I loved that little OCD cleaner bot MO in WALL-E. I also love dogs. But somehow, combining the two just ends up…weird.
I’m talking about the “Puppy Robotic Vacuum Cleaner,” whose name is actually a bit misleading. Puppy Robotic is composed of several parts: A “mother dog” base — complete with “docking tits” (seriously!) — and four mini-Roomba style “puppy” cleaners with “docking mouths” (how else would they suckle power from their mother unit?).
Each puppy has a rolling brush and suction hole for cleaning, and a display screen that relays whether it’s in cleaning mode (a smiley face), entertainment mode (a music note), or feeding mode (what appears to be a nipple). The antenna is appropriately implemented as a tail.
From the images, it also looks like you can hook a remote control on your actual dog’s collar so that the cleaner pups trail it, sweeping up the animal’s muddy footprints as it trots along.
There’s a lot of animal-inspired robotics out there: robot smartbirds, baby robo dinos and sneaky robot snakes, to name a few. The Puppy Robotic Vacuum Cleaner appears to be the first to utilize a “docking tit” though, as far as I’m aware.
The Puppy Robotic Vacuum Cleaner is thankfully only a concept.
Puppy Robotic Vacuum Cleaner [Yanko Design]

Intel's new 3-D processor, codenamed "Ivy Gate" (right), and one of the previous generation of transistors (left). Photo courtesy Intel
Intel has announced the world’s first 3-D microprocessor transistor for mass production.
It’s a major breakthrough for the semiconductor industry, which has been trying for years to get the microscopic semiconductor structures that make up computer chips into the third dimension.
“This transition to 3-D devices will help us continue Moore’s Law,” said Intel senior fellow Mark Bohr at the news conference Wednesday. “Clearly you can pack more things into a small space if you go vertical with 3-D.”
The Tri-Gate 3-D transistors will be put onto a new line of Intel chips. Dubbed “Ivy Bridge,” the chips are the world’s first mass-produced 22-nanometer microprocessors, which means they also contain the smallest semiconductors yet available on a production chip.
The creation of the 3-D transistor is a major advancement in chip manufacturing. Instead of the power-conducting channel occurring on a 2-D surface as with existing transistors, it is replaced with a thin silicon fin that rises vertically from the silicon of the transistor.
Current control is then gated on each of the fin’s three sides on a 3-D transistor, rather than just on the top side, as happens in the current generation of planar, or 2-D, transistors.
Essentially, that means as much current flowing as possible when transistors are in the “on” state, increasing performance by as much as 30 percent compared to the current planar transistors. Alternately, when the transistor is in its “off” state, the flow will be as close to zero as possible, with lower leakage than before. This lower leakage means minimizing power usage.
In other words, the new line of processors will be smaller, faster and perform at a lower voltage with less power leakage than before.
“It’s the first change in transistor structure since 1958, when Robert Noyce invented the first planar IC,” said Dan Hutcheson, an analyst at VLSI Research. “Over the past 10 years, all we’ve done is shrink the chips. But it’s been growing more and more difficult to do so without actually changing the transistor itself.”
Also, more transistors are able to be fit on the Ivy Bridge processors, using the company’s 22-nanometer manufacturing process. Bohr said the new chips have twice the transistor density of the previous generation of 32-nanometer chips.
“Because they’ve made this shift, they have the power equivalence of about two nodes in one,” Hutcheson said.
While most microprocessors contain many vertical layers of circuitry (the wiring that connects the chips’ billions of transistors) the transistors have been confined to the bottom layer of the chip. That’s because the etching technology used to create semiconductors is destructive, so you can’t create multiple layers — or 3-D structures — without destroying the underlying layers.
Intel claimed only a 2-to-3-percent cost increase from the previous generation of planar transistors.
The company will be making upgrades to its factories over 2011 and 2012 in order to manufacture the new transistors. The technology should be expected to be in full production by the end of this year.
When asked, company spokesmen wouldn’t say when we would see 3-D transistors in smartphones and tablets, but acknowledged the company has a date in mind.
While this is a major announcement for the firm, Intel’s year hasn’t been without its problems. The company revealed in February that a supporting chip in one of its “Sandy Bridge” line of processors, codenamed “Cougar Point,” contained a manufacturing flaw. After shipping approximately 8 million of the bad chips, the subsequent recall cost the company an estimated $1 billion in the first quarter of 2011, after calculating for lost revenues and replacement costs.
But Intel has fared better this week. Apple announced its refreshed line of iMacs on Tuesday. They’re powered by Intel’s “Sandy Bridge” i5 and i7 processors. Early benchmarks show extremely speedy results.
With the development of the Tri-Gate transistor, Bohr estimates that Intel is definitely going to stay competitive with its rival, ARM Holdings.
“It doesn’t mean that ARM is going to roll over and die,” Hutcheson said. “But it’s not going to have the advantage in low-power consumption like it used to.”

In the iPhone's settings menu, Location Services can be flipped off to disable location-data collection. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com
Apple on Wednesday morning released a software update for iPhones, iPads and iPod Touch devices, fixing a flawed location-storage method that raised privacy concerns last month.
The update, iOS version 4.3.3, reduces the size of the file that stores geodata on iOS devices — meaning it will no longer contain a history of location data going back as far as one year ago.
Additionally, with the update installed, iTunes won’t back up the iOS device’s location database file, meaning the geodata will no longer be stored on your computer.
Last, when customers disable the Location Services setting on their iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch, it deletes all the information stored in the location file, according to Apple.
The software update comes in response to a security issue illuminated by two data scientists, who discovered that an unprotected file inside Apple’s iOS software stores a log of geodata accompanied with time stamps, creating a digital trail of a customer’s general moves for the past year.
The Wall Street Journal later reported that even when location services were turned off on the iPhone, the device was still collecting geodata.
Apple eventually explained that iOS devices are not actually tracking a customer’s precise movements, but rather, iOS devices are collecting information about nearby cell towers and Wi-Fi access points, which helps speed up location services.
The company added that “bugs” caused iOS devices to continue storing location data even when location services were turned off. Apple also said it made a mistake by making the location database file too large.
The iOS 4.3.3 update is a free download available through iTunes. The download is 666 megabytes large.
See Also:
- Why You Should Care About the iPhone Location-Tracking Issue …
- Why and How Apple Is Collecting Your iPhone Location Data
- Apple Promises Fix for Location-Gathering ‘Bug’ on iPhone


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