Thursday, 27 July 2017

AUDI'S NEW A8 - DRIVERLESS CAR



Audi’s new A8 will drive through traffic jams for you



Semi-autonomous driving systems like Tesla’s Autopilot are all the rage these days. In advance of fully autonomous vehicles taking over our roads, automakers are pushing systems that can do the driving for you in specific circumstances.

The newest is Audi’s new A8, which debuted at the Audi Summit in Barcelona this week. The car is powered by Nvidia, and features Audi’s “AI Traffic Jam Pilot” that will handle gridlock for you.
Much like other autonomous systems, the Traffic Jam Pilot uses cameras and laser sensors to map out the road and other vehicles. Then, at speeds up to 40mph, it can stop, start, and follow vehicles for you, enabling you to relinquish control throughout a traffic jam.
It’s the same technology being used to solve a different problem as Tesla’s Autopilot, which is designed for highway cruising situations. Traffic jams all happen at lower speeds and with fewer lane changes than highway cruising, which makes autonomous driving easier for the computer, and far less dangerous.
The system is activated by a single button on the dash, and it has audio and visual prompts for the driver when it’s time for the human to take back control.
In addition to the autonomous driving features, Nvidia also powers the in-car infotainment system and screens, which are meant to create a “virtual cockpit.” Using screens to replace traditional buttons and dials is a trend that’s increasingly popular on expensive, tech-focused cars, thanks to the success of Tesla’s dial-free cars.

This startup is using Uber and Lyft drivers to bring self-driving cars to market faster

Roads aren’t the stagnant strips of concrete and asphalt they appear to be. They’re constantly changing. Traffic lights are added and removed, stop-and-go intersections turn into roundabouts, a typically quiet street turns into a construction zone. It’s happening everywhere, all the time.
Human drivers might be able adjust to this dynamic environment, but autonomous vehicles need extra help. They need maps. But not just any old map will do, say the three founders behind Lvl5, a new mapping and localization startup that launched publicly today.






Lvl5 was founded in December by Andrew Kouri and Erik Reed, who both worked on Tesla’s Autopilot team, and George Tall, a computer vision engineer from iRobot, has developed a way to take enormous amounts of video collected from a camera and turn it into high-definition 3D maps that are constantly refreshing. These maps will always reflect the latest road conditions, providing self-driving cars with the information they need to detect and plan their route safely.
“The thing that everyone is kind of ignoring silently is that self-driving cars won’t ship unless we have really good HD maps that update every single day,” Kouri said in an interview with The Verge. “And nobody has a system to do this yet. This is what we’re building.”
The company, which graduated from the Y Combinator accelerator in March, contends that it’s an inexpensive solution that beats other costly sensors that tech companies and automakers are betting on. And it believes it has a better system than much bigger competitors like Mobileye, TomTom, and HERE.
Kouri says self-driving cars don’t need LIDAR, light detection, and ranging radar used to see the world around it. That’s a departure from what many automakers and tech companies like Google’s Waymo say is needed for the safe deployment of autonomous vehicles.
Lvl5’s philosophy, in many ways, mirrors Tesla’s approach, which contends it can deploy fully autonomous vehicle technology without relying on LIDAR.



“We don’t really care if LIDAR wins out or computer vision wins out,” Kouri said. “Right now we know that if we want to make self-driving car en masse, cameras are ready and LIDAR is not.”
The company’s system uses consumer-grade cameras and a computer vision algorithm to turn all of the video it captures into useable, 3D maps. But it needed to scale it.
So they reached out to Uber and Lyft drivers who can crowdsource the video data via a dashcam app created by Lvl5 called Payver.
Drivers are paid to mount smartphones on the dashboard of their cars and run the app, which automatically collects video, accelerometer, and GPS data. Huge amounts of data are captured; video is taken every meter along a vehicle’s route. The compressed data is then sent to the cloud and then sent to lvl5’s central hub. From there, lvl5 uses its computer vision algorithm to translate all of this footage into high-definition 3D maps.

“That’s something that even Tesla doesn’t do right now,” Kouri said. (Although it should be noted that earlier this year Tesla started collecting “short video clips” using the car’s external cameras to learn how to spot lane lines, traffic lights, street signs, and other visual cues. The aim is to use this data to improve autonomous safety features, Tesla has said.)
The company was able to get 2,500 drivers to download and use the app. In three months, they’ve developed a pipeline of map data that covers 500,000 miles of US roads, and it’s refreshed constantly.
The startup is currently piloting its system with an unnamed major automaker. The aim is to work with multiple automakers, each one paying an initial fee to install the system into the vehicles. The HD maps change multiple times in a day, which requires constant maintenance. Lvl5 will charge a monthly subscription fee per vehicle to maintain the maps.



