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-   -   Applied for patent at work, which can be used for turbos (https://www.miataturbo.net/insert-bs-here-4/applied-patent-work-can-used-turbos-64042/)

JasonC SBB 03-06-2012 11:02 PM

Applied for patent at work, which can be used for turbos
 
LOL, I'm feeling a bit proud of my work.

It's something for power electronics, regarding control systems, and from day one a week ago when I starting thinking about it and fleshing it out, I saw the applicability for electronic boost control. :)

Mobius 03-07-2012 01:44 AM

Sweet! Congrats.

Jeff_Ciesielski 03-07-2012 01:52 AM

Nice! Congrats dude, I hope it works out.

JasonC SBB 03-07-2012 03:06 AM

Heh, thanks. I file for a lot of patents at work and only a few are filed with the USPTO and are granted.

Now I will start thinking about a practical implementation for boost control. :)

Faeflora 03-07-2012 09:53 AM

What is your day job?

Braineack 03-07-2012 10:03 AM


I want whtaever algorithm is controlling these to control every PWM device in my car.

TurboTim 03-07-2012 10:29 AM

ok that is the most awesome thing I will see today. I can go home now.

mgeoffriau 03-07-2012 10:38 AM

Nano?

Joe Perez 03-07-2012 12:13 PM


Originally Posted by Braineack (Post 844600)

Did anybody else get a creepy Space Invaders / Galaga vibe at pretty much everything shown from 0:40 onwards?

That technology could actually be used to build a real-world implementation of Galaga. All you need is an airsoft gun and some means of detecting when an individual unit in the swarm has been hit.

Actually, programming the devices to function as a logical centipede would make for a pretty cool game of Centipede as well. :D

Or Pac Man. Where they're the ghosts and you're Pac Man. In a cornfield maze.

Actually, forget Pac Man. Those things are perfect stand-ins for the ghosts in Gauntlet!

One could produce such terrifyingly fun things with this technology.

JasonC SBB 03-07-2012 12:33 PM

They're starting with ping pong:




My day job = power and analog electronics design.

Power electronics: e.g. switching power supplies and motor drives

If I didn't get into power electronics I'd have gone into robotic control systems (which I did for a wee bit), such as the above quadcopters lol.

y8s 03-07-2012 03:33 PM

Blooper Reel!




Also how do you know if your patent is complete or just filed? or is there no distinction?

Also, the red lights in the still frame are infrared tracking. So be safe in knowing that the quadrotors can't organize like that without external sensory perception.

Mobius 03-07-2012 03:54 PM


Originally Posted by y8s (Post 844778)
So be safe in knowing that the quadrotors can't organize like that without external sensory perception.

Yet

mgeoffriau 03-07-2012 03:59 PM


Originally Posted by y8s (Post 844778)
Also, the red lights in the still frame are infrared tracking. So be safe in knowing that the quadrotors can't organize like that without external sensory perception.

Come on, we've all seen this movie/read this book. The robots hide the fact that they've gained sentience/mobility/speech/free will until it's [almost] too late for the humans to do anything about it.

JasonC SBB 03-07-2012 04:12 PM

1 Attachment(s)

Originally Posted by y8s (Post 844778)
Also, the red lights in the still frame are infrared tracking. So be safe in knowing that the quadrotors can't organize like that without external sensory perception.

If someone gets the bright idea of connecting them to Skyn... I mean Google, we will get this:

https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1331154720



Also how do you know if your patent is complete or just filed? or is there no distinction?
I file it within my employer, then weeks or months later they may or may not decide to file it with the USPTO. Then a year or so later they decide to grant it (or not).

I checked online and I have >9 filed with the USPTO since 1998. Most of them were granted (the exceptions being those still in the process).

Scrappy Jack 03-07-2012 04:42 PM

I was trying to find something more meaningful or clever to say but ended up with "very cool, Jason." :party:

I'll try to make a witty e-card image later...

Joe Perez 03-07-2012 05:20 PM

2 Attachment(s)

Originally Posted by JasonC SBB (Post 844682)
(video of robots playing ping-pong)

Well, add that to the list of things we no longer need humans for.

Actually, what is it about ping pong that fascinates the AI crowd? The folks at MIT were teaching a PDP-6 how to catch, and later hit, a ping-pong ball back in '66. And it worked!
... then someone like Marvin Minsky might happen along and say "Here is a robot arm. I am leaving this robot arm by the machine." Immediately, nothing in the world is as essential as making the proper interface between the machine and the robot arm, and putting the robot arm under your control, and figuring a way to create a system where the robot arm knows what the hell it is doing.

Hackers, by Steven Levy

https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1331158836 https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1331158836




Originally Posted by y8s (Post 844778)
Also, the red lights in the still frame are infrared tracking. So be safe in knowing that the quadrotors can't organize like that without external sensory perception.

Ah, yes. It's fortunate that no technology exists which allows large outdoor spaces to be remotely imaged, and said data shared in realtime with autonomous agents distributed across a wide area.

Originally Posted by JasonC SBB (Post 844811)
If someone gets the bright idea of connecting them to Skyn... I mean Google,

Ah, yes. That would be the aforementioned technology.

It is, in all honesty, kind of scary to think about the relatively near-future possibilities of conjoining a realtime database of pretty much everything in the entire world (eg: google) with an army of semi-autonomous robots (eg: the Air National Guard's 174th MQ9 Fighter Wing, aka the "All Robot Attack Squadron"). Granted, folks have been fretting about this for decades, it just seems like we're nearing the point at which real-world technology reaches parity with decades of apocalyptic sci-fi.

blaen99 03-07-2012 05:55 PM


Originally Posted by Joe Perez (Post 844850)
Actually, what is it about ping pong that fascinates the AI crowd? The folks at MIT were teaching a PDP-6 how to catch, and later hit, a ping-pong ball back in '66. And it worked!

A ping pong ball has zero chance of damaging any hardware, is fairly difficult to "just hack something" to work due to characteristics of the ball, and offers quite a few substantial challenges to work with. There's not -that- much of a difference between, say, a baseball and a ping pong ball speaking from a software perspective, but...

Did I mention it (a ping pong ball) has zero chance of damaging hardware?

Joe Perez 03-07-2012 06:11 PM


Originally Posted by blaen99 (Post 844862)
Did I mention it (a ping pong ball) has zero chance of damaging hardware?

True.

Though humorously, those present at the time report that the robot arm nearly killed Minsky on one occasion when his head wandered into its field of view and was mistaken for a ping-pong ball, which the robot promptly whacked with the paddle. (Some sources claim that the TV light reflecting off of his bald head looked like a ball to the robot.)

As much as I'm glad that Minsky didn't die (it would have been a serious blow to computing research in general), I'm morbidly curious to know, if he had been bludgeoned to death by the robot, what sort of hysterical news reporting would have followed it.

"Cyborg runs amok, murders MIT professor!"

(Journalism geeks will recognize the use of the Linotype font in its appropriate context here.)

y8s 03-07-2012 06:14 PM

I can hear the mantra of the quadrotor army:

THE WORLD IS MY FIDUCIAL

Reverant 03-08-2012 02:14 AM

I, for one, welcome our new quadrotor overlords.


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