Fun video showing a rabbit doing what comes naturally.
Related: Bunny and Kittens: Friday Cat Fun – A Cat Adopts a Squirrel – Friday Fun: Cat Parkour
Fun video showing a rabbit doing what comes naturally.
Related: Bunny and Kittens: Friday Cat Fun – A Cat Adopts a Squirrel – Friday Fun: Cat Parkour
Just a fun video for this Friday, showing a visit by a puppet dinosaur to a Australian school.
Related: Most Dinosaurs Remain Undiscovered – Nigersaurus – Kids on Scientists: Before and After – Friday Fun: Aerodynamics for Sports – Great 3D Printing Presentation – Tornado Ride, Wet-n-Wild Australia
Very fun presentation by 10 year old on 3D printing and the open source Makerbot at Ignite Phoenix.
Related: 3D Printing is Here (2009 post looking at 3D printers) – Open Source 3-D Printing – Expensive Ink (for regular printers)
In a first-of-its-kind experiment, Bongard created both simulated and actual robots that, like tadpoles becoming frogs, change their body forms while learning how to walk. And, over generations, his simulated robots also evolved, spending less time in “infant” tadpole-like forms and more time in “adult” four-legged forms.
These evolving populations of robots were able to learn to walk more rapidly than ones with fixed body forms. And, in their final form, the changing robots had developed a more robust gait — better able to deal with, say, being knocked with a stick — than the ones that had learned to walk using upright legs from the beginning.
Bongard’s research, supported by the National Science Foundation, is part of a wider venture called evolutionary robotics. “We have an engineering goal,” he says “to produce robots as quickly and consistently as possible.” In this experimental case: upright four-legged robots that can move themselves to a light source without falling over.
Using a sophisticated computer simulation, Bongard unleashed a series of synthetic beasts that move about in a 3-dimensional space. “It looks like a modern video game,” he says. Each creature — or, rather, generations of the creatures — then run a software routine, called a genetic algorithm, that experiments with various motions until it develops a slither, shuffle, or walking gait — based on its body plan — that can get it to the light source without tipping over.
Fun, an engagement ring that plays a 20 second audio clip “Shelina, I’ll love you forever. Marry Me!…Shelina, I’ll love you forever. Marry Me!” made by artist and inventor Luke Jerram.
Using the ring, I proposed to Shelina in a hot air balloon over Bristol in 2005. We’ve since got married and had 2 children Maya and Nico.
Much better than marketing driven expensive diamonds, in my opinion.
Related: Camera Fashion – Get Your Own Science Art – Low-Cost Multi-touch Whiteboard Using Wii Remote – Cellphone Microscope
I wrote the following to my friend yesterday
> for those that haven’t picked up English, pretty soon Google translate
> will do a decent enough job of imitating a universal translator
> through my cell phone to get by 🙂
And today my brother tweeted this video:
Ok, not quite a universal translator yet, but we are moving in the right direction.
Related: Aztec Math – Holographic Television on the Way – Droid Incredible – Lego Mindstorms Robots Solving Sudoku and Rubiks Cube

This great Halloween costume by Evan Booth shows what a bit of imagination and engineering can do. A projection screen over his stomach displays a live video image of a camera on his back giving the illusion of a gaping hole. Photos via flickr. Very cool. Lets see what costumes Curious Cat readers can come up with.
Related: home engineering posts – Build Your Own Tabletop Interactive Multi-touch Computer – Low-Cost Multi-touch Whiteboard Using Wii Remote – Awesome Cat Cam
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Fun video from Russia showing some great 3D projections.
Related: Volkswagen Fun Theory: Piano Staircase – Low-Cost Multi-touch Whiteboard Using Wii Remote – Very Cool Wearable Computing Gadget from MIT – Cat Fun: Rocky the Standing Cat
More illusions by R Beau Lotto, lecturer in neuroscience, University College LondonThe middle tiles on the cube both have the same color, even though they appear very different to most of us.
The science of optical illusions
In this case the angles suggest depth and perspective and the brain believes the green table is longer than it is while the red table appears squarer.
The beautiful thing about illusions is they make us realise things are never what they seem, and that our experiences of the world shape our understanding of it.
Studying illusions can teach us several things. We can learn that it is easy for our senses to be fooled. We can learn about how the brain works. We can also learn how to take into account how our brain works to try and adjust our opinions (to be careful we are not just interpreting things incorrectly). It is amazing to see some of the wild guidance our brains give us. Normally they do a fantastic job of guiding us through our day but they have weaknesses that can lead us to mistaken conclusions.
Related: Albert Einstein, Marylin Monroe Hybrid Image – Why Does the Moon Appear Larger on the Horizon? – Illusions, Optical and Other – Seeing Patterns Where None Exists
In a fun example of appropriate technology and innovation 4 college students have created a football (soccer ball) that is charged as you play with it. The ball uses an inductive coil mechanism to generate energy, thanks in part to a novel Engineering Sciences course, Idea Translation. They are beta testing the ball in Africa: the current prototypes can provide light 3 hours of LED light after less than 10 minutes of play. Jessica Matthews ’10, Jessica Lin ’09, Hemali Thakkara ’11 and Julia Silverman ’10 (see photo) created the eco-friendly ball when they all were undergraduates at Harvard College.
They received funding from: Harvard Institute for Global Health and the Clinton Global Initiative University. The
sOccket won the Popular Mechanics Breakthrough Award, which recognizes the innovators and products poised to change the world. A future model could be used to charge a cell phone.
From Take part: approximately 1.5 billion people worldwide use kerosene to light their homes. “Not only is kerosene expensive, but its flames are dangerous and the smoke poses serious health risks,” says Lin. Respiratory infections account for the largest percentage of childhood deaths in developing nations—more than AIDS and malaria.
Related: High school team presenting a project they completed to create a solution to provide clean water – Water Pump Merry-go-Round – Engineering a Better World: Bike Corn-Sheller – Green Technology Innovation by College Engineering Students
Watch a June 2010 interview on the ball:
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