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Reading Brain Signals

Posted by admin On December - 6 - 2009 2 COMMENTS

epoc_headset are clutching my temples, reading electric signals from my brain. I’m sitting in a conference room in San Francisco looking at an orange box floating on a large . My goal is to make it disappear using nothing but thought. “Cheshire cat,” I think, and the box starts to fade.

No, I haven’t turned into the Mad Hatter, though the device I’m wearing may make me look like one. I’m trying out the headset, made by a company called Emotiv.

Earlier I calibrated the by thinking of commands for the orange box when the program asked for them: move left, move right, rise, drop, stop. For disappear, I thought of Lewis Carroll’s vanishing kitty. The just proved it can remember which areas of my brain lit up while I did that.

“Electric information from the brain is broadcast on the inside of the skull, which is how the headset picks it up,” says Tan Lee, president of Emotiv, via a videoconferencing system. (Like the company’s 10 , she is in Sydney; 20 employees work in San Francisco.) “By the time it gets to the skull, that information looks very different from the way it does on an scan. So we basically had to unfold the cortex to learn how to read it.”

The $299 headset launches in early 2010, along with the Windows that calibrates it. Emotiv’s four scientist-founders hope to make it the basis of a whole new system of playing: “Pressing a button to cast a doesn’t give you a fulfilling experience,” Lee explains. “But thinking that spell does.”

The ’s are set to stretch far beyond games. Emotiv has received requests for developer kits from 10,000 engineers around the world. Applications have been suggested in industries such as aerospace, education and healthcare. Some people with disabilities are already using the to control their wheelchairs.

The most fascinating — and disturbing — thing about the is that its can read emotional states like anxiety, frustration, excitement and engagement. In the calibration , they are shown rising and falling on a graph in real time, like seismic readings. The idea is that game designers will be able to adjust the difficulty of a given level if you’re frustrated, or change musical tempos depending on your excitement.

As with all transformative technology, the ’s mind-reading abilities are bound to have unintended consequences. I couldn’t ask a question in my interviews at Emotiv without my anxiety level rising on the graph. The days when journalists can smile through dull pitches while keeping their real feelings hidden may be numbered.

Play-it-safe startups, you have been warned.

Courtesy CNN.

Popularity: 23% [?]


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Flexible Readers

Posted by admin On December - 6 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

plasticlogic_thumbOne product that already looks set to evolve out of all recognition is  Logic’s much-anticipated , the Que, which the Mountain View, Calif., company plans to release in January 2010.

On the surface, much about the Que seems familiar. Like Amazon (AMZN, Fortune 500)’s — a $350 e-reader that has sold more than 500,000 units since its launch in 2007 — the Que displays pages in grayscale E-Ink, designed to be easier on the eyes than conventional screen displays. Like the , the Que will allow users to download books and magazines wirelessly (via AT&T (T, Fortune 500); the uses Sprint (S, Fortune 500)). To counter Amazon’s giant library of , Logic has inked a deal with Barnes & Noble. It will also fetch digital versions of publications such as USA Today, for a subscription fee.

Like the , the Que features a single physical button that takes you to the home page. Instead of the ’s awkward keyboard and page forward/back buttons, it has a pop-up touch- and navigates pages with the flick of a finger.

But that’s where the similarity to current e-readers ends. To see what’s new about the Que, look under the hood: There’s no silicon in the screen. All its transistors are made of . This is the result of years of research by professors at the in Cambridge, England. Five years later this research yielded an e-reader that is fundamentally flexible, unlike the , with its breakable glass screen.

Soon after the company launched in 2007, CEO Richard Archuleta built an international organization. The research arm stayed in Cambridge, but every other business function was sent abroad: manufacturing moved to Dresden, Germany; assembly, to Taiwan; and headquarters, where most of the employees work, to , the better to poach local talent.

“It’s very easy to get engineers excited about joining this company,” grins Archuleta, the former head of Hewlett-Packard (HPQ, Fortune 500)’s notebook business.

Disappointingly, Logic has played it safe by encasing the flexible screen in a more rigid case. “We did prototypes that were rigid on one end and floppy on another,” says Anusha Nirmalananthan, Logic’s product manager. “We found users had trouble getting used to that.”

Still, the Que retains a significant “wow” factor. It is legal-paper size but weighs a mere pound, three ounces less than the comparable DX. Logic regularly drops the Que on concrete, and it survives. The battery will last for days on a single charge. Plug it into your computer and you can download any PDF or text file. The device can hold thousands of PDFs and tens of thousands of books.

Archuleta is pitching the Que squarely at business users. It will offer the ability to annotate documents. You can type on virtual sticky notes or draw on the screen. (The can do none of these things.) The Que’s price point hadn’t been announced at press time but will likely fall between $400 and $800.

That’s too rich for some analysts. “The magic number for an e-reader is $199,” insists Allen Weiner of Gartner Research.

Win or lose with the Que, Logic’s research continues. It is developing color e-reader technology with a grant from the U.K. government. It hopes to launch a color Que in 2011. Archuleta has proposed a military application: a foldout map that could be wirelessly updated in the field.

“You will see bendable, foldable, rollable readers,” he says. “Whatever the marketplace wants.

Courtesy CNN.

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