Star Trek's Design Influence On Palm, New Tech
kevcol writes "The San Francisco Chronicle has a fun article describing how many of the inventions of Star Trek have made early appearances, 2 centuries ahead of Captain Kirk's time. They talk with one of Palm's UI designers, who admits that '...my first sketches were influenced by the UI of the Enterprise bridge panels', and also notes: 'When we designed the first Treo... it had a form factor similar to the communicators in the original series. It had a speakerphone mode so you could stand there and talk into it like Capt. Kirk'."
The needle-less shots McCoy would give for every little thing are not that far off either, DMSO is a popular one that's used for horses, but you wouldnt want that one used on yourself unless you love the taste/smell of dead fish...
drunk chemists
Temperature and heart rate should be easy - infrared pyrometers are used in industry to measure, with accuracy, the temperature of a surface, no reason it shouldn't work to point it at a person & get a number. Heart rate - several optical ways, no problem, or a directional microphone and appropraite sound processing - again, nothing too complicated.
Blood pressure, though...since BP is measured by finding the two points where (1) the pressure in the cuff blocks all flow, and (2) the pressure in the cuff blocks no flow, I can't see an easy way to get that without actually blocking and unblocking said flow.
Non-inavsive blood pressure systems work by "listening" to the pulse with a pressure transducer & working some fairly mundane math to get the numbers, but I just can't see a way to find out how much pressure it takes to occlude a blood vessel without...occluding that blood vessel.
How's develpment on the transporter coming?
Quantum teleportation is progressing slowly. Teleporting electrons using quantum entanglment has been done. Scaling it up to macroscopic sizes and massively superposed states is not trivial.
Da Blog
However, he DID say it in "Star Trek 4: The
Voyage Home"... which of course in an even numbered movie.
Norman Cook's Ode to Sl
Well, technically Kirk never said anything in ST:TOS. When he was speaking, it wasn't called Star Trek: The Original Series, was it? :)
Yep, my dad has one. Well, its a phone with a "walkie-talkie" mode.
I don't have time to comment my code, the program is late already.
Don't forget that QWERTY was initially designed to slow down typists, due to the tendency of typewriters to jam if you typed too fast.
Online Starcraft RPG? At
Dietary fiber is like asynchronous IO-- Non-blocking!
".... are not that far off either...."
They've been "here" for quite a while now. I guess they're just not widely used. Case in point: when I went throught basic training back in '97 almost all of the shots were given with needleless injectors. I don't think they called them hyposprays, but they were effectively the same device. IIRC it was basically just a regular shot with a high PSI load behind it. There is a drawback though--you had be really still when they gave it to you or would cut the skin like a little razor (due to the insanely high pressure).
"On a scale from 1 to 10, people are stupid"
Sorry, he still did not say that. I believe it was "Scotty, beam me up" in ST4. As close as he ever got to uttering the imortal phrase.
Actually, it is.
You're referring to the aura that a patient develops when a seizure (fit) is going to happen. The usual indicators of an aura is:
- Metallic taste in the mouth;
- Visual distortion (red tint, sometimes blue tint or solid object moving / morphing); and
- Strange / intense headaches.
All these are experienced by the patient - they are not necessarliy obvious to the observer. An observer can sometimes pick when a seizure is going to happen.
The point about dogs is that they can pick up a seizure apparently by smell alone - sometimes several hours in advance. Some dogs can even detect a seizure before the patient's aura develops. There's definitely someting interesting happening here.
From the Star Trek Technical Manual - Page 34
We incorporated the concept of software-definable, task specific panel layout into our controls because Mike (Okuda) thought it a logical way of simplifying designs that would otherwise have been nightmarishly complex. The basic idea is that the panels automatically reconfigure themselves to suit the specific task at hand. A side benefit we discovered is this gave our actors much more freedom in hitting controls to accomplish various tasks. Even though out case tries to get things right, there are numerous occasions when a particular shot will require an actor to hit a button on a specific area of a panel, which may not reflect out original design for that panel. Variable layout control panels mean that the button that fires phasers this week is not necessarily the same button that fires them next week.
If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
Spray hypodermics predated the Star Trek series. McCoy's injector was based on them - though of course vastly improved. (Dial-a-drug, hand-held rather than big gun with compressor sidekick, etc.)
The original discovery was made when a worker handled a high-pressure hydraulic hose with a pinhole leak, and reported to medical with a sore spot in his hand. The medic found a teaspoon or so of hydraulic fluid under the skin - but the worker hadn't felt it going in. Investigation quickly identified the leak and thus resulted in the discovery that a very small, very high-speed, jet of fluid will go subcutaneous or even intramusclular with minimal sensation.
Somehow this info didn't get lost, but resulted in the bright idea of doing it deliberately to reduce the discomfort and increase the speed and convenience of injections - especially mass injections. The military funded development of the first devices (primarily because they have to innoculate thousands of troops in batches efficiently, and also so they could innoculate a civilian population rapidly in case of a biowar attack - this being during the "cold war".)
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way