- China has the highest number of engineers graduating annually (estimates are at 600,000 per annum – Bloomberg Business Week)
- China has the largest population (standing at 1,338,612,968 as at 2009 – Internet World Stats)
By Kingsley Ndiewo.
Remember Eden?
The wrapper library for Panda3D that Funtrench developed from 2008? Well Eden is still here and at version 2.0 it’s really a potent tool for bringing the digital tomorrow to life. Perhaps a good testament to its robustness is the fact that the latest version of Eden was designed with Panda 1.6.2 in mind and works beautifully with Panda 1.7.0 without any modification. And this is not even what Eden calls its best quality….
Web designers and programmers in Kenya are of three general classes:
Each level has less people and more money. And the business way of looking at things must beg the question “what’s after Flash?” Well, at least I’m sure the good people at Funtrench have been asking themselves that. And Panda’s developers have the answer – the next big thing: P3D files.
P3D is the 3D equivalent of what Flash and Javascript are in 2D. An applet framework that allows 3D applications developed using Panda-Eden to run from a web page. And unlike Flash, P3D is open-source all the way. Even Eden itself is proudly open-sourced by Funtrench.
So all the programmers across East Africa, watch this space. Funtrench is unveiling an Eden Training Centre soon, to equip you with the skills you need to build your 3D career from scratch. For more inquiries you know where to reach us.
By Kingsley Ndiewo.
Funtrench is a fun company to work in. Because of business, the returns and the sheer weight of life lessons that I get from here. All the way from making software for USAID in Embu, to the great house hunt and finally to settling down into the life of a self-employed team, we have experienced so much from God, people around us and business that we could seriously write a book.
It’s rarely that people get insights into what it’s like to work in a company – from the company blog. But at Funtrench we’re proud of what we do and the way we do it – it’s not a job, it’s an experience. An experience in business and technology.
This week my focus is on RFID technology. The technology of proximity cards fascinates because of the convenience it brings. Imagine walking through airport security without producing any documents simply because an RFID reader has read the card in your wallet, which is tucked away in your pocket. Radio frequency identification (RFID) technology is the use of an object (typically referred to as an RFID tag) applied to or incorporated into a product, animal, or person for the purpose of identification and tracking using radio waves. Some tags can be read from several meters away and beyond the line of sight of the reader.
Radio-frequency identification comprises interrogators (also known as readers), and tags (also known as labels).
Most RFID tags contain at least two parts. One is an integrated circuit for storing and processing information, modulating and demodulating a radio-frequency (RF) signal, and other specialized functions. The second is an antenna for receiving and transmitting the signal.
There are generally three types of RFID tags: active RFID tags, which contain a battery and can transmit signals autonomously; passive RFID tags, which have no battery and require an external source to provoke signal transmission; and battery assisted passive (BAP) RFID tags, which require an external source to wake up but have significant higher forward link capability providing greater range.
RFIDs are easy to conceal or incorporate in other items. For example, in 2009 researchers at Bristol University successfully glued RFID microtransponders to live ants in order to study their behavior. This trend towards increasingly miniaturized RFIDs is likely to continue as technology advances. However, the ability to read at distance is limited by the inverse-square law.
Hitachi holds the record for the smallest RFID chip, at 0.05mm x 0.05mm. The Mu chip tags are 64 times smaller than the new RFID tags. Manufacture is enabled by using the Silicon-on-Insulator (SOI) process. These “dust” sized chips can store 38-digit numbers using 128-bit Read Only Memory (ROM). A major challenge is the attachment of the antennas, thus limiting read range to only millimeters.