Tag Archives: computer

Raspberry Pi is Changing Our World

If you have not heard about Raspberry Pi, it is a very cheap computer circuit board that is changing the world.  It can be used to turn normal things into computerized robots and devices.  Read below and have your mind blown…

World’s cheapest computer gets millions tinkering

By Judith Evans

Published July 20, 2013

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    Japanese engineer Shota Ishiwatari displays the humanoid robot “Rapiro” which works with a “Raspberry Pi” in Tokyo on July 8, 2013. Raspberry Pi, the world’s cheapest computer, costing just $25 (??17, 19.50 euros), has astonished its British creators by selling almost 1.5 million units in 18 months. (AFP)

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    Japanese engineer Shota Ishiwatari displays the humanoid robot “Rapiro” which works with a “Raspberry Pi” circuit board in Tokyo on July 8, 2013. The Raspberry Pi is now powering robots in Japan and warehouse doors in Malawi, photographing astral bodies from the United States and helping to dodge censorship in China. (AFP)

LONDON (AFP) –  It’s a single circuit board the size of a credit card with no screen or keyboard, a far cry from the smooth tablets that dominate the technology market.

But the world’s cheapest computer, costing just $25 (??17, 19.50 euros), has astonished its British creators by selling almost 1.5 million units in 18 months.

The Raspberry Pi is now powering robots in Japan and warehouse doors in Malawi, photographing astral bodies from the United States and helping to dodge censorship in China.

“We’re closing in on one and and half million (sales) for something that we thought would sell a thousand,” said Eben Upton, executive director of the Raspberry Pi Foundation.

“It was just supposed to be a little thing to solve a little problem.

“We’ve sold many more to children than we expected to sell, but even more to adults. They’re using it like Lego to connect things up.”

The device, which runs the open-source Linux operating system, was designed as an educational tool for children to learn coding.

But its potential for almost infinite tinkering and customisation has fired up the imaginations of hobbyists and inventors around the world.

Tokyo inventor Shota Ishiwatari has created a small humanoid robot run by a Pi, which can tell you the weather, manage your diary and even make coffee.

“I wanted to create something by using a 3D printer and the Raspberry Pi – two cool items,” he told AFP, adding that he also wanted to demonstrate the potential of the microcomputer.

“Many Raspberry Pi users did not know how to have fun with the chip. I wanted to present practical ways to play with it.”

Upton and his colleagues first thought of creating a cheap computer suited to programming when they were teaching computer science at Cambridge University.

They noticed that children of the wired generation lacked the day-to-day experience of coding that was so formative for the computer geeks who grew up in the 1980s.

“They didn’t have the grungy familiarity with the dirty bits, the hacking,” Upton told AFP.

“The theory of computer science is maths, but the practice is a craft, like carpentry.”

Upton reminisces happily about his childhood coding on a BBC Micro, a rugged early personal computer from 1982.

Back then, you had to know a computer “language” in order to use one at all. But home computers are now so complex that parents often ban children from interfering with the underlying code.

Upton and his colleagues saw that developments in technology meant something like the Micro could now be created for a fraction of the cost, in pocket size, with the capacity to run multimedia programmes.

The team behind the Pi grew as the project developed; it now includes David Braben — the designer of a classic Micro game, Elite — and tech entrepreneur and investor Jack Lang.

By 2012, with Upton now working for a chip design firm, the Pi was ready to launch.

Demand for the device, assembled in Wales, was so high that the websites of its distributors crashed.

User groups called Raspberry Jams now meet monthly in cities from Manchester to Singapore to share ideas.

A Raspberry Jam brought together the team behind a Pi camera that will photograph rhinos and other endangered animals in east Africa, generating data on their habits and on poaching.

The Instant Wild system, backed by the Zoological Society of London, already operates in several countries, beaming images via satellite to park rangers and to an app that crowdsources identifications of animals.

But by replacing expensive purpose-built equipment with cheaper Raspberry Pis, Instant Wild hopes to vastly expand its work.

A grid of 100 Pi cameras will be set up in 2015 on a Kenyan ranch, while another Pi will make its way to Antarctica to record penguin behaviour.

“It used to be very expensive — you’d have to run a laptop, with a huge car battery to power the thing. This saves countless power and it’s easy for it to send out alerts automatically,” said Alasdair Davies, technical advisor to the project.

Upton, however, is focused closer to home.

The Raspberry Pi Foundation is nonprofit and the design freely available, so he and his team will not be retiring on the proceeds of their success.

Instead they are working on software to make the Pi more accessible for children without expert help, and Upton remains intent on improving computer education.

The foundation is in discussions with the British government on a new IT curriculum.

For the country that invented some of the earliest computers, Upton feels that teaching coding should be a matter of national pride.

“The definition of computing is being reworked to be less about PowerPoint and more about computer programming — the useful stuff. The real stuff,” he said.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/07/20/world-cheapest-computer-gets-millions-tinkering/?intcmp=obnetwork#ixzz2aHjSnjI9

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World’s oldest digital computer restarted

World’s oldest digital computer restarted

Published November 22, 2012

TechNewsDaily

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    A panorama view of the world’s oldest original working digital computer at The National Museum of Computing. (Robert Dowell)

One of the world’s first digital computers to replace the handwritten calculations of human “computors” is getting an official reboot that could lead to a spot in the Guinness Book of Records.

The 61-year-old Harwell Dekatron — about the size and weight of an SUV — was originally hailed as a slow, steady machine capable of delivering error-free calculations while running for 90 hours a week. It has survived to become the oldest original working digital computer following the announcement of its completed restoration by The National Museum of Computing in the U.K. on Tuesday.

