Slashdot Mirror


Best of What's New 2005

mmoyer writes "Begin the onslaught of year-end roundups. Popular Science takes the early lead with their Best of What's New awards, a roundup of what they consider the top 100 products and technologies of the year. In addition to the obvious awardees like the PSP and perpendicular magnetic recording, there's interesting asides like the world's first programmable wave pool and colored toy bubbles made from disappearing dye."

16 of 132 comments (clear)

  1. This is filed under Games? by richdun · · Score: 5, Funny

    So how fun is that fiber-reinforced polymer bridge in Wisconsin?

    1. Re:This is filed under Games? by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well Tacoma had a bridge that gave people quite a ride a few years back. Maybe they're just waiting for a windy day?

      --
      If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
  2. Some just don't compare... by mister_llah · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comparing a PSP or a Jeep to Neuro-controlled bionic arms and perpendicular magnetic recording?!

    haha!

    Excuse me for being a cynic, but the PSP/Jeep portion of the 'grand awards' just feels like advertising...

    --
    MoM++ - A Classic Expanded - [Master of Magic 1.5]
    http://mompp.sourceforge.net/
  3. Dyed Toothpaste by Prince+Myshkin · · Score: 5, Funny

    "...a toothpaste that turns kids' mouths bright pink until they've brushed for 30 seconds."

    If there's one things kids HATE, it's bright pink mouths...
    One of the more bizarre products I've heard of. Should do well in Japan.

  4. If we're talking about games by From+A+Far+Away+Land · · Score: 5, Funny

    Then Sony's new Rootkit with DRM goodness should get a prize in 2005. It helped dozens or thousands of WoW cheaters to evade The Warden. Now that's cutting edge gaming technology!

  5. Just a note by FST · · Score: 5, Informative

    For those of you that don't know what perpendicular magnetic recording is, it is basically a new technology recently introduced by Toshiba into their line of MP3 players which is a way of stacking the bits perpendicular to the hard disk rather than laterally. Conventional HDD can hold up to 400 GB while this new technology allows for 10 times the storage per square inch. Many of the hard disk drives plan to introduce a new hard disk in pc's by 2007.

    In my opinion, with this new jump in technology, the future is secure with HDD of similar size, yet 10x the capacity.

    --
    46487 466780 252994 376409 96920 39622 205366 244315 622115 512361 668040 63608 259203 955314 811176 652718 166330 23922
    1. Re:Just a note by Xarius · · Score: 5, Informative

      Maybe it's time to Get Perpendicular!

      --
      C17H21NO4
  6. How about the worst of what's new? by tcd004 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Why don't people ever do these kinds of lists?

    I can think of a few. Cellphone spam, Sony DRM, the EU trying to take over the internet, T.O. What else?

    And of course Small Town Misfit (plug for my website)
    tcd004

  7. Re:A "grand award" for colored soap bubbles? by Z0mb1eman · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you'd RTFA, you might find your answer.

    The colored bubbles are cool because no one's successfully done it before, getting the dye to spread uniformly over the entire bubble (as opposed to just flowing to the bottom) isn't trivial, and it took the guy about 10 years to actually get it done.

    But my guess is the grand award part comes in because of the specific dye they developed in the process. Specifically, this dye disappears after at most half an hour - faster if it's subjected to friction (eg. you can just rub it off your skin, out of your clothes, or whatever it lands on). The article claims (I'm not a chemist, so I don't know how true it is) that this is an entirely new type of dye.

    One of the applications they listed was toothpaste that colors the inside of a kid's mouth a bright color until they've brushed the necessary 30 seconds.

    All in all, to me it sounds like it deserves it - it's a new concept that opens up entirely new fields of innovation, rather than an iterative improvement over previous technology.

    --
    ClutterMe.com - easiest site creation on the Net. Just click and type.
  8. Colored toy bubbles? by lbmouse · · Score: 4, Funny

    ?? As opposed to colored military-grade bubbles.

  9. Photography section is bogus by toupsie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not one listing for Digital SLRs just some crappy point and shoots with superfluous features, printers and camcorders. Why not a video section instead of the camcorders? 2005 has unleashed some great SLRs from Nikon and Canon. The Nikon D200 and Canon 20D are two great examples of consumer level Digital SLRs that will blow the doors off a Kodak Easyshare-One or Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-R1 in image quality, speed, CMOS/CCD size and focal range. I would talk about the Canon EOS 1Ds but I would short out my keyboard from the drool.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  10. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  11. Re:Greatest device by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    actually, the Xbox360 gets the Grand award for Home Entertainment ... getting accolades before it's out and tested by the masses.

    No kidding. Could they have written a more sensational piece?

    the Xbox 360 easily maintains the cred the original Xbox earned in 2001 when it crushed rival PlayStation with superior graphics and performance.

    *Crushed* the Playstation? I hope someone told Sony, because last I heard they were still dominant.

    Its one-teraflops processing speed, fueled by three 3.2-gigahertz processors (think: three desktop computers), may make the 360 the most powerful computer you've ever used.

    Do these guys need to work on their copy, or what? 3.2 GHz is impressive, but hardly "three desktop computers". And what's this "fueled by"? Is a processor a consumable? If so, can I turbo-charge it with silicon aditives? I mean, these guys have been writing way too many car reviews.

    Besides, the only reason why the X-Box is on top is because they beat Nintendo and Sony to market. Which is kind of funny, because it's sounding more and more like all the console makers will be using many of the same technologies. Which suggests that this could be the least impressive lineup of game consoles ever to hit the market. We'll see how it pans out, though.

  12. They're talking about octane rating by DG · · Score: 5, Informative

    Disclaimer: I build and race turbocharged race cars http://farnorthracing.com/

    To oversimplify a complex subject, when you burn fuels in a spark-ignited engine, it is possible to get a kind of explosive combustion called "detonation" instead of a nice smooth rapid burn.

    Detonation is also sometimes called "knock" and it is an engine killer. Detonation is Not Your Friend.

    The things that tend to increase the liklihood of experiencing detonation are a lean fuel/air mixture, excessive ignition advance, localized hotspots in the combustion chamber, excessive static compression ratio, excessive intake temperature, or excessive intake boost pressure.

    The measure of a fuel's ability to resist detonation is its "octane" rating. The derivation of the term is an article in of itself... bottom line is the higher the octane, the lower the probability of detonation.

    My race car drinks 118 octane, because it uses a ton of turbo boost and a lot of ignition advance to make power. Most regular pump gasses are 87-89 octane, and premium runs about 91-94 octane.

    Ethenol is an octane booster (Sunoco's 94 octane fuel has a lot of it) so all else being equal, it is safer to run higher boost levels when there is ethenol present in the fuel.

    DG

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
  13. Irrelevant by wiredlogic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So what. They are just ads in disguise. They awarded the lame ROM exercise machine ($14000 a pop) a few years back. It does nothing that you can't do for free or with $500 in equipment. Their basis for choosing the "best" things is pretty skewed.

    --
    I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
  14. Re:Greatest device by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Except that it's not actually three processors. It's three processor cores. Just like on the IBM Power and PowerPC chips, AMD64 X2, and the late-model Intel Pentiums and Xeons.

    Which isn't to say that the multicore SIMD design of this chip won't be impressive. It will be. But three desktop computers? I don't think so. Even the 1 teraflop claim is suspect. Just like how graphics card manufacturers can pump 3 trillion triangles a second, right? (*cough*underlabratoryconditionsmaybe*cough*)