Power up, with juice from the yard – The Boston Globe

Call it the democratization of wind, sun, and rain: You catch it, you keep it. With a residential turbine on your roof or in your backyard, subsidized in part by tax rebates, you (and your accountant) might find a way to break even in a few years.

In a year or so, for example, you might want to charge your Chevrolet Volt, without paying NStar for the privilege.

Enter Envision Solar International Inc. (envisionsolar.com), which this year plans to market a carport, called the LifePort, which has solar panels on its roof.

Read my Boston Globe column this week: Power up, with juice from the yard – The Boston Globe.

Gulf oil spill a sucker punch to lazy science reporters

The takeaway: Too many science journalists lack skepticism, and balls. — MB

Science reporters and bloggers are guilty of overstating the ability of microbes, nanobots and other technologies to prevent and to lap-up oil spills.

As a result, TV and Web viewers are being lulled into thinking there’s a fix for everything, including BP’s latest pooch-screw.

Here is the underlying problem: Rather than treating scientists and technologists as potential liars — as we are trained to do with pols, for example — we science journos typically treat our subjects with reverence.

To the science writer, I say, the next time any company puts a hard hat on you, and gives you the nickel tour of its facilities, wipe that look of astonishment off your face, and remember to ask, “Will this work?” “Is it safe?” “Where’s the documentation?” and “What if…?”

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There’s a stunning slide show, meanwhile, over at Boston.com. Here’s a snip from the text accompanying the images, via PuppetGov:

“While tracking the volume of the continued flow of oil is difficult, an estimated 5,000 barrels of oil possibly much more continues to pour into the gulf every day. While visible damage to shorelines has been minimal to date as the oil has spread slowly, the scene remains, in the words of President Obama, a ‘potentially unprecedented environmental disaster.’”

via The Big Picture: Disaster unfolds slowly in the Gulf of Mexico | PuppetGov.

ViewSonic: immersive 3D under $1,000

From my Boston Globe column this week…

“I expect that ViewSonic’s PJD5352 projector (about $749) (www.viewsonic.com/products) and its PGD-150 Active Stereographic 3-D shutter glasses ($99) will be a hit not only with engineers and industrial designers, but with new-media professionals and artists, for whom expensive, high-maintenance, 3-DVR “caves,’’ with their Linux servers and projectors and IR tracking hardware, might be impractical.”

via Processing power, OLED touch screen shine on Incredible – The Boston Globe.

OLED Android device is iPhone without the cool

Important note to Heretic readers: I receive no compensation  for maintaining this blog. I do, however, get paid to write this column (below). Please click, read and comment, to support my work!

Thanks! — MB

“Last week, I showed my buddy Sean, a plain-spoken woodworker from Westwood, the soon-to-be released Droid Incredible. He immediately noted the red screen covering the phone’s speaker and its garishly bright, white, touch-sensitive control buttons.”

‘It’s like the iPhone without the cool,’’’ Sean said.

via Processing power, OLED touch screen shine on Incredible – The Boston Globe.

Block the rain with blinking Blade Runner umbrellas – The Boston Globe

From my Boston Globe column this week: LED umbrellas and tougher OLEDs… — MB

“The Blade Runner Style LED Umbrella is my new favorite for, as ThinkGeek’s brilliant copywriters put it, staying dry on my “walk to the noodle shop.’’Evocative of Ridley Scott’s rain-soaked, futuristic Los Angeles, the Blade Runner umbrella has a pushbutton, light-up shaft. The umbrella comes with three button batteries that will probably outlive its fabric, if this spring’s rains are a sign of things to come.”

via Block the rain with blinking Blade Runner umbrellas – The Boston Globe.

Classic iPad games push boomer buttons

In my Boston Globe personal technology column this week, I take a look at casual games for the iPad.

And one commenter accuses me of snobbery, for including this bit in my column:

“Asteroids, Space Invaders, Ms. Pac-Man: Back in the 1980s, on Long Island, my friends and I played these games compulsively at home and at the local tennis club, while players sat around, sipping Perrier water.”

But that’s how we rolled, up on the North Shore of Long Island…

via A classic pops up quickly on the iPad – The Boston Globe.

Cell phone pics, straight to the fireplace mantel

A new, cellular network-connected picture frame is a receptacle for your shots from the street. From my Globe column, this week:

Called the Vizit, the sleek device is prettier and more powerful than the cheap digital frames we have seen lining the shelves at CVS and Costco. It comes in a half-dozen finishes. And you can use the frame to form a network that includes your friends’ and family’s mobile phones and PCs, and perhaps even their own Vizits.

via Wireless peel-and-stick devices for feeling safe – The Boston Globe.

MIT lab helps designers reimagine video games – The Boston Globe

Lab might do for video games, what USC did for film:

GAMBIT’s researchers, a collaboration of artists, historians, writing instructors, and educators, are mostly interested in breaking away from gaming conventions: the princess who needs rescuing, the shady merchant with the weapon you must get to survive the next chapter, the mushroom power-up.

They are also focused on teaching courses with heady titles like “Making Deep Games’’ and publishing papers such as “Bioshock: A Critical Historical Perspective.’’

“Everything done in the lab is based on some sort of research interest,’’ said Eitan Glinert, who was GAMBIT’s first graduate student, in 2007.

via MIT lab helps designers reimagine video games – The Boston Globe.

Northeastern’s smart shirt to prevent pitcher’s elbow

This week, in User Friendly, we glimpse the smart fabrics that many of us will soon be sporting, regularly.

“A sensor-covered ‘datalogging’ compression shirt for baseball pitchers, which detects signs of bad mechanics before they lead to torn ligaments, is an example of how e-textiles can support good health.”

More: Northeastern’s smart shirt aims to prevent pitcher’s elbow – The Boston Globe.

Plot sickens: Bishop a suspected bomber, too

Targeted; Paul Rosenberg received a bomb in the mail from, police at the time suspected, Amy Bishop. Photo: Children's Hospital.

UAH alleged shooter Amy Bishop may have had a singular  way of settling scores — by the bullet, or the bomb.

The Globe reports today that the nutty professor was suspected, too, of sending pipe bombs to a supervisor at Children’s Hospital.

Many great quotes in this story, such as this one:

“We knew she had a beef with Paul Rosenberg. And we really thought it was a really unbelievable coincidence that he would get those bombs.”

via Alleged Ala. killer was suspect in attempted bombing of Harvard professor – Local News Updates – The Boston Globe.