors, he envisions sphincter muscles that can open and close. Current prototypes are pig skin cells grown around a recycled PET plastic scaffold.

It has also has the virtue of forcing upon us previously unheard-of thoughts.  For example:  whether it is Kosher (or Vegetarian) to live in pig-meat houses?  And is a house of pig-meat cells alive?

Related articles by Zemanta

Enhanced by Zemanta

Five for Friday: Best of the Eyjafjallajokull Eruption

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Now that flights through European airspace have resumed, we’ve rounded up the best images, data, and research to come out of the Eyjafjallajokull eruption. We know that the ash has affected millions—farmers, manufacturers, the airlines, business and pleasure travelers, to name a few—but the eruption and its news coverage also offered crash courses in geology, climate change, predictions and risk, geography, and aeronautic technology. After the jump, we find a silver lining in the volcanic ash cloud.

(more…)

Five for Friday: Top Innovation Experts

Friday, February 26th, 2010

Who do you trust when it comes to innovation? Whose advice on innovation has really helped you? Here’s a few innovation experts (in no particular order) who have inspired hypios. Feel free to add to our list in the comments.

1. Adaptive Path: The Experience Is the Product

The 2009 Wired article “The Good Enough Revolution” makes the case for accessibility over features, ease of use over bells and whistles. Customers don’t care about the latest technology unless it caters to their needs, so ‘cheap and simple’ is often the recipe for a winning product.

Adaptive Path, a San Francisco-based design firm, has been preaching this kind of empathetic design for years. In their latest bookSubject to Change: Creating Great Products and Services for an Uncertain World, four Adaptive Path designers urge fellow creative types to make experiences, not products, and design for people, not demographics. If “the medium is the message” was a mantra for the 20th century, Adaptive Path updates it to “the experience is the product.” As the book’s title implies, they also remind readers that fighting uncertainty or resisting unexpected change is pointless. Instead, we should see change as an opportunity to improve a product or experience.

Adaptive Path may not be the most general resource on innovation, but it’s worth a look—especially the book, which is a short, informative read.

(more…)

Five for Friday: 5 problems submitted to “problem to love”

Friday, February 19th, 2010


hypios launched its “problem to love” competition just in time for Valentine’s Day.  The contest invites researchers, scientists, engineers, innovators, social entrepreneurs, etc. to submit their unresolved and most challenging research problems (until March 14).

Two problems will be chosen out of the batch of submissions, on the basis of jury decision and popular vote, and hypios will contribute $50,000 towards solving them.  Those lucky two will then be formalized and posted on hypios’ marketplace, with solution rights going to the problem-submitter.

So you see, it’s like adding $50,000 to your research budget.  If you’ve got a fascinating problem that our network of super-Solvers should take a look at, send it our way (hold the how to survive heartbreak or how to get world peace question, though–we’re not good at solving those)!  And don’t forget to vote (early and often).

For this very special Five for Friday, see the top five problems submitted so far, at least according to this reviewer.

1. A Low Cost, Kitchen Friendly Process for Reproducing Single Copies of Printed Circuits
Joseph Bowers

Describe a low cost, safe and convenient process for reproducing single copies of potentially complex conductive patterns that can be used in the creation of electrical circuits, such that private individuals can perform this process in their kitchen with safe, commonplace, and low cost household materials. The ideal process, including the acquisition and handling of materials, or operation of equipment, should be analogous in difficulty and required expertise to baking brownies from scratch.


Because cooking-up electrical circuits in your kitchen is an important item on any DIYers’ wish list….

2. Novel Laser Technology
Anonymous

Laser technology is used everywhere: from optical storage (DVD) to ophthalmic surgery, from metal cutting to nuclear fusion simulation. One family is composed by single crystals. A. Ikesue found a way to reduce the price and to improve the effectiveness of those lasers by synthesizing transparent ceramic out of cubic materials such as Y2SiO5. The new challenge is to find a process to produce transparent ceramics out of non-cubic materials (such as YLiF4, AlN, …). Can you find it?

This sounds like a delightful challenge, and very well-posed at that.

3. A living engine for tomorrow’s cars
William Le Ferrand

We can power cars with gas or electricity, but what about imitating nature and creating an engine based on muscle fibers? Such an engine would reuse fats and carbohydrates (or directly adenosine triphosphate) to contract slow and/or fast twitch fibers and move wheels. I’d love to get a precise explanation on how muscle fibers can be grown in a laboratory, how they can be kept alive during months/years, how they regenerate and what do they need to regenerate (food, hormones).

Bio-mimicry seems a promising approach for green technologies, at least conceptually.  Not sure if this problem description is too literal, but seems worth finding out.