“If Tesla solves this problem that’s great, but they only have 250,000 cars on the road,” he said. “On the other hand, if we partner with three or four OEMs, we’re going to prevent a lot of Josh Brown incidents from happening.”
Last year, Joshua Brown was killed while driving a Tesla Model S while the semi-autonomous Autopilot feature was engaged. A white tractor trailer drove across the divided highway that Brown was traveling on. In that moment, neither the driver nor the camera used for Autopilot, noticed the white side of truck set against a brightly lit sky. Meanwhile, the radar resolution tricked Autopilot into thinking there was a space between the road and the underside of the truck for the car to pass under.
Autopilot thought it was a bridge because it looked similar to a radar signature of a bridge, Kouri explained. “Had there been a map, the car would have known there’s no bridge here,” he said, adding that it would have slammed on the brakes because it was “seeing” an anomaly.
The fatality didn’t lead directly to Lvl5. But the accident did underscore the significance of what we were doing, Kouri said.
“At that time I knew that others were close to shipping Level 2 autonomy, but likely didn’t have any maps available to them—a dangerous combination,” Kouri explained in an email. “This was our call to action.”

Monday, 17 July 2017

LONG RANGE FM TRANSMITTER | MAKING




Specs:

- 1/4 Mile Radius Range
- Powered By A 9V Battery
- Lasts For Several Days
- Adjustable 87-108mHz

Image of Parts for making FM transmitter



PCB layout and Schematics


 
So there is no need to buy kits, this tutorial includes the PCB layout and the Schematics

PCB Layout and Fritzing File link: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B4AaipaVjNo-SjUzV3dFTFNLTVU

So now you can make your own radio channel  and have fun!!!!!!😃😃😃


LIST OF INDIAN IT COMPANIES

Top 10 companies

Name *HeadquartersCity
Tata Consultancy ServicesMumbaiAhmedabad
Bangalore
Bhubaneswar
Chennai
Coimbatore
Delhi
Gandhinagar
Gurgaon
Guwahati
Hyderabad
Indore
Kochi
Kolkata
Lucknow
Patna
Mumbai
Noida
Pune
Trivandrum
Vadodara
InfosysBangaloreBangalore
Bhubaneswar
Chandigarh
Chennai
Delhi
Hyderabad
Indore
Jaipur
Mangalore
Mysore
Pune
Trivandrum
WiproBangaloreAhmedabad
Bangalore
Bhubaneswar
Chennai
Coimbatore
Gurgaon
Guwahati
Hyderabad
Indore
Jaipur
Kochi
Kolkata
Mumbai
Mysore
Noida
Pune
Vadodara
Visakhapatnam
HCL TechnologiesNoidaBangalore
Chennai
Gurgaon
Hyderabad
Kochi
Kolkata
Mumbai
Noida
Pune
Vadodara
Tech MahindraPuneBangalore
Bhubaneswar
Chandigarh
Chennai
Gandhinagar
Gurgaon
Hyderabad
Kolkata
Mumbai
Noida
Pune
Visakhapatnam
Oracle Financial Services SoftwareMumbaiBangalore
Chennai
Hyderabad
Mumbai
Pune
Larsen & Toubro InfotechMumbaiBangalore
Chennai
Mumbai
Pune
MphasisBangaloreBangalore
Chennai
Mangalore
Mumbai
Pune
MindtreeBangaloreBangalore
Bhubaneswar
Chennai
Hyderabad
Mumbai
Pune
Hexaware TechnologiesNavi MumbaiBangalore
Chennai
Mumbai
Pune

