Showing posts with label Caterpillar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caterpillar. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Caterpillar CAT B15 smartphone offers a taste of rugged Jelly Bean

Caterpillar CAT B15 smartphone offers a taste of rugged Jelly Bean


We've seen our fair share of rugged smartphones, but there's a certain amount of attention due when a heavy equipment builder like Caterpillar gets involved. Its newest smartphone, the CAT B15, undoubtedly has the survivability you'd expect from a company that makes bulldozers: the aluminum-and-rubber shell can survive 5.9-foot drops on to hard concrete, stay immersed in 3.3 feet of water for half an hour and keep working in temperatures between -4F to 122F. Just don't expect top-flight performance elsewhere. While we're big fans of the CAT B15 shipping with Jelly Bean, its 4-inch WVGA screen, dual-core 1GHz Cortex-A9 chip, 512MB of RAM and 5-megapixel camera won't have many of us giving up our faster, more fragile devices. The phone's £299 and €329 European prices (about $437) could still lead to the more accident-prone among us picking up a CAT B15 when it ships in March.


Source: T3


More Coverage: Pocket-lint

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

This 200-Year-Old Mechanical Caterpillar Does Everything But Turn Into a Butterfly

This story will display in ...Dec 25, 2012 9:00 PM  

This 200-Year-Old Mechanical Caterpillar Does Everything But Turn Into a Butterfly Robots are so commonplace now that we use them to entertain kids at amusement parks. But even though modern technology has given us artificial lifeforms that can walk, talk, and even fly, there's still something utterly fascinating about pre-electronic mechanical automatons like this Vers de Soie caterpillar dating back to 1820.

It's almost 200 years old and despite being so small you'd think there was no room for gears or other mechanisms, it can still crawl across a flat surface, writhing and undulating like the real thing. The creation is attributed to Henri Maillardet who is thought to have designed and built it in Switzerland, presumably taking advantage of the country's history and expertise in watchmaking.

And unlike other antique automatons that reveal their age through extensive wear and tear, this bejewelled gold and enamel creation sparkles and shines as bright as the day it was first wound. And that's probably part of the reason the Vers de Soie recently sold at auction for over $415,000.

This 200-Year-Old Mechanical Caterpillar Does Everything But Turn Into a Butterfly

[Worldtempus via Neatorama via Richard Kadrey]


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