Wednesday 9 May 2012

5 Future Car Technologies That Truly Have a Chance

1: Energy-storing Body Panels

Exxon Mobil predicts that by 2040, half of all new cars coming off the production line will be hybrids [source: Kahn]. That's great news for the environment, but one of the problems with hybrids is that the batteries take up a lot of space and are very heavy. Even with advances in lithium-ion batteries, hybrids have a significant amount of weight from their batteries. That's where energy-storing body panels come in.

In Europe, a group of nine auto manu facturers are currently researching and testing body panels that can store energy and charge faster than conventional batteries of today. The body panels being tested are made of polymer fiber and carbon resin that are strong enough to be used in vehicles and pliable enough to be molded into panels. These panels could reduce a car's weight by up to 15 percent
The panels would capture energy produced by technologies like regenerative braking or when the car is plugged in overnight and then feed that energy back to the car when it's needed [source: Volvo]. Not only would this help reduce the size of hybrid batteries, but the extra savings in weight would eliminate wasted energy used to move the weight from the batteries.
Toyota is also looking into lightweight energy storing panels, but they're taking it one step further and researching body panels that would actually capture solar energy and store it in a lightweight panel.
Whether future body panels collect energy or just store it, automotive companies are looking into new ways to make our cars more energy efficient and lightweight.

2: Airbags That Help Stop Cars

Ever since airbags were been added to vehicles, they've continued to make their way around the inside of our vehicles. We now have curtain airbags, side airbags, knee airbags, seat belts airbags and even ones that deploy under us. Maybe all of us don't have them in our cars, but they're on the road. And Mercedes is working on a new way to use airbags that moves them away from a passive safety measure and makes it part of an active safety system.
Mercedes is experimenting with airbags that deploy from underneath the car that will help stop a vehicle before a crash. The airbags are part of the overall active safety system and deploy when sensors determine that at impact is inevitable. The bags have a friction coating that helps slow the car down and can double the stopping power of the vehicle. The bags also lift the vehicle up to eight centimeters, which counters the car's dipping motion during hard braking, improves bumper-to-bumper contact and helps prevent passengers from sliding under seat belts during a collision.
What gives this kind of airbag potential as a future technology is that it uses existing vehicle safety systems. Although Mercedes has been working on this technology for several years, it isn't available on any production models yet and may not be seen on the road for another few years.
With the current evolution of airbags and their pervasiveness within the automotive world, it wouldn't be a stretch to imagine future cars using airbags to not only protect passengers, but to actually stop cars as well.

3: Augmented Reality Dashboards

GPS and other in-car displays are great for getting us from point A to point B, and some high-end vehicles even have displays on the windshield, but in the near future cars will be able to identify external objects in front of the driver and display information about them on the windshield.
Think of the Terminator, or many other science fiction stories, where a robot looks at a person or an object and automatically brings up information about them and can identify who or what they are. Augmented Reality dashboards, AR for short, will function in a similar way for drivers. BMW has already implemented a windshield display in some of their vehicles which displays basic information, but they're also developing augmented reality dashboards that will be able to identify objects in front a vehicle and tell the driver how far they are away from the object. The AR display will overlay information on top of what a driver is seeing in real life.
So if you're approaching a car too quickly, a red box may appear on the car you're approaching and arrows will appear showing you how to maneuver into the next lane before you collide with the other car. An augmented reality GPS system could highlight the actual lane you need to be in and show you where you need to turn down the road without you ever having to take your eyes off the road.
BMW is also researching the use of augmented reality for automotive technicians. They produced a video where a BMW technician uses AR glasses to look at an engine, identify what parts need to be replaced and then shows step-by-step instructions on how to fix it.
AR is also being researched for passengers as well. Toyota has produced working concepts of their AR system that would allow passengers to zoom in on objects outside of the car, select and identify objects, as well as view the distance of an object from the car using a touch-screen window.
Augmented reality may not be here yet, but if these car companies have their way, we'll be seeing it in our future cars a little ways down the road.

4: Self-Driving Cars

The idea of a self-driving car isn't a new idea. Many TV shows and movies have had the idea and there are already cars on the road that can park themselves. But a truly self-driving car means exactly that, one that can drive itself, and they're probably closer to being a reality than you might think.

In California and Nevada, Google engineers have already tested self-driving cars on more than 200,000 miles (321,869 kilometers) of public highways and roads. Google's cars not only record images of the road, but their computerized maps view road signs, find alternative routes and see traffic lights before they're even vi sible to a person. By using lasers, radars and cameras, the cars can analyze and process information about their surroundings faster than a human can.
If self-driving cars do make it to mass production, we might have a little more time on our hands. Americans spend an average of 100 hours sitting in traffic every year . Cars that drive themselves would most likely have the option to engage in platooning, where multiple cars drive very close to each and act as one unit. Some people believe platooning would decrease highway accidents because the cars would be communicating and reacting to each other simultaneously, without the on-going distractions that drivers face.
In some of Google's tests, the cars learned the details of a road by driving on it several times, and when it was time to drive itself, it was able to identify when there were pedestrians crossing and stopped to let them pass by. Self-driving cars could make transportation safer for all of us by eliminating the cause of 95 percent of today's accidents: human error.
Although self-driving cars may seem far off, GM has already done its own testing and some people believe that you'll see some sort of self-driving car in showrooms in the next decade.
Go on to the next page to learn how we may be viewing all of our car's data in the near future.

