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<title>Haaze.com / asiasana / Published News</title>
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<pubDate>Tue, 11 Jan 2011 08:10:01 +0000</pubDate>
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<title><![CDATA[Kinect tinker brings motion controls to Adobe Flash]]></title>
<link>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=kinect-tinker-brings-motion-controls-to-adobe-flash</link>
<comments>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=kinect-tinker-brings-motion-controls-to-adobe-flash</comments>
<pubDate>Tue, 11 Jan 2011 08:10:01 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>asiasana</dc:creator>
<category>Mobile &amp; Electronics</category>
<guid>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=kinect-tinker-brings-motion-controls-to-adobe-flash</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Blitz&amp;39' Yosef Flomin demonstrates using an Adobe Flash application with Kinect as the method of interface.(Credit:Blitz)In the spirit of opening up Microsoft's Kinect gaming peripheral to more types of user control schemes, the Blitz marketing agency tomorrow is planning to release software that will let the Kinect work with Adobe's Flash, as well as other interface tools like Microsoft's own Silverlight. Blitz's workaround for this was to go through a socket server to transmit Kinect's data stream to other applications. In terms of Flash, this turns three-dimensional movements into coordinates that can be read by Flash applications or games. In the example video (embedded below), you can see that turns doing something like moving your hand in a forward motion into clicking on an object. While demoing the new tool, Blitz software developer Yosef Flomin also mentions that because the processing is done outside of Flash, it won't cut into the computer's resources. Blitz says it will releasing the source code for the project at its Labs site tomorrow at 8 a.m. Pacific. In the meantime, the group has put together a very detailed video of how it can be put together with Flash applications to create motion-controlled user interfaces:Flash Kinect Demo from BLITZ Agency on Vimeo.<br/><br/>0 Vote(s) ]]></description>
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<title><![CDATA[Will charging infrastructure be the electric car&'s speed bump]]></title>
<link>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=will-charging-infrastructure-be-the-electric-carrsquos-speed-bump</link>
<comments>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=will-charging-infrastructure-be-the-electric-carrsquos-speed-bump</comments>
<pubDate>Mon, 30 Nov -001 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>asiasana</dc:creator>
<category>Latest News</category>
<guid>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=will-charging-infrastructure-be-the-electric-carrsquos-speed-bump</guid>
<description><![CDATA[This year &amp;8212' and next &amp;8212' will be a busy one for arrival of electric cars. The Ford Focus Electric and Coda&amp;'s sedan are slated for launch by 2011. The Nissan Leaf is slowly making its way to buyers in the U.S. and Europe, the Wheego Whip and LiFe are on sale in New York,and the partially electric Chevrolet Volt is on dealer lots now.Yet Tesla Motors, the one company that&amp;'s been ahead of the pack in actually selling electric vehicles, saw its stock price drop 16 percent today.The Silicon Valley-based maker of the all-electric sports car Roadster saw its stock drop today in part due to today&amp;'s expiry of the 180-day lockup period that kept insiders from selling their shares. But it also fell 8 percent Thursday after being downgraded to a &amp;''sell&amp;'' by analyst Carter Driscoll of Capstone Investments. One of the reasons for his new rating was the lack of publicly available charging infrastructure, which he predicts will push green car buyers more towards hybrids and plug-in hybrids.It&amp;'s not an issue unique to Tesla, Driscoll told me.&amp;''While the infrastructure is clearly growing daily and there&amp;'s a lot of state support &amp;8230'it&amp;'s going to be a number ofyears before the infrastructure is widely developed and widely recognized by the buying public to alleviate some of therange issue concerns,&amp;'' Driscoll said.Lack of charging infrastructure has also been reportedly cited as the reason for Nissan Leaf delays in markets in Maryland and Washington, D.C., according to All Cars Electric.But Paul Scott, cofounder of advocacy group Plug In America (and an electric car owner himself), argues it&amp;'s not an issue because most people will do the majority of their charging at home.