Robótica Educativa!
25.8K views | +0 today
Follow
Robótica Educativa!
Una Educación sin miedo a las máquinas!
Curated by juandoming
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by juandoming from Consumer and technological trends in China
Scoop.it!

Xiaomi prefers WOM to advertising : News from warc.com

Xiaomi prefers WOM to advertising : News from warc.com | Robótica Educativa! | Scoop.it

"Xiaomi, the fastest growing smartphone vendor in China, believes investment in quality products and innovation is a more effective driver of sales growth than advertising, the company's president has said ..."

©


Via Leona Ungerer
No comment yet.
Rescooped by juandoming from cross pond high tech
Scoop.it!

Google smartphones become brains of hovering robots at ISS

Google smartphones become brains of hovering robots at ISS | Robótica Educativa! | Scoop.it

NASA will employ Google smartphones with advanced 3D sensing and vision technology to control Star Wars-inspired small, round hovering robots on the International Space Station.

The phones, part of Google’s Project Tango, will be used for NASA’s Synchronized Position Hold, Engage, Reorient, Experimental Satellites (SPHERES). The system may eventually assume chores from astronauts or potentially dangerous tasks outside the International Space Station (ISS).

The 5-inch handsets will accompany a cargo spacecraft scheduled for launch on July 11, according to Reuters.

Project Tango devices, first introduced by Google in February, use sensors to build visual maps of rooms using 3D scanning. Google believes the sensors, used in combination with advanced computer vision techniques, can revolutionize indoor navigation and gaming, among other opportunities.

NASA’s soccer-ball-sized SPHERES robots, guided by the Google handsets, will be used around the space station’s microgravity interior, moving an inch per second via small spurts of carbon dioxide.


Via Philippe J DEWOST
Philippe J DEWOST's curator insight, July 8, 2014 4:05 AM

Interesting echo to a recent comment stating than a smartphone now has the computing power of an Apollo mission, or even for some, of the entire 1970 NASA...