Hawser
family an anchor during rough waters :)
Saturday, May 14, 2016
sky walker
Welcome to the Lower Moravia – at an altitude of 1116 meters. A winding road through the trees, the wooden structure, will lead you to the top of this unique building. The height of 55 meters offers breathtaking views of the surrounding countryside.
Wednesday, May 4, 2016
Ehang's autonomous helicopter promises to fly you anywhere, no pilot required
CES has already given us plenty of news about drones and cars, it’s even given us drones that launch from the back of trucks! Both industries are working toward the same end goal — completely autonomous vehicles that can carry passengers or packages. And they are relying on a similar set of fundamental technologies — from computer vision and artificial intelligence to a suite of sensors for positioning and navigation. But we rarely think of them as overlapping.
That will certainly change after this morning. Ehang, a Chinese drone company, announced a new product at CES it's calling the Ehang 184, an all electric quadcopter scaled up from a drone so that it's large enough to carry a passenger. Ehang calls it an autonomous aerial vehicle, I prefer personal pilotless helicopter, but if you need to explain what it is to anyone, just say it's a driverless car for the sky.
Ehang says the 184, which is all electric, can carry a single passenger up to 10 miles or roughly 23 minutes of flight. The person in the cockpit doesn’t do any piloting, they just input their destination and enjoy the ride. The aircraft claims to be able to autonomously take off, fly a route, sense obstacles, and land. And if anything goes wrong, a human pilot is supposed to step in and take over the controls from a remote command station.
If this sounds crazy and illegal, well that's because currently it is. Right now Ehang has no plans to fly it in the US, where it hasn’t been tested or approved as airworthy by the FAA, so unfortunately a live demo at CES isn't happening. It says it has completed successful flight in China, but the video the company provided never showed the aircraft in flight with a human inside. The photos it supplied were mostly renders or images of the craft that lacked any other objects for scale.
The particles visualizer on Google Play Music sets the mood with music “particles” you can see.
When listening to music on the cloud player’s web app you can now choose between two fullscreen views: the traditional panning album art or the new mesmerizing ‘particles animation’.
Despite the name the actual effect is more akin to ink moving around in water.
The heuristics choreographing the movement is, presumably, supposed to be in time with the music (though as with most audio visualizers I’ve ever tried, it seems a little hit and miss in that regard).
That doesn’t mean it isn’t beautiful to look at though. It’s hypnotic. The splodges dance in a 3D space, darting around, intertwining and changing color during the course of a track.
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