Other companies

Name *HeadquartersCity
3i InfotechMumbaiBangalore
Hyderabad
Mumbai
Noida
Accel FrontlineChennaiBangalore
Chennai
Delhi
Kolkata
Aditi TechnologiesBangaloreBangalore
Adrenalin eSystemsChennaiChennai
AftekMumbaiMumbai
Atom TechnologiesMumbaiMumbai
Blue Star InfotechMumbaiMumbai
C-DACPuneKolkata
Pune
Trivandrum
CMC LimitedNew DelhiHyderabad
Kolkata
Mumbai
CognizantTeaneck, New JerseyBangalore
Chennai
Coimbatore
Gurgaon
Hyderabad
Indore
Kochi
Kolkata
Mangalore
Mumbai
Pune
CollaberaMorristown, New Jersey, United StatesBangalore
Gurgaon
Hyderabad
Mumbai
Kolkatta
Pune
Computer Sciences CorporationFalls Church, VirginiaChennai
CRMNEXTNoidaMumbai
Noida
CybagePuneGandhinagar
Hyderabad
Pune
CyientHyderabadBangalore
Hyderabad
CynapseMumbaiMumbai
Datamatics Global ServicesMumbai Mumbai
Nashik
Bangalore
Puducherry
Chennai
EclerxMumbaiMumbai
FirstsourceMumbaiBhubaneswar
Kolkata
Flytxt Mobile SolutionsAmsterdamTrivandrum
Fulcrum WorldwideMumbaiMumbai
Pune
Gateway TechnoLabsAhmedabadAhmedabad
Godrej Infotech LtdMumbaiMumbai
Harbinger SystemsPunePune
HoneywellMorris Plains, New JerseyMadurai
HSBC GLT IndiaPunePune
IGATEBridgewater Township, New JerseyBangalore
Chennai
Gandhinagar
Hyderabad
Indore
Mumbai
Noida
Pune
KPIT TechnologiesPunePune
MastekMumbaiMumbai
Pune
Melstar Information TechnologiesMumbaiMumbai
MicrolandBangaloreBangalore
Microsoft India PLHyderabadMumbai
Mistral SolutionsBangaloreBangalore
MobMEKochiKochi
Monsoon MultimediaNoidaNoida
NIIT TechnologiesNoidaDelhi
Gurgaon
Indore
Kolkata
Mumbai
Noida
Nucleus Software Exports Ltd.NoidaNoida
Onward TechnologiesMumbaiMumbai
Persistent SystemsPuneHyderabad
Nagpur
Pune
PlivoSan FranciscoBangalore
Polaris Financial Technology LimitedChennaiChennai
Hyderabad
Pramati TechnologiesHyderabadHyderabad
Prodapt SolutionsChennaiChennai
Quest GlobalThiruvananthapuramThiruvananthapuram
Trivandrum
Ramco SystemsChennaiChennai
Mumbai
Rediff.comMumbaiMumbai
Samsung India Software CenterNoidaNoida
SaskenBangaloreBangalore
Chennai
Pune
Sonata SoftwareBangaloreBangalore
Mumbai
SPAN Infotech (India) Pvt. Ltd.BangaloreBangalore
SunTec Business SolutionsThiruvananthapuramKochi
Thiruvananthapuram
Tata Interactive SystemsMumbaiMumbai
TrianzSilicon ValleyWashington DC Metro
New York
Bengaluru
Mumbai
Delhi NCR
Chennai
Hyderabad
Dubai
ThinkPalm TechnologiesKochiKochi
Thiruvananthapuram
Chennai
ThirdwareMumbaiMumbai
ThoughtworksBangaloreBangalore
Chennai
Hyderabad
Gurgaon
Pune
UST GlobalAliso Viejo, CaliforniaKochi
Trivandrum
WNS Global ServicesMumbaiMumbai
Nashik
XansaReading, BerkshireNoida
XeroxNorwalk, ConnecticutBangalore
Zensar TechnologiesPuneHyderabad
Pune
ZOHO CorporationPleasanton, CaliforniaChennai

* To know more details about the companies click on the name of the company for your further information about that company via wikipedia.

PATENT

What is a patent?

Patents protect inventions and improvements to existing inventions.
Patent is a monopoly right granted by the Government to exclude others from exploiting or using a particular invention. This exclusive monopoly granted by a Patent is provided in return for the inventor disclosing the details of the invention to the public. Therefore, the patent is a monopoly right which offers exclusivity to the patentee to exploit the invention for 20 years after which it falls to the public domain.



While filing a patent for your invention, there are several critical aspects to be followed especially in drafting the claims, which define the scope of the invention. Drafting patent specification is an art by itself, and requires the expertise of skilled professionals in this field. 

