Archive for October, 2008
RFID dust
Pink Tenticle (a blog dedicated to all things Japanese) recently wrote of a development by Hitachi of minute RFID chips smaller than a hair is thin. The company has been working on small RFID chips that can be embedded in paper for authentication of tickets and even money. These new chips are even smaller.
I can see a time where we will regularly tagged as we walk along a street or enter a building (no more inky stamps on our hands when we leave a club), our food will contain them, our cloths will have them in the very fibres they are manufactured from and our shoes will betray our movements on floor sensors as we walk on the ground.
This is the technology that will bring Orwell’s dystopia not the visible cameras we see on every street today. The real monitoring will be insidious, connected, omnipresent and undetected. Cameras will dissapear from our buildings as the information grid grows and their functionality and use diminishes. There’s a new kid in town.
Perhaps the market to be in for the future will be that of detection and device destruction. Willam Gibson’s Neuromancer vision of scanning for electronic devices before meeting or talking will come true.
The science of scrambling RF signals and EM-pulse to eradicate our bodies of the tags will blossom in the next 5-10 years, portable EMP devices to sweep our clothes and bodies after a day in the city will become as normal as showers to wash our hair or clean our skin of dirt.
Cough. Anyway here’s the article:
No commentsRFID keeps getting smaller. On February 13, Hitachi unveiled a tiny, new “powder” type RFID chip measuring 0.05 x 0.05 mm — the smallest yet — which they aim to begin marketing in 2 to 3 years.
By relying on semiconductor miniaturization technology and using electron beams to write data on the chip substrates, Hitachi was able to create RFID chips 64 times smaller than their currently available 0.4 x 0.4 mm mu-chips. Like mu-chips, which have been used as an anti-counterfeit measure in admission tickets, the new chips have a 128-bit ROM for storing a unique 38-digit ID number.
The new chips are also 9 times smaller than the prototype chips Hitachi unveiled last year, which measure 0.15 x 0.15 mm.
At 5 microns thick, the RFID chips can more easily be embedded in sheets of paper, meaning they can be used in paper currency, gift certificates and identification. But since existing tags are already small enough to embed in paper, it leads one to wonder what new applications the developers have in mind.
[Source: Fuji Sankei/Pink Tenticle]
WTF no FireWire?
Ok the dust has more than settled on the new MacBooks and we have all had time to digest another carefully spoonfed helping of Appley goodness and in the cold light of day the question I would like to ask is WTF is there no FireWire on the new MacBook and only one 800 port on the MBP when many of the cool things a Mac does relies on that little connector?
That and the shiny ass screens – oh and no NetBook device, really – what was the point?
1 commentRIP Visual Hub
My favourite software for converting the various movie file formats from around the internet into something the iPod and Apple TV can cope with, has been killed off by it’s author in, kind of, mysterious circumstances.
Tyler from Techspansion had this to say on his home page:
…After much soul-searching (it’s not you, it’s me), for personal reasons, Techspansion is closing its virtual doors.
The Support Forum and Support E-mail will be available for a while longer to take care of any remaining issues for you.If you have VisualHub or AudialHub, here are directions on how to back them up for safe keeping:
How to Back Up VisualHub and AudialHub
(iSquint is self-contained. just back up the app itself)Thanks for all your support. It’s been a fun ride.
The source code for two of the projects (one you haven’t seen yet, and will hopefully really like) are now online.
I’ll get the other two online a little later.
These are new projects, with new names, ready for a new life with smarter people. All of their development and discussion should happen on theSourceForge project page.…and a special thanks to all the well-wishers that have e-mailed. I’m sorry I don’t have the time to respond to every e-mail, but please know that it’s very appreciated.
All very strange.
The last time I saw a company with a good product like this dissapear was when Apple bought it!
Hmmmm, Maybe?
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