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:: Tuesday, March 10, 2009 ::

E & I

In a return to my occasional series on unusual magazines found lying around in the office kitchen, I am now a convert to Engineering and Technology magazine.

For a start, here are some interesting links from October’s fashion and technology special:
A new breed of robot
Catwalk goes techno
Haute tech couture



And the current issue is a Lego special!
Building on a dynasty
Play for tomorrow
Lego for life
Inventors’ inbox
Falling for technology
Diy society
Child's play
And more

From the DIY Society article:
www.modumobile.com
www.buglabs.net
wiki.openmoko.org
www.openhandsetalliance.com
www.sand-labs.org
www.gumstix.com
I hadn't realised how far the open handware movement had got!

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:: Dan 10.3.09 [Arc] [1 comments] ::
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:: Monday, March 31, 2008 ::

Theo Jansen

[thanks ana]

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:: Dan 31.3.08 [Arc] [0 comments] ::
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:: Wednesday, January 23, 2008 ::

Motorway Heritage
A recent technical discussion in the office was sidetracked by discussions about the age of parts of the UK motorway network. Google to the rescue, we found ukmotorwayarchive.org, "the online encyclopaedia of UK motorway heritage."

Not only did it answer all of our questions, it even presented an animated time history of network (very slow loading).

Meanwhile, over at Chris's British Road Directory we find the intriguing C-road hunt and the brilliantly annotated work in progress that is the Motorway drive simulator. I recommend the simulation of the M5 Northbound from Exminster in particular, where the petrol is only 85p/ltr and where the first "Tiredness kills Take a break" sign is annotated "Ten miles between junctions here - it's a long way to Bristol and most people are going all the way. Please don't drift off!"

Stupidly geeky as it is, it is still strangely fascinating. I've often wondered if such a map existed as I've been driving, but until now never bothered to look it up. Much as we like to take the piss out of the boring old gits in Civils in the office the engineers' fascination with such systems cannot be denied. In Microserfs Douglas Copland has the computer programmers pouring over 1970s freeway design manuals, quoting aloud from them to each other. There he touched an important part of the engineers psyche that transcends discipline.

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:: Dan 23.1.08 [Arc] [0 comments] ::
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