Wearable Computer Expedition Reaches South Pole
henrym writes: "Tom and Tina Sjogren have reached the South Pole after skiing in for two months wearing portable computers. Their web site hasn't been updated to reflect this fact, but our station manager has just come back from greeting them as they reached the pole. Details of their expedition can be found at thepoles.com. Henry Malmgren, South Pole Station Network Engineer" It's not every day we get a story submission from the South Pole.
Is it because they wanted some Penguins?
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(if you're still looking for the point, it was back there, in the post. </sig>)
I hope if they're in the South Pole they're wearing more than just a computer.
Some nerds can be that obsessed with penguins?!
That, or they were desperate overclockers looking for the ultimate cooling solution.
"expidition" as "exhibition"...
...
Imagine this: The 2020 wearables exhibition: Now at the South Pole
And then they wonder why so few people came...
Make even shorter URLs - 8LN.org
They went to all that trouble to serve up a webpage from the south pole. They surely can't have that much bandwidth at the south pole then they go and get slashdotted.
Well at least their systems wont need any cooling.
mark
If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
It's cold. We are tired. Be glad when we get there. Wish you were here.
Sent from your iPad.
AMD has produced video footage of an AMD-based PC that keep on working even when the heat sink is removed. When questioned about the results, AMD Spokesman just mentioned something about a "secret laboratory down south"...
Ain't that a good idea?
Make even shorter URLs - 8LN.org
Fingers freezing. Palm pilot stuck to chest. Must run cpu-heavy routines for warmth. So cold.
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Today's Top Deals
From the site:
:)
The technology
High energy Solar Panels
Wearable computing
PDA
Finger mouse
Wrist key board
Head mounted display
Flat panel display
Customized technology west's
Shoulder mounted web camera
Lithium-Ion batteries
Satellite phone
Power converters
I was wondering how they powered all that stuff, and now I feel like an idiot. I was thinking fuel cells, batteries (which, granted, they did have) wind power and the rest, but completely missed THE SUN.
Funny what you don't think about when you live in a metropolis. I miss the country.
Triv
Damn. Bad Pun.
CNN manager talking to a reporter: Now Jones, it was a bad, bad thing when you drove up to that crime scene and ran over the body. The police were very angry with us. Very angry indeed. Now, now, I know it was an accident.
Fire you? No, no, everyone makes mistakes, Jones. Why, when I was a young cub like yourself, I made a few in my day, too.
In fact, I have little assignment for you, Jones. Right up your alley. Let me show you this map...
Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
Apparently, they have gone insane...
http://www.thepoles.com/? Shouldn't it have been http://www.thepoles.aq/?
Why can't I moderate something "Wrong" or at least "Grossly Misinformed"?
When I saw this story, my first thought was "how did they design robots which could travel across Antarctic terrain?".
The idea that the "wearable computer expedition" actually included people somehow didn't occur to me.
Tarsnap: Online backups for the truly paranoid
South Pole Live Camera.
or check out our South Pole Web Page.
So how do we get power down there ?
Yeah the stations on the high Antarctic plateau may not have too much power requirements but they use mainly diesel generators.
The Americans used a nuclear generator taken from a Sub years ago but they kept having problems with it and it's now been removed because the Antarctic Treaty forbids it.
In summer there's plenty of sun, so solar panels are used, but in winter there's none. In the center of Antarctica there's not too much wind (I studied at Dome C where most winds are 'born' and there's not enough to power a fan. On the other hand, on the coast you get demented winds that will break anything.
The French experimented with a heat transfer system that had it's highest efficiency in cold winds. The colder and faster the better. But it wasn't too conclusive.
And if you just want power for your palmtop, take L91 Lithium Energizer batteries, the only ones that work below -50C...
Non-Linux Penguins ?
You know, in a few hundred years, it won't be so near the south pole anymore. Heh. I also find it amusing that the "south pole" (as in an actual pole stuck in the ice/snow) has to be readjusted constantly. I guess that's what you get for building stuff on a glacier =]
What?