Posted: June 14th, 2009 | Author: SD | Filed under: TechTalk | Tags: siemens, video conference | Comments Off
You think that video conferencing is still a luxury and not required by your organization. You find the cost of implementing video conferencing across your organization too high compared to the benefits.
Think again. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: June 14th, 2009 | Author: SD | Filed under: TechTalk | Tags: India, isro | Comments Off
After attracting world attention last month by launching the country’s first “spy satellite,” the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) is already planning to launch the indigenously built Oceansat-2 satellite by July end or July.
G Madhavan Nair, Chairman, ISRO
“It will be a unique mission and the satellite would enable us to study the sea surface, wind and also track down the fishing zones,” Nair told reporters on the sidelines of a national seminar on ‘Aerospace Expanding Frontiers-Technologies and Challenges’. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: June 14th, 2009 | Author: SD | Filed under: TechTalk | Tags: nokia | Comments Off
Nokia Life Tools is in the news for quite some time now. The service was unveiled in 2008 and a trial run was on in Maharasthra and now the service has been commercially launched across India on June 12. I decided to do some Googling and understand what exactly is Nokia Life Tools about.
Nokia Life Tools is a pioneering concept by the Finnish mobile phone giant on value added services for the rural market. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: June 7th, 2009 | Author: SD | Filed under: People, TechTalk | Tags: gadgets, mobile | Comments Off
The Finnish phone-maker Nokia is all set to launch its first touchscreen-QWERTY phone, the Nokia N97, shortly in India. The phone has already started shipping in Europe with mixed responses coming in.
Key Features :
- Touch display (3.5″ of it) which slides and tilts to reveal a full QWERTY kepboard plus d-pad for easy navigation.
- 5 Megapixel Camera
- Carl Zeiss integrated optics coupled with a dual LED flash
- A massive 32GB of internal memory with MicrSD support for further memory expansion
- Integrated Assisted GPS
- WiFi and HSDPA
- DVD quality video capture and 16:9 display
Targeted towards the internet-savve mobile users, N97 will be launched nationwide within two weeks at a likely price of around Rs 34,000. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: SD | Filed under: TechTalk | Tags: netbook | Comments Off
Lenovo’s foray into the netbook market was described as a solid start by reviewers. Keeping upto the reputation it has, Lenovo has just announced the launch of slightly modified Ideapad S10 which I think has addressed most of the major issues which could have made the EeePC or the Aspire One a better choice.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: SD | Filed under: TechTalk | Tags: internet | Comments Off
I just spotted airtel.com. Check it out!
I read in a forum that the domain name was part of the deal when Vodafone acquired Airtel, Spain! And this Airtel which happened to be the 2nd largest mobile service provider in Spain has no relations with our Bharti Airtel.
The website was registered way back in 1999 and many bloggers and forums have discussed it.
There is a Press Release here at the Vodafone site on the acquisition. Look at the date!
I already knew about ie7.com.
According to Mozilla, spokesperson the ie7.com domain was registered by some individual no way related to the company.
Posted: May 13th, 2009 | Author: SD | Filed under: Personal, TechTalk | Tags: gadgets, netbook | 3 Comments »
This is not a list of fancy exorbitant gadgets out there which I sure will like to have but my wallet wont permit in the near future. Rather, here I have listed gadgets I wish to buy soon.
1) Lenovo Ideapad S10
A netbook for my personal use at home and while traveling.
These ultra-mini laptops has created a whole new market for themselves and all the big laptop players have jumped in to grab a share of the ever increasing market. Not just traveling corporates, but students, professors, housewives, bloggers and everybody else looking for a second laptop just for basic uses find a netbook just perfect. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted: April 5th, 2009 | Author: SD | Filed under: TechTalk | Tags: laptop | 1 Comment »

Touchpad
or Why does a laptop touchpad (or trackpad) only detect fingers?
This came up in discussion in office and I searched the net a lot to get the right answer. Although, the internet almost always have googles of pages on anything, I could not find the perfect answer.
Ultimately, I have to take the harder path to the answer. First understand how a trackpad works and then find why it only detects fingers.
Wikipedia is the best place to look first.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touchpad
Touchpads operate in one of several ways, including capacitance and conductance sensing. The most common technology used today entails sensing the capacitance of a finger, or the capacitance between sensors. Because of the property being sensed, capacitance-based touchpads will not sense the tip of a pencil or other similar implement. Gloved fingers will generally also be problematic (such as in a cleanroom environment). Likewise, moist, sweaty, or callused fingers will also affect capacitance sensing. However, some touchpads, such as have been manufactured by Elographics, sensed electrical conductance. In the case of the Elographics touchpads, there were little nipples that separated a flexible top surface from a lower surface. When the top surface was pushed into contact with the bottom surface, using either a finger or any other device, the point of contact could be sensed due to the signal being conducted. In this case, one could use a finger or a wooden stylus, and performance would not be affected by sweat or calluses, for example.
From this I understand, Touchpads that work by sensing the capacitance of finger are tuned in such a way that they will detect only capacitance of fingers or human body parts.
The rest of the article was not of much help regarding the question I had.
Then, I found another source of some information at : http://www.answerbag.com/q_view/36881
Many people shared there views on this here. And the closes to the perfect answer to my query I got here is :
Most of the above answers are correct in terms of touchpads through history, they have all worked on gird array’s of wires, thermal pickups etc throughout the evolution of the devices, but duffmean has come the closest to it so far.
Nowdays, 99.9% of laptops use capacitance pads. This is a system where wires are overlaid across each other, but the change in capacitance when your finger moves over is what triggers the pad. A capacitor consists of 2x main elements, the plates and the dialectric (being some sort of material that interferes with current flow between the plates, electrolyte in an electrolytic capacitor for example, tantilum in a tantilum capacitor etc). Imagine 2 metal plates about an inch apart, with power flowing through them. If you place an object between the plates, the capacitance will change as you are effectivly modifying the distance between the plates by adding mass (those who have ever pulled the guts out of a valve radio will be familiar with the rotary plate tuners they use. basically a series of metal plates that are inserted and removed to adjust capacitance, and therefore tuning, see http://www.eham.net/articles/5217 ). You dont nessicarily need to go between the plates, you can just go near them, which is how theramins work, and why TV’s with indoor antenna’s sometimes go off tune when you approach the antenna.
So, with this in mind, we return to the touchpad. The grid of wires are set up as individual capacitors, and a finger moving across them works to change the capacitance at a given intersection of wires. Trying to proove myself wrong, I actually went and got some ice water and chilled my finger to the point where it went blue (I love science!) and tried this, my touchpad still worked. I heated a pencil eraser with a cigarette lighter to approximately human body temp, this failed to trigger the touch pad. Based on all this its fair to say that the touchpads are “tuned” in terms of capacitance to only allow objects of similar density to the human body to trigger them, which is why pens and other objects fail to trigger them. Short of wiping a piece of ham or something over my touchpad (which I would if I had it at hand) thats about as much as I can test, but if someone out there wants to wipe some meat over their laptop to check this out, please let us know! in the meantime thats my theory, and im sticking to it ^_^
This basically almost clears the doubt. I am still trying to understand it further. I will add more to this article soon.
However, think that the touchpad does not move even when you touch it with your nails!
Nowadays Youtube is also a good place to look for information. However, the only video I found there was this one. I dont realize who is it itended for?
I am still googling.