Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Halloween Pumpkins

I'm not carving a pumpkin this year. However, I did do some carving last year and in 2009. The Hello Kitty is a basically a relief carving.

 My 2011 Hello Kitty Pumpkin
My 2011 Hello Kitty Pumpkin
My 2011 Hello Kitty Pumpkin
 My 2009 Toothy Pumpkin
My 2009 Toothy Pumpkin

I used a paring knife, a Leatherman Micra, and an XActo knife. I'm thinking about upgrading to clay sculpting loops in the future. I usually do some internet searching for inspiration and my 2009 pumpkin is an "homage" to another pumpkin.

I won some movie tickets for the Hello Kitty pumpkin from my workplace. However, there was only one other entry in the pumpkin carving contest that year.

Friday, September 21, 2012

That'll do shuttle, that'll do.

The shuttle Endeavour passed over California today. It landed at LAX and will begin a slow journey to her final retirement at the California Science Center.




That'll do shuttle, that'll do.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Antique Artifacts


As Richard Polt posits, human constructed artifacts are created in a particular context of technology and culture. Technology and culture will then march, or perhaps drift on, slowly altering that context until such artifacts are antique, and are little connected to the technology and culture of our present.

The typewriter existed in a constellation of office culture and precision mechanical manufacturing expertise of the late 19th and most of the 20th centuries. Today, it is hard to believe that typewriter repair shops existed in every major city and that anyone could do work in an office punctuated by the staccato of type arms striking paper. The word processor has replaced both the typewriter and the typing pool.

The images are of a Remington Rand Deluxe Model 5, a portable manual typewriter that was manufactured before and after World War II. This particular typewriter was manufactured between 1946 and 1949. I found it at a garage sale and purchased it for a few dollars.

I learned to type on manual typewriters in a junior high school typing class in the mid 1980s. The sounds of the strikes on the paper and the ding when you near the right side of the paper are still a kind of music. It makes you think of the writer's den, the newsroom, and the busy office.

Some fun websites on typewriters are listed below. Craigslist, Etsy, and eBay are potential Internet sources for old typewriters. Garage sales, estate sales, and thrift shops are potential local sources.

Monday, August 30, 2010

3D Photography

3D displays are beginning to become popular again with new 3D capable televisions entering the market. However, 3D displays have a long history. In the 1800's Charles Wheatstone developed a technique for producing 3D imagery that involved presenting slightly different images to the left and right eyes. There's a nice article about stereoscopes at Wikipedia.

To create 3D photographs, we can take an image with a camera, slide the camera to the right a certain distance, and take another image. If we present the left image to the left eye and the right image to the right eye, the viewer will see a 3 dimensional image.

Here is an image I made of Gunslinger, a research project at the USC Institute for Creative Technologies. It is an immersive experiment in storytelling that puts you in the role of a ranger in the old west.

This is an anaglyph image, which means it combines a red image and blue image together, but you wear glasses with red and blue filters to direct the red image to one eye and the blue image to the other. So with your red and blue 3D glasses, you will see some depth. I used some free software called Anaglyph Maker to create the composite picture from the two original images.

I built a camera rail, which allows me to slide the camera along a fixed track. A rule of thumb I have seen is to measure the distance from the camera to the objects in the scene and use 1/30 of that value for the displacement. If you are taking an image of something 10 feet away, you should slide the camera 4 inches between images (10 feet = 120 inches, 120 inches/30 = 4 inches). There can be other considerations, like the range of distances to object in the scene, the size of the screen on which you will finally view the image, the ability of your users to fuse stereo images (which varies from person to person), as well as the composition and dramatic effect you are trying to achieve in you image.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Ergonomic Keyboards

A lot of people comment on my keyboard, which is a Kinesis Classic Ergonomic Keyboard. It has a very unusual appearance. There keys are separated into several clusters. The smaller clusters can be reached by the right and left thumbs. Since the thumbs are rather strong, it makes sense to use them for many keys. With a standard keyboard, I usually only use my thumbs for the space bar.



The larger clusters of keys are dished, which is meant to conform the to arcs in which your fingers can move. The keys are basically arranged in a standard QWERTY key pattern, but DVORAK keyboards are also available from Kinesis. It is very programmable and configurable. I could remap the keys according to some personal preferences, but I'm quite happy with the default settings. I do turn off the audible keyboard click.

I do enjoy using it. It did take me about two weeks to feel comfortable with it. I then started a large programming project and discovered that I needed a little longer to adjust to it for programming usage. The symbols that you commonly use in C++ programming have been slightly relocated. Letters and numbers are in the standard relative locations, but I had to relearn proper two-handed typing. One of the interesting side effects for me is that I can switch between a standard, non-ergonomic keyboard and my Kinesis keyboard. However, if I use some of the curved, semi-ergonomic keyboards from Microsoft or Logitech, my fingers get confused. I can't help but use those keyboards as if they were like my Kinesis. I suppose the keyboard classifier algorithm in my fingers can not recognize keyboards of intermediate designs!


For folks who have issues with Repetitive Stress Injuries, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, or any kind of pain from working at a desk with computers, ergonomic devices can be part of the answer. I've learned that each person's ergonomic issues can be highly individual and each person will need to work to understand how to address their issues.

Fortunately, many workplaces have ergonomic consultants who can come by and help improve your workspace. It's better to help folks before they have a major injury, lose productivity, or spend time from work.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Laser Range Finders

Bosch, the company known for automotive parts, also has a division that builds power tools. One of their most interesting product lines is a set of laser range finders. The model on the left is a DLE 50. The red button triggers the laser, and a set of optics and an optical sensor triangulate the distance to a visible red laser dot. It can measure distances up to 50 meters with an typical accuracy of a 1.5 millimeters.

The model on the right, the DLE 150 Connect, provides a few more features. Range is up to 150 meters. It also comes with Bluetooth connectivity, allowing it to send measurements to Windows laptops or Windows Mobile PDA's.

They use some of the same optical principles as the Velodyne LIDAR I discussed in an earlier post. They also have a nice industrial design with a tough enclosure and a large button that gives a bit of a kick when triggered. That's great for users who are wearing thick gloves. Unfortunately, these range finders do not yet seem to be available in the US.

For purposes of full disclosure, I must add that at the time I posted this blog, I worked for the Bosch corporation at its research lab in Palo Alto, California.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Moffet Field Hanger

This is Hanger One at Moffet Field, a former Naval Air Station. The US Navy left Moffet Field in 1994, leaving the field to the NASA Ames Research Center. Many of the buildings now house NASA contractors. The airfield sometimes serves Air Force One during visits of the president to the Bay Area.

Hanger One was built in the 1930s to house the USS Macon, a helium filled blimp commissioned by the Navy for scouting. The hanger is 1,133 feet long, 308 feet wide, and covers 8 acres in area.

Hanger One is so large that it can generate it's own unique weather. Fog sometimes forms inside the hanger, near the ceiling. I've heard that it can even rain inside the hanger.

While it is a familiar and significant historical landmark for Bay Area residents, it is an environmental hazard due to asbestos and toxic materials that leach into the area's ground water. The high costs of both demolition or decontamination have thus far prevented any decisions about how to deal with the hanger.