4. Practical electromechanical batteries
Charlie

Electromechanical batteries (see Lawrence Livermore National Labs http://bit.ly/dDcJ1K) have the potential to have an energy density far greater than those of chemical batteries. However, an obstacle is the complexity of the systems involved in the magnetic bearing used to maximise energy storage life. I’d like to see a solution, sized to passenger vehicle use, that reduces complexity & cost of manufacture at minimal expense of energy life – i.e. utilising the best “conventional” technology.

Because if biomimcry doesn’t work…there’s always “conventional” technology.

5. Technologies for s-l-o-w-i-n-g down
Anonymous

How can technology be used to help people slow down… We seek a technology solution that would trigger mindfulness and a chance to consider balance in life. This challenge could use Web 2.0, SMS or other channels to engage minds in being present and aware of what they are, not keep moving towards an impossible goal of what they want.

Maybe it’s because it’s Friday and I’ve felt particularly inundated this week  (I feel like I’m tweeting in my sleep), but reading this problem actually soothed me.  How about using those portals and pods that we’re glued to, to lower anxiety, stress.  Beta-wave inducing music is cool, what else can you think of that will impose a little Zen?

Find the rest of the problems posted here.  Consider submitting your own or just vote!

Five for Friday: Best Open Innovation Experiments

Friday, February 12th, 2010

In case you had forgotten, “open innovation is a paradigm that assumes that firms can and should use external ideas as well as internal ideas, and internal and external paths to market, as the firms look to advance their technology.” (Thanks, Henry Chesbrough!) This week we’re looking at five companies that are taking the paradigm to heart and running great open innovation experiments.

1. Local Motors: Driven by Design

Local Motors wants to create a series of cars designed for and inspired by specific locations. The company uses intelligent crowdsourcing for its car designs, from body to roof-mounted light bars. Interiors and critical parts, like the engine and brakes, come from established, high end brands like BMW. Designers submit ideas and the best are chosen through community vote. Once designs are in, cars are built in local micro-factories with owners’ help.  (Think of the IKEA model—drivers can come from anywhere, but must be able to pick up and help assemble their new cars.)
The company also runs linked competitions, community builds, and allows designers to use their portfolios as extended business cards.

(more…)

Five for Friday #2 : 5 Websites that Share Smarts for the Love

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Seems like everybody’s trying to figure out how to make a mint over the net, but a lot of valuable content is already accessible free of charge (or at least started out that way).

The creation of true value, online and off, is accounted for by intrinsic motivation. In his latest book, Drive, Dan Pink dubs it “Motivation 3.0.” In honor of motivation gone digital, we’re rounding up some of the best labors of love on the web.

There’s a bias here toward what we at hypios happened to fall in love with, and it doesn’t take into account large well-known projects like Google, TechCrunch, craigslist or slashdot, but if you find something new today, this effort at least won’t have been in vain. (more…)

Five for Friday (Five4Five) #1: A Casual Roundup of the Best Online Research Tools

Friday, January 15th, 2010


1. Mendeley:  iTunes for your .pdfs

Why is Mendeley so cool?  Because it’s like iTunes for research papers — if iTunes let you access your musical library remotely, annotate albums and share them with friends.

Mendeley’s goal is to create a giant network of socially-annotated research libraries. Its aim is fostering interaction and connection among researchers in all fields. Store your unmanageable collection of pdfs and share them with your research team. Save notes and comments, then avail them to others.

But the best feature — at least for those of us drowning in pdfs — is the possibility to organize digital docs by topic, or according to the different articles you’re writing. By making comments and research notes available along with research article metadata and citations, this tool will bring joy to the lives of many researchers — that is, once all the social features are up and running (it’s still a relatively new service).

Finally, Mendeley replicates aspects of web-based reference managers: by extracting, storing and exporting references from the library, it allows users to quickly create formatted bibliographies. But it’s more complimentary to these services than competitive; you can import and export citations, for example, between Mendeley and CiteUlike and Zotero.

Sadly, like iTunes, it can’t extract data from everything you drop on. A recent test found this reviewer manually editing reference information for 00034bdg.pdf.  It should be especially helpful for teaching and collaborative paper writing, since it allows a team of researchers to share references and store them in a commonly accessed collection.
-Milan Stankovic, PhD@hypios

2. CiteULike: Spreading the Bibliographic Metadata

Unless keeping track of citations with index cards is your thing, you’re probably using either a web-based citation manager (Connotea, CiteUlike, Zotero) or the popular but costly EndNote.  Whatever you’re using, here’s probably what you want to be able to do: extract and export citational data from any web-based document (blog post, JSTOR article) as easily as you can retweet or Digg.  Then you want to be able to access citations (wherever you are) to whip-up a perfectly formatted bibliography in the time it takes to put together a playlist.

(more…)