REQUIREMENT FOR FILLING PATENT

Requirement for filing patent application in India


A)     ORDINARY APPLICATION

  
1)      Name, Address and Nationality of applicant(s)
2)      Name, Address and Nationality of inventor(s)
3)     Complete Specification [or provisional specification if Provisional Application needs to     be filed]
4)      Description, Claims, Abstract & Drawings, if any
5)   Details of all corresponding foreign applications, including application number, date  of filing and current status

B)     CONVENTION APPLICATION

1)      Name, Address and Nationality of applicant(s)
2)      Name, Address and Nationality of inventor(s)
3)      Complete Specification including Description, Claims, Abstract & Drawings, if any
4)      Priority claim details (Priority date, Country and Application number)
  Certified copy of priority document (if not filed at International Bureau)
  Verified English translation of priority document (may submit later)
5)  Details of all corresponding foreign applications, including application number, date of   filing and current status

C)     PCT NATIONAL PHASE APPLICATION IN INDIA

1)     Name, Address and Nationality of applicant(s)
2)     Name, Address and Nationality of inventor(s)
3)     Complete Specification including Claims, Abstract & Drawings, if any
   If the PCT application is in a language other than English, a verified English translation of the PCT specification is required.
4)     PCT Application Details (International Application Number & Date)
5)     Details of Priority application (if applicable)
 i) Priority date, Country and Application number
 ii) Certified copy of priority document (if not filed at International Bureau)
 iii) Verified English translation of priority document (can be filed later)
6)     Details of all corresponding foreign applications, including application number, date of filing and current status
7)     Other Documents (if applicable)
 i)  Particulars of Amendments made to specification/claims during the International Phase (Verified English translation)
 iiCorrections or changes made at the International phase (Form PCT/IB/306)



FORM AND FEE FOR PATENT

Sr. No.
Process Title
Download (PDF) *
1
The First Schedule Fees
Fees  (683 KB) 
2
Application for Grant of Patent
Form 01  (380 KB) 
3
Provisional/Complete Specification
Form 02  (39 KB) 
4
Statement and Undertaking Under Section 8
Form 03  (67 KB) 
5
Request for Extension of Time
Form 04  (63 KB) 
6
Declaration as to Inventorship
Form 05  (43 KB) 
7
Claim or Request Regarding any Change in Applicant for Patent
Form 06  (71 KB) 
8
Notice of Opposition
Form 07  (36 KB) 
9
Representation for Opposition to Grant of Patent
Form 07(A)  (53 KB) 
10
Claim or Request Regarding Mention of Inventor as Such in a Patent
Form 08  (37 KB) 
11
Request for Publication
Form 09  (25 KB) 
12
Application for Amendment of Patent
Form 10  (38 KB) 
13
Application for Direction of The Controller
Form 11  (31 KB) 
14
Request for Grant of Patent Under Section 26(1) and 52(2)
Form 12  (66 KB) 
15
Application for Amendment of The Application for Patent/Complete Specification
Form 13  (65 KB) 
16
Notice of Opposition to Amendment / Restoration / Surrender
Form 14  (45 KB) 
17
Application for Restoration of Patent
Form 15  (32 KB) 
18
Application for Restoration of Title/Interest
Form 16  (43 KB) 
19
Application for Compulsory Licence
Form 17  (36 KB) 
20
Request/Express Request for Examination of Application for Patent
Form 18  (43 KB) 
21
Application for Revocation of a Patent for Non Working
Form 19  (41 KB) 
22
Application for Revision of Terms And Conditions of Licence
Form 20  (35 KB) 
23
Request for Termination of Compulsory Licence
Form 21  (40 KB) 
24
Application Registration of Patent Agent
Form 22  (51 KB) 
25
Application for The Registration of Name in The Register of Patent Agents
Form 23  (22 KB) 
26
Application for Review/setting Aside Controller Decision/Order
Form 24  (33 KB) 
27
Request for Permission for Making Patent Application Outside
Form 25  (41 KB) 
28
Authorisation of a Patent Agent/Or any Person in a Matter or Proceeding Under The Act
Form 26  (39 KB) 
29
Statement Regarding the Working of the Patented Invention on Commercial Scale in India
Form 27  (41 KB) 
30
To Be Submitted By Small Entity / Startup
Form 28  (70 KB) 
31
Request For Expedited Examination Of Application For Patent
Form 18(A)  (71 KB) 
32
Request For Withdrawal Of The Application For Patent
Form 29  (63 KB) 
33
To Be Used When No Other Form Is Prescribed
Form 30  (65 KB) 
34
प्ररूप-3


* Click on the respective form to download it as Portable Document Form(PDF)


ADDRESS FOR PATENT OFFICE IN CHENNAI

                            Shri . S.P.Subramaniyan
                                       Deputy Controller of Patents and Designs
                                       Property Office Building,
                                           G.S.T. Road, Guindy,

                                           Chennai-600032

                                           Phone: 044-22502081-84, 044-22502080

                                           Fax: 044-2502066

                                                Email: chennai-patent@nic.in