Placeholder Content Image

What the “father of the cell phone” wants you to know

<p dir="ltr">The inventor of the mobile phone has shared his candid opinion about the obsession with smart devices. </p> <p dir="ltr">Martin Cooper, an American engineer dubbed the “father of the cell phone”, invented the very first mobile phone 50 years ago in 1973. </p> <p dir="ltr">Back then, the weighty block of wires and circuits were only used to make calls, a far cry from having the world at your fingertips with smartphones today. </p> <p dir="ltr">Cooper believes that despite all the good that can come from modern technology, the world has become a little obsessed with smart devices. </p> <p dir="ltr">“I am devastated when I see somebody crossing the street and looking at their cell phone. They are out of their minds,” the 94-year-old told AFP from his office in Del Mar, California.</p> <p dir="ltr">“But after a few people get run over by cars, they’ll figure it out,” he joked.</p> <p dir="ltr">Mr Cooper also indulges in the latest gadgets, as he wears an Apple Watch and uses a top-end iPhone, flicking intuitively between his email, photos, YouTube and the controls for his hearing aid.</p> <p dir="ltr">Despite keeping up with all the latest apps, updates and upgrades, he confessed that sometimes it can all seem a little overwhelming. </p> <p dir="ltr">“I will never, ever understand how to use the cell phone the way my grandchildren and great grandchildren do,” he said.</p> <p dir="ltr">“Each generation is going to be smarter … they will learn how to use the cell phone more effectively,” he said.</p> <p dir="ltr">“Humans sooner or later figure it out.”</p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Image credits: Getty Images</em></p>

Technology

Placeholder Content Image

Inventor promising rain to farmers for 50k denies "preying" on the desperate

<p>An inventor has been accused of “preying” on vulnerable farmers by promising his device can change the weather and make it rain to where they need it most.</p> <p>However, David Miles from<span> </span><a rel="noopener" href="http://www.milesresearch.co/" target="_blank">Miles Research</a><span> </span>has insisted “there’s no way we want to con anyone”.</p> <p>Miles is currently offering a three-month rain contract to farmers in Victoria’s grain belt for $50,000 on a “success basis”.</p> <p>The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has slammed this, saying that farmers should not do business with Miles, but they are powerless to stop him.</p> <p>“It’s preying on people’s desperation,” Australian Competition and Consumer Commission deputy chairman Mick Keogh <em><a rel="noopener" href="https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/am/farmers-desperately-turn-to-a-man-who-can-make-it-rain/11630332" target="_blank">told ABC Radio on Wednesday</a>.</em></p> <p>“If you wanted to prosecute a court requires you to prove essentially that there’s no basis for the claims being made and that is a very difficult thing to do. By far the very best defence against them is widespread consumer education. It’s up to individuals obviously to make their own mind up. If it sounds too good to be true it probably is.”</p> <p>Miles has denied the allegations, saying that the ACCC are defaming him.</p> <p>“How can they do that without looking at our contracts? We’re success based, if we don’t deliver rain we don’t get paid,” he said to<span> </span><em><a rel="noopener" href="https://www.news.com.au/finance/business/other-industries/we-dont-want-to-con-anyone-inventor-charging-50000-for-rain-denies-preying-on-farmers/news-story/4a253e71686cf66c41b8bab257921cd8" target="_blank">news.com.au</a>.<br /></em></p> <p>“I think the ACCC probably jumped the gun in making that comment. They’ve never seen the contracts, they haven’t spoken with me. We don’t mind scepticism, but the Government needs to be careful not to defame us as they did in 2006.”</p> <p>What Miles is referring to is that he has been operating weather modification technology for nearly two decades under a different business name of Aquiess. The Victorian Government highly criticised the business back in 2006.</p> <p>Miles has said a “small private group” of farmers has seen results from the program.</p> <p>“They signed the agreement that if by the end of June they’d received 100mm, they pay $50,000, if they only receive 50mm, they would only pay $25,000. Anything under half we don’t want to be paid,” he said.</p> <p>One farmer vouched for the device, saying that he’s seen results.</p> <p>“I got involved because it sounded good, the fact you can control weather, because as a farmer rainfall is everything,” he told the broadcaster.</p> <p>“I think the evidence is out there, you look at the forecast what’s meant to come and all of a sudden it increases dramatically. You know that he’s behind it and I reckon I haven’t seen such good crops in this district ever, everywhere.”</p> <p style="text-align: center;"><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7832009/water-thing.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/3c0f74f296be4a5b9ce6f2b76932f4a7" /></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em>Image credit: Miles Research Whitepaper</em></p> <p>Miles is keeping his technology under wraps as he fears it could be stolen by competitors or “weaponised” by the government.</p> <p>“There’s no way we want to con anyone,” he said. “Our best approach at the moment is to put up a risk-free model, so the farmers can get some rain and we can get some income to get a facility. We’ve been able to make adjustments to approaching weather and we want to be able to offer that to the rest of Australia.”</p> <p>On Miles’ website, since deleted, he claimed the technology uses “electromagnetic scalar waves”.</p> <p>“Electromagnetic scalar waves don’t exist,” University of Melbourne associate professor of physics Martin Sevior told ABC Radio. “There’s no such thing. He’s taken a few words and put them together and made them sound somewhat scientific but it’s meaningless.”</p> <p>Miles has also not patented the technology, as this would involve exposing how it works.</p> <p>“We were advised against patenting because it’s basically exposing how it works. There are a lot of big companies that invest in trawling through patents. We thought it’s probably right to go down the lines of Coca-Cola,” he said.</p> <p>“I understand the scepticism, the only other way is to fully prove up our science and physics and peer review. If we did that, we’ll lose it, it will be taken up as a national security interest and it’ll then be weaponised.”</p>