5: Cars That Communicate with Each Other and the Road

Car manufacturers and the U.S. government are seriously looking into and researching two technologies that would enable future cars to communicate with each other and with objects around them.
Imagine approaching an intersection as another car runs a red light. You don't see them at first, but your car gets a signal from the other car that it's directly in your path and warns you of the potential collision, or even hits the brakes automatically to avoid an accident. A developing technology called Vehicle-to-Vehicle communication, or V2V, is being tested by automotive manufacturers like Ford as a way to help reduce the amount of accidents on the road.
V2V works by using wireless signals to send information back and forth between cars about their location, speed and direction. The information is then communicated to the cars around it in order to provide information on how to keep the vehicles safe distances from each other. At MIT, engineers are working on V2V algorithms that calculate information from cars to determine what the best evasive measure should be if another car started coming into its own projected path. A study put out by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in 2010 says that V2V has the potential to reduce 79 percent of target vehicle crashes on the road.
But researchers aren't only considering V2V communication, vehicle-to-infrastructure communication, or V2I, is being tested as well. V2I would allow vehicles to communicate with things like road signs or traffic signals and provide information to the vehicle about safety issues. V2I could also request traffic information from a traffic management system and access the best possible routes. Reports by the NHTSA say that incorporating V2I into vehicles, along with V2V systems, would reduce all target vehicle crashes by 81 percent .
These technologies could transform the way we drive and increase automotive safety dramatically. Good thing car companies and the government are already working to try to make this a reality.
All of this communication and preemptive vehicle assistance leads us into our next future technology, so go on to the next page to find out what it is.


Saturday 5 May 2012

Cristiano Ronaldo Has 'Ambition to Win' Euro 2012

Cristiano Ronaldo hits the field during the Portugal vs. Poland match on Wednesday (February 29) in Warsaw, Poland.
The 27-year-old Real Madrid star spoke to reporters after the game ended in a 0-0 draw.
“We have to have ambition, both in football and in life, to always be the best. We will go to Euro 2012 with the ambition to win,” said Cristiano.

Cristiano Ronaldo Has 'Ambition to Win' Euro 2012
 
“We know it will be difficult, but we have to think logically. The group stage will be difficult, but nothing is impossible,” he added. “I hope people come to the stadiums and assist us, as it was in 2004 – putting flags on homes, chantings songs of encouragement for us. We are all pulling in the same direction.”

cristiano ronaldo poland game 02cristiano ronaldo poland game 05


cristiano ronaldo poland game 07 cristiano ronaldo poland game 04 

Record-breaking goal-machine Cristiano Ronaldo is at the peak of his career but the world's most expensive player still has one unfulfilled ambition - to win a major international trophy for Portugal.
The 27-year-old Real Madrid forward's trickery, pace and ferocious shots will be a highlight for soccer lovers at Euro 2012 where he hopes to captain his country to a long-awaited success.
Like his nemesis, Argentine Lionel Messi of Barcelona, Ronaldo has chronically underperformed at international tournament finals.





His determination to do well will be stronger than ever after Real Madrid's failure in the Champions League this season despite their almost certain title success in La Liga.
At Euro 2004, when Portugal still relied on the declining powers of Luis Figo and Rui Costa, Ronaldo came agonisingly close to glory but Greece shocked the hosts in the final.
A young Ronaldo was left in tears and, though he was picked for the team of the tournament, he scored only twice. If that was a personal disappointment, it was deepened in the three major tournaments that followed when he scored just once at Euro 2008 and at the World Cup finals in Germany and South Africa.
His critics say this is the main reason that Ronaldo, like Messi, cannot be compared to past greats like Pele, Diego Maradona or Eusebio, all of whom are remembered for stunning tournament performances.
"Cristiano has always had a lot of responsibility since he was 18," Madrid and Portugal team mate Pepe has said.
"People put a lot of pressure on him. The squad needs to give support to Cristiano so Cristiano can be calm and play his football."
Ronaldo's club record with Manchester United and Real Madrid speaks for itself.
Last year he added Spain's Copa del Rey to his Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup titles at United. This year he hopes he can add La Liga to that list as Madrid fend off Barcelona.
He won the FIFA World Player of the Year award in 2008 and two European Golden Boot trophies, including last season when he grabbed 40 league goals, a figure already surpassed this term with 43, exactly the same total as Messi.
GOAL MACHINE
His success is as much a product of his own hard work as his talent as he has improved himself, and his goal ratio, steadily.
He is close to averaging a goal in each game during the last two and a half seasons at Real Madrid compared to 0.5 goals per game in six seasons at United where he developed from a winger into an all-round striker.
For Portugal coach Paulo Bento one key task will be to bring out the best in Ronaldo, enabling him to repeat his club form.
Since succeeding Carlos Queiroz in September, 2010, he appears to have found the right approach to this challenge, Ronaldo's form for Portugal having improved along with his integration into the team.
Ronaldo was Portugal's top scorer in the qualifiers and it was one of his trademark tomahawk free kicks that inspired a memorable 6-2 aggregate victory over Bosnia to secure their passage to the finals.
His combination of speed and stepovers may be thrilling, but it will be his part in Portugal's collective effort that matters as they bid for success.