“In 1951, the Harwell Dekatron was one of perhaps a dozen computers in the world, and since then, it has led a charmed life surviving intact while its contemporaries were recycled or destroyed,” said Kevin Murrell, a trustee at the museum.

‘In 1951, the Harwell Dekatron was one of perhaps a dozen computers in the world.’

– Kevin Murrell, a trustee at TNMOC

The computer relies on 480 relays that have more in common with telephone exchanges rather than modern PCs or Macs. Such relays sit inside a collection of racks that also hold 828 flashing Dekatron valves — gas-filled counting tubes used in the early days of computing rather than the transistors of modern electronics. [Could the Computer Age Have Begun in Victorian England?]

“The restoration was quite a challenge, requiring work with components like valves, relays and paper tape readers that are rarely seen these days and are certainly not found in modern computers,” said Delwyn Holroyd, a volunteer at the museum.

Running the computer requires about 1,500 watts of power — roughly equivalent to the power consumption of a modern hairdryer. By comparison, a laptop might use just 50 watts (1,000 watts being the equivalent of a kilowatt).

The computer does not convert calculations to the modern binary computer code consisting of ones and zeroes. Instead, the Dekatron valves each hold 10 gas-filled tubes that can each be activated as part of its decimal counting system.

Clattering paper readers and printers surround the computer to create a sound more like a roomful of typewriters than the quiet, whirring fans of modern computers.

Harwell Dekatron first served in the Harwell Atomic Energy Research Establishment that represented the U.K.’s main center for nuclear research from the end of World War II through the 1990s. But the computer had become redundant by 1957 and ended up as a teaching computer at the Wolverhampton and Staffordshire Technical College until its retirement in 1973.

The computer joins other relics of the early computing age at The National Museum of Computing, such as a rebuilt Colossus computer originally made by the Allies to break Nazi codes during World War II.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2012/11/22/world-oldest-digital-computer-restarted/?intcmp=features#ixzz2EKKx9OxJ

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The Nerd is Strong in This One! (My Nerd Credentials)

Sometimes people wonder how deep the nerd goes in me.  Think bottomless pit.  I started reading very young and always loved Conan, Lord of The Rings, Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser, Dune, Chronicles of Amber and other fantasy and sci-fi.  I started out with bookshelf wargames, the ones with square paper counters and hex maps.  We played one called Gettysburg where the map was ten feet by thirty feet in size and there was one counter for every 100 troops in the battle.  It took around two weeks per turn, moving the counters with a long dowel.  Then I went to miniature games.  Little lead (then pewter when lead was banned) figurines and a ruler.  Then computers started to come out.  At first, I railed against the demise of pen and paper, or nights with friends eating Doritos and pizza.

I believe my oldest sister had a degree in computer science in 1976, I got mine in 1984.  In high school, I was the class of 1981.  I put together my first computer in 1977 and then taught the teachers how to operate them when some were donated.  The computer lab was a trailer with 4 early Apples.  We used to have to go to an arcade and use quarters to play video games.  I had three world championships back then, in Space Invaders, Battlezone and Robotron.  The first two I kind of cheated because I read the code and figured out to beat them.  There was no code protection back then and I knew assembly and machine languages along with COBOL and FORTRAN.  Basic had not been invented until later lol.  On Robotron I was actually filmed playing it for nearly 8 hours non-stop by the local TV station reporting on the flash in the pan phenomenon of video games.  When I left after 8 hours, I had rolled the machines 385 levels 3 times and had 55 free men left lol.  I would have played longer but I was hungry and tired.

I started wargaming at a young age, with counters, then miniatures.  I played the original Chainmail game which later became Dungeons and Dragons.  I was a Dungeon Master and wrote for Dragon Magazine for about twelve articles.  I created the famous half-dragon half-man creatures lol.  We played pong, nintendo, intellivision, anything we could.
When I got into the Air Force, they came out with Starflight and Pirates, and I lost tons of sleep.  Then I was addicted to Evercrack (Everquest), the best game in history and that is where I started being guild master and doing 60 hour gaming weeks.  Played almost every game since then and I have 123 Steam games right now, which is about half the games I have loaded up.

At one point I was the first person to make 100 million credits in Star Wars Galaxies with my character Meridian Trivector, and the second to create my own city, Mos Nuevo on Tattooine.  I have a five year character on EVE Online, I have been the leader or officer in over a dozen player organizations in Everquest, WoW, SWG, LoTRo, DAOC, etc.  I am ranked number 6 out of several hundred thousand players in DoD:S.  I was ranked in the top 5 of Age of Conan when I played it.

But then, when games started counting your playing time, I realized I was up to over 70 hours per week.  It seemed like an aweful waste of life at some point.  Now I play maybe ten hours a week.  I try to avoid the really addictive MMORPGs (Massively Multi-player Online Role Playing Games) that can suck the life out of you.  Many player associations require that you play a minimum of 50 hours per week in one game to even qualify to join them.

Now, I a ‘cas’, a derogatory term for a casual player.  Also known as someone who has a real life as well.  Although in my real life I also dress up like I live in the 1880s for Steampunk events, I go to ComicCons and I write science fiction.  So my nerd credentials are quite solid, despite my moving into finance, economics and later executive positions.  I have watched or read nearly every sci-fi movie or book out there – most of which are not that good.  To me science fiction and fantasy are like sex.  When its good its fantastic, and when its bad, it is still worth doing.

There is just one person who keeps me from nerding out too much – my wife.  At a recent party, I recognized a MechWarrior miniature and she said, “You are such a nerd!”  I mean, who wouldn’t know about MechWarriors and Tribes?  Anyway, posted below are some pics with me and my bride of 27 years.  I fear I am rubbing off on her though, she just got done playing a Zombie game on Google+, but she quit because she could not figure out how to get more energy…such a NOOB!

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