Home & Garden

Placeholder Content Image

"I created a Frankenstein's monster": Inventor of most popular dog breed haunted by regret

<p>The labradoodle is one of the most popular dogs around the world - it is no wonder how with their cutesy curls and plaintive eyes. </p> <p>However, the man who first invented the breed in the 1980’s admitted he has some feelings of regret for creating the infamous labradoodle. </p> <p>"I realised what I had done within a matter of days,” Wally Conron told<span> </span><a rel="noopener" href="https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2019-09-23/labradoodle-guide-dogs-designer-regret/10717186" target="_blank">abc.net.au.</a></p> <p>As a professional dog breeder, Wally said he mainly worried about breeding healthy, happy pups. </p> <p>However, he believes labradoodle breeders do not share the same concerns. </p> <p>"I realised the reason for these unethical, ruthless people [was] to breed these dogs and sell them for big bucks," Wally says.</p> <p>"I opened a Pandora's box and released a Frankenstein's monster.</p> <p>"When I'm out and I see these labradoodles I can't help myself, I go over them in my mind.</p> <p>"I look at it thinking, does it have hip dysplasia, has it got elbow problems, any other problems I can see?</p> <p>"I find that the biggest majority are either crazy or have a hereditary problem. I do see some damn nice labradoodles but they're few and far between."</p> <p>Mr Conron first crossed a labrador and a poodle in the late eighties after he was asked to breed a non-shedding guide dog. </p> <p>"I bred the labradoodle for a blind lady whose husband was allergic to dog hair," he says.</p> <p>"She wanted to know if we could come up with a dog that she could use as a guide dog and her husband wouldn't be allergic to," he says, speaking to the ABC podcast<span> </span><a rel="noopener" href="https://abclisten.page.link/gro5" target="_blank">Sum Of All Parts.</a></p> <p>He trialled 33 different standard poodles after deciding a “standard” one would “do the job”, he decided they didn’t have the right temperament to be a successful guide dog. </p> <p>After three years of attempts, Wally came up with the idea make a brand new crossbreed or "a dog with the working ability of the Labrador and the coat of the poodle".</p> <p>After breeding three dogs, he shipped one off to the blind woman and her husband who lived with the dog well into his retirement.</p> <p>The other two, he found, were extremely hard to get rid of as “no one wanted a cross breed,”</p> <p>Out of sheer frustration, Mr Conran approached Guide Dogs Victoria’s PR department and asked them to say they’d bred a “special breed.”</p> <p>"I said 'can you get onto the media and tell them that we've bred a special breed? A breed called the labradoodle — it's non-allergenic',”  he said.</p> <p>Quickly Wally found it became a sensation. </p> <p>"I could not visualise the publicity that a crossbred dog would get," Wally says.</p> <p>"Cars would stop and people would get out of the car and say to me, 'excuse me what sort of dog is that?' I'd say 'it's a labradoodle!'"</p> <p>While the gorgeous dogs have captured the attention of many over the last 30 years, the cost of them far outweigh their multi-thousand dollar price tag.</p>

Family & Pets

Placeholder Content Image

The forgotten inventors

<p>Over time, men and women have contributed to the vast development and evolution of mankind in their own special ways. Their names have been mostly buried, but their contributions live on. Here’s a selection of the world’s greatest inventors to be recognised, appreciated and remembered for their efforts.</p> <ol> <li><strong>CORNELIS JACOBSZOON DREBBEL</strong> (1572-1633) = construction of the world’s first navigable submarine in 1620.</li> <li><strong>ADA LOVELACE</strong> (1815-1852) = Lovelace accurately conceived and described an algorithm for the engine to compute Bernoulli numbers, making her the world’s first computer programmer. </li> <li><strong>ÉDOUARD-LÉON SCOTT DE MARTINVILLE</strong> (1817-1879) = Patented a contraption called the phonautograph, which could translate the vibrations of sound into a wavy line scratched by a stiff bristle on a hand-cranked cylinder. His invention was a precursor to Edison’s creation of the phonograph two decades later. </li> <li><strong>ANTONIO MEUCCI</strong> (1808-1889) = Created an electromagnetic telephone to link his basement laboratory to the second floor bedroom of his bedridden wife — almost two decades before Bell’s patent of the telephone. </li> <li><strong>SIR JOSEPH WILSON SWAN</strong> (1828-1914) = The first incandescent light bulb</li> <li><strong>GUSTAVE WHITEHEAD</strong> (1874-1927) = Claimed he had achieved powered flight before 1902, at least a year before the Wrights.</li> <li><strong>EDWIN HOWARD ARMSTRONG</strong> (1890-1954) = Invented frequency modulation transmission — in other words, FM radio.</li> <li><strong>PHILO FARNSWORTH</strong> (1906–1971) = the creator of the first complete television system.</li> <li><strong>DOUGLAS ENGELBART</strong> (1925-2013) = the father of the computer mouse.</li> </ol> <p> </p> <p><strong>Related links: </strong></p> <div> <div class="advert"> <div id="adspot-300x250-pos3" class="ad"> <div id="google_ads_iframe_/6411/oversixty/news_2__container__"> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><em><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/news/news/2016/01/chihuahua-begs-for-freedom-photos/">Photographer captures moment dog begs for freedom</a></em></strong></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><em><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/news/news/2016/01/service-dog-steals-the-show-at-wedding/">Service dog steals the show at wedding</a></em></strong></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><em><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/news/news/2016/01/nsw-gold-opal-daily-cap-could-rise/">Gold Opal daily cap could rise and self-funded retirees could lose cards</a></em></strong></span></p> </div> </div> </div> </div>

News

Our Partners