Galaxy S III Serves Up Big Dollop of Ice Cream Sandwich

Galaxy S III Serves Up Big Dollop of Ice Cream Sandwich

Samsung launched the Galaxy S III smartphone in London on Thursday. The device will run Android Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS), version 4.0 of the mobile OS. The Galaxy S III's features include facial and voice recognition, voice command capability and eye tracking.



  Samsung Galaxy S III














The Samsung Galaxy S III
"We believe the Galaxy S III is the most anticipated product in the 20-year history of Samsung Mobile," Blythe Makenzie, Samsung Mobile's representative, told TechNewsWorld. "We will continue to share information as it becomes available."





The Galaxy S III's Specs
The Galaxy S III has an 4.8-inch Super AMOLED 1,280 by 720 pixel screen, an 8 MP autofocus rear camera with flash and zero shutter lag, a front-facing 1.9 MP camera that records HD videos at 30 fps with zero shutter lag, and WiFi and Bluetooth 4.0 capability.
It also offers NFC, or near-field communications, which enables mobile payments and lets devices exchange data when they touch.
The S III also has an accelerometer, an RBG light, a digital compass, a barometer, a gyroscope and a proximity sensor.
Other features are Smart Stay, S Beam, Buddy Photo Share, Share Shot, AllShare Play, AllShare Cast, social and group tags, S Voice, and links to the usual Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) mobile services.


 

Samsung Struts Its Software Stuff

The S III was designed to maximize its usability to its owner, Samsung said.
For example, Smart Stay uses eye tracking through the S III's front camera to recognize what the user's doing with the phone and adapt accordingly. If the user's reading an ebook, for example, the S III will adjust the brightness of the display accordingly.
S Voice lets the S III listen to what the user says and respond appropriately. It allows information search, lets the user communicate with the S III, and has device control features. S Voice can be used to control volume, send text messages and emails, automatically launch the camera and take a photo, organize schedules, or play songs.
The S Beam feature lets users share data quickly -- a 1 GB movie file within three minutes, or a 10 MB music file within two seconds -- when they touch their devices together, whether or not there's a WiFi or cellular signal. It expands the capabilities of the Android Beam, which leverages NFC to enable peer-to-peer data exchange between two devices.
AllShare Cast lets users wirelessly transfer content from the S III to their television set. AllShare Play lets users share files between the S III and the user's tablet, PC or television set regardless of the distance between the devices.
"If anything, Samsung's flexing its software muscle," Ramon Llamas, a senior analyst at IDC, told TechNewsWorld. "I think they were trying to impress all the people who are really paying close attention to design, like Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Nokia (NYSE: NOK), rather than to the average consumer."

Keeping the ICS Flag Flying

The S III "is an evolution over previous devices, but not a huge leap forward," Carolina Milanesi, a research vice president at Gartner (NYSE: IT), told TechNewsWorld.
The device's real impact could be to boost acceptance of ICS, Michael Morgan, a senior analyst at ABI Research, suggested.
"As of now, Ice Cream Sandwich hasn't taken off that quickly," Morgan told TechNewsWorld. "Hopefully now that we have a hero device being launched, this will help increase its penetration."
Google's own statistics for the 14 days ending May 1 show that ICS has only 5 percent of the Android market.
That's partly because came out at the end of the industry cycle and we haven't seen any new devices leveraging it coming out yet, Morgan suggested. "The S III is that hot device, and it could absolutely bring Ice Cream Sandwich into play."
Google launched ICS in October.

Leveraging the Market's Timing

Samsung "has an opportunity to maximize sales between now and the launch of the iPhone 5 and still stand out among competitors such as HTC and LG," Gartner's Milanesi opined.
The new iPhone will likely be launched around October, while the Galaxy S III will be released in Europe May 29, and "that interval's a good chance for Samsung to grab market share," IDC's Llamas said.
Samsung Mobile will release a version of the Galaxy S III optimized for the fastest LTE and HSPA+ 4G networks in the United States sometime this summer, company representative Blythe said. She wouldn't be more specific about the timing and the carriers.