2007/03/27

TI demos its movie projector in a phone | CNET News.com

TI demos its movie projector in a phone | CNET News.com


At the CTIA Wireless 2007 show, TI is providing public demonstrations of its digital light processing (DLP) 'pico' projector, a tiny movie projector that can fit inside a cell phone.

TI showed off the components and a prototype at the Consumer Electronics Show earlier this year to a few reporters. Now the company is touting a working prototype in a phone. The phone is fake, but the projector works.


I expect someday this is what laptop displays will look like. Why waste physical space and weight, provided you can find or create a flat viewing surface?

2007/03/05

TextMate, Parallels, and Visual Web Developer 2005 Express Edition

I've been using TextMate for the past two years, and like it so well that I have a hard time adjusting to most other text editors. Even my old favorite, XEmacs, is now painful to use.

I recently started work on my first ASP.NET project. The customer wants the whole thing to be done with VB.NET -- another first for me.

Lots of bundles are available for TextMate, and among them is an "ASP vb.NET" bundle. Yippee! Since my Windows XP "machine" is a VM hosted under Parallels, I can develop my project in a shared folder. [Edit 2007/03/06] On the Mac side I can use the Finder's "Network" sidebar entry to connect to my VM and mount the shared folder. TextMate sees it just fine. I get to use all of the toys at once.

Almost... I think it's because of filename limitations in NTFS, but I can't check out a working copy of my subversion repository into such a shared folder -- not from the Mac side. Trying to do so fails when subversion tries to check out a file whose name contains more than one period (".").

The simplest solution seems to be to to install the excellent TortoiseSVN under XP, and to check out the working copy from Windows. In order to avoid entering my ssh password 400 times, I've also installed PuTTY and used it to generate a private/public key pair for use with the subversion server.

Parallels really makes for some head-twisting fun. Recently I attended a web meeting using GoToMeeting, running in a Parallels VM. Instead of scrambling madly to keep notes on paper, I recorded the whole thing as a QuickTime movie using iShowU, running natively on Mac OS X. Let's see, that's a screencast recorded on a Mac, of a web conference running in a Win XP virtual machine hosted on the Mac.

2007/03/01

Mars Melt Hints at Solar, Not Human, Cause for Warming, Scientist Says

Mars Melt Hints at Solar, Not Human, Cause for Warming, Scientist Says: "Simultaneous warming on Earth and Mars suggests that our planet's recent climate changes have a natural—and not a human-induced—cause, according to one scientist's controversial theory."

"Man-made greenhouse warming has made a small contribution to the warming seen on Earth in recent years, but it cannot compete with the increase in solar irradiance," Abdussamatov said.


Abdussamatov is not alone in his beliefs. Last fall a group of German researchers also concluded that the sun was the primary cause of the historically recent increases in global mean temperature. [insert URL here]

Humans have a significant effect on this planet. Pick a satellite image, any image, and it's obvious that we've been here :) And of course we could soil our environment so badly that we die out.

Still, the hand-wringing over climate change often sounds like an oblique claim to importance. Dominion over the animals, created in God's image, etc. It's an anthropocentric world-view that even atheists can embrace. So reminders of the relative importance of the sun are good for our humility.

Unfortunately, the article notes several reasons why Abdussamatov's claims are met with skepticism. Mars has much bigger orbital wobbles than Earth, so it endures bigger climate swings. Greenhouse gases are important to our climate; without them life probably wouldn't have flourished here. Etc.

Abdussamatov does offer a way to test his claims, but it will take some time:
"The solar irradiance began to drop in the 1990s, and a minimum will be reached by approximately 2040," Abdussamatov said. "It will cause a steep cooling of the climate on Earth in 15 to 20 years."

N. Korea vows to denuclearize in talks - Yahoo! News

N. Korea vows to denuclearize in talks - Yahoo! News: "SEOUL, South Korea - North Korea's No. 2 leader pledged his country's commitment Thursday to giving up its nuclear program amid intensifying diplomacy aimed at implementing Pyongyang's pledge to disarm."

Based on seismic readings, North Korea's nuclear test last fall might have been a dud. Could this be one reason (coming as a distant second to the prospect of mass starvation) for the North's commitment to disarmament?