&amp;''We could get by with zero public infrastructure and the cars would be fine. Millions of Americans would be totally fine charging at home,&amp;'' Scott said. &amp;''Any public infrastructure is just icing on the cake. It&amp;'s nice but not necessary.&amp;''Scott also pointed out that the plug for the Tesla Roadster doesn&amp;'t jibe with the current charging standard J1772, which was developed after the Roadster came out &amp;8212' so public chargers can&amp;'t currently service the Roadster. Scottexpects Tesla&amp;'s 2012 Model S sedan to be chargeable with the new standard.The Department of Energy&amp;'s director of Vehicle Technologies Program Pat Davis also argued that home charging will suffice on the DOE&amp;'s blog last week:&amp;''Today, there are very few public charging stations out there, as of the middle of December in 2010. And thata4a4s really okay because at this point most people are going to be charging their vehicles locally, typically at home.&amp;''Even though charging infrastructure companies like Ecotality and Coulomb are rolling out lots of chargers fueled in part by government funds, the projects are still underway. Ecotality is rolling out 15,000 chargers in 16 cities, a project that is slated to finish in summer 2011. Coulomb plans to allocate and install 5,000 chargers nationwide by October 2011.NRG Energy CEO David Crane told me last month that the company discovered Tokyo only needed 60 charging stations to be declared fully wired &amp;8212' and expects that the sprawling city of Houston, where NRG is launching charging infrastructure with monthly rates, would need anywhere from 50 to 150 chargers.Having launched earlier, hybrids do have a better toehold on the green car market than electric cars and will likely continue to do so. Cars like the Toyota Prius have been around longer and eliminate consumer fears of running out of battery, also known as &amp;''range anxiety.&amp;''According to a J.D. Power &amp;amp' Associates report, 5.2 million hybrid or electric cars will be sold in 2020 (or 7.3 percent of the overall car market), and the vast majority &amp;8212' 3.9 million &amp;8212' will be hybrid electric vehicles, with 1.7 million of those forecast to be in the U.S. And of the 1.3 million battery electric vehicles sold in 2020, the U.S. would account for only 100,000 of those.Ford is expecting most of their green car sales to come from plug-in hybrids and hybrids &amp;8212' which made sense to me after I test-drove a Ford Focus Electric and was warned on a blistering hot Texas summer day that running the air conditioner would deplete the battery faster.There are other factors that can keep buyers from going for an all-electric car, of course. They&amp;'re pricier than many gas-powered vehicles, and it&amp;'s still not clear how long batteries last and whether people are willing to change their driving habits for it. Though analyst Driscoll sees charging infrastructure expanding in future years, he sees the current dearth of charging stations as a deterrent to electric car sales right now.&amp;''It is one aspect of the auto purchase decision that is an hindrance to theadoption of EVs (electric vehicles),&amp;'' Driscoll said.Scott of Plug In America disagrees.&amp;''There are tens of millions of people for whom it&amp;'s not an issue at all. (Electric) carmakers will not run out of customers for years to come,&amp;'' Scott said.[Image via Flickr/milos milosevic]Previous Story: Samsunga4a4s Galaxy Player to debut next week, its answer to the iPod TouchPrintEmailTwitterFacebookGoogle BuzzLinkedIn      DiggStumbleUponRedditDeliciousGoogleMore&amp;8230'          Tags: charging infrastructure, electric cars, electric vehicles, Leaf, LiFe, Model S, Roadster, Volt, WhipCompanies: Capstone Investments, Chevrolet, Coda, Coulomb, Department of Energy, DOE, ECOtality, ford, Nissan, Plug In America, Tesla, WheegoPeople: Carter Driscoll, Pat Davis, Paul Scott          Tags: charging infrastructure, electric cars, electric vehicles, Leaf, LiFe, Model S, Roadster, Volt, WhipCompanies: Capstone Investments, Chevrolet, Coda, Coulomb, Department of Energy, DOE, ECOtality, ford, Nissan, Plug In America, Tesla, WheegoPeople: Carter Driscoll, Pat Davis, Paul ScottIris Kuo is the VentureBeat's lead GreenBeat writer. She has reported for The Wall Street Journal in Hong Kong, Houston Chronicle, the McClatchy Washington Bureau and Dallas public radio. Iris attended the University of Texas at Dallas and lives in Houston. Follow Iris on Twitter @thestatuskuo (and yes, that's how you  pronounce her last name).VentureBeat has new weekly email newsletters.  Stay on top of the news, and don't miss a beat.<br/><br/>0 Vote(s) ]]></description>
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