Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

The real problem with electric cars

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

I’ve been seeing lots of articles recently about how someone has solved the “last remaining technical problem” to make electric cars a practical reality.

The one thing all these articles have in common is that none of them ask the most important question – where is all the electricity going to come from ?

An average car (say 80 horse power) uses the equivalent of 60 Kilowatts of electricity. I’ve no doubt that we can build electric cars that are more efficient than their petrol equivalents but nonetheless, cars need a lot of “juice”.

To put this in perspective, the chart below shows “primary energy usage” for the UK in 2008 in “barrels of oil equivalent”.

uk energy consumption 2008

It’s pretty clear that if we switch to electric cars, we are going to need to generate *a lot* more electricity, approximately 600% more !

As natural gas runs out, we’re going to need *even more* than that if we still want to heat our homes (roughly a further 600% increase). This means that over the next 10 to 20 years, we’re going to have to increase our electricity production by 1200% to maintain our currently relatively carefree energy lifestyles.

Houston, we have a problem !

Solar Laptop Charger for Tour d’Afrique 2009

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Something that readers of my TDA 2009 blog may not have realised, is that for the first half (2 months) of the tour, I was writing my blog posts on an Asus eeepc laptop powered almost entirely from a solar panel and li-po battery mounted on the rear rack of my mountain bike.

My home made charger worked perfectly, giving me an average one hour of netbook use per day and also allowed me to charge my mobile phone from a USB port on the netbook. Throughout most of Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia and Kenya we had very limited access to electricity and on the occasions where mains was available, competition for “socket space” was fierce. There were also security concerns leaving valuable electronics lying around to charge up. Having independence from the grid was very handy and it was a fun and successful experiment :) .

Home made solar chargerThe photo shows the top of the unit which consists of  a 12 volt and 6 volt solar panels wired in series to give a total of 18 volts and about 10 watts of power. The reason for having 2 panels is that it didn’t occur to me until after I bought the first panel that you can’t efficiently charge a 12 volt battery with a 12 volt power source.

The solar panels are screwed to a wooden frame which had space underneath for a lithium polymer universal external laptop battery to actually store the power. I wasn’t about to subject my poor little laptop to the vibrations of crossing Africa on the back of a hard tail mountain bike.

In addition, there was a “mounting plate” made from 12mm marine ply which was bolted to the rear rack. In combination with the web straps this held the whole thing securely in place on the rack. It also protected the unit from dust and water (within reason) and meant that by unclipping the straps, the valuable parts of the unit could be removed and replaced in about 30 seconds.

Orange P7 in Keyna.The whole unit weighed 2.2Kg + the weight of the bike rack. It was heavy enough to upset the handling of my bike slightly and I guess it made a difference going up the many hills, although I can’t say I noticed ( I was exhausted anyway).

Relatively speaking, my solar panel was quite low powered (size does matter!). It would take 5 days to charge from empty to fully charged, and this would give me about 5 hours of computer use. Combining this with charging both the laptop and my charger battery from the mains when power was convenient meant that I always had enough electricity.

Sadly, after the laughably serious hammering from the “roads” in Kenya, something in the external battery gave up the ghost and the unit stopped working (and started smoking!) at roughly the half-way point in Arusha. By this point, electrical sockets were much more common, and whilst it wasn’t as convenient I was able to keep blogging by charging from mains power. I regret not removing the solar charger from my bike during the “Trans East Africa Highway” section, because then I think it would still be working today :(

More amazing robotics

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

This robotic arm is co-ordinated with a camera to perform feats of incredible dexterity and speed. In the near future these things are going to be everywhere – building, cleaning, protecting, farming. Then what ?

Salesforce does content management …

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Salesforce have launched a new product called “Salesforce Sites” which allows Salesforce customers to easily create content managed websites with workflow and full CRM integration. I’ve only seen the demo video (link below) but it looks like it could live up to it’s claim that:

“Salesforce.com will change forever the way businesses build websites”

http://salesforce.vo.llnwd.net/o1/us/us/Sites/sites_techoverview.mov

Best Worst Website of 2008 ??

Monday, June 8th, 2009

The following website wrongly came 5th in the webpagesthatsuck.com “Worst Websites of 2008″ awards.

http://www.cleanishappy.com/

The site describes an innovative type of toilet seat called a Washlet that apparently redefines the way you think about your toilet. With such a bold claim the website uses multimedia flash to great effect to justify their claim and sell their product.

The video presentation is extremely well done, amusing and compelling. This is probably one of the most engaging websites I’ve seen. With a “buy it now” button at the right price, they could sell trillions of these things.

Google Wave

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

The following is a video demo of “Google Wave” presented at Google IO 2009

Wave is Google’s replacement for email. It is stunning in a number of ways and I think it will revolutionise business communication, collaboration, customer service and of course content management. The user interface alone will reset peoples expectations of what constitutes good or even *usable* software.

The video is 1 hour 20 minutes long. You don’t have to watch it all to get an idea of how ground breaking Google Wave but there are amazing revelations all the way through. I’m not easily impressed but Google Wave is the most impressive piece of software I’ve ever seen.

Google Wave is being developed by the same developers that created Google Maps and is due for release as open source software in Autumn 2009 !

If anyone reading this can see the transformational potential of hooking Wave into a CRM such as Salesforce and would like to sponsor a bit of development, then please contact me.

More information about Google Wave

Tim Berners-Lee talks about the importance of linked data

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Strathclyde Police Trial Mobile Data System

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

Strathclyde Police Mobile Data System by ArqivaStrathclyde Police are trialing a new mobile data system from 22nd February 2008.

The idea behind the mobile data system is to make police officers much more efficient by reducing the amount of time they spend completing paperwork.

The system also allows officers access to unprecedented levels of information via mobile data terminals in police cars.

From what I’ve seen it looks like the system has been superbly implemented by Arqiva and should make officers much more effective.

Watch a video demo of the system here

Second Life for Business

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

I’ve been doing some investigation into  Second Life from a business perspective. I’ve written an article about what I’ve found and published it on the Immediacy website.

http://www.immediacy.net/company/blog/second_life_for_business.aspx