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Virtual Dictionary
Mesh A mesh is a type of modelling form in which simple polygon plains interlock into a 3D structure, with each polygon sharing two nodes and a line border with it?s neighbour. Thus the mesh forms a kind of contour map, which continues working round until every single polygon in it shares two nodes and a line with each of it?s neighbours. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases which may match this term.
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Results by page [1] ECoG, or electrocorticography is a method of brain-computer interaction, in which a mesh of electrodes is placed like a veil, directly over the outside of the brain itself. MicroEcog, as the name suggests, is an order of magnitude smaller, and much more permanent. It was only a matter of time before someone took the concept of a sensor web literally, and created a smart mesh web that could cover an object and detect when and where any breaches in the web occur. That wait is now over, and the first such smart fabric now exists. Electrocorticography or ECoG is a method of neural interface in which an electrode array, quite like a fine mesh, is draped over the upper surface of the brain directly, under the skull. A section of the skull is removed to allow the array to be fed in, then replaced. The result is near-identical to a high fidelity EEG that is under the skull and thus away from its pattern dampening properties.
Industry
News containing the Term Mesh:
Results by page [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] (25/04/2010)
21st - 25th June Boston, Massachusetts, USA IEEE SECON provides a forum to exchange ideas, techniques, and applications, discuss best practices, raise awareness, and share experiences among researchers, practitioners,...
(10/05/2005)
For the police, for firefighters, paramedics, and other disaster site workers, being wireless isn't just about walkie-talkies anymore. An increasing number of emergency workers rely on high-speed wireless data networks while on the job. Bu...
(21/03/2007)
Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, and Pennsylvania University, both in the United States, have developed prototype scrambling robots, based on the insect model. In insects, leg spines enable them to scra...
(18/12/2006)
(Press Release) Lyon, France - December 18th 2006 - PathEngine announces release 5.06.00 of the PathEngine pathfinding and agent movement SDK. This release adds support for 'tile by tile' construction of individual meshes for PathEngine'...
(22/10/2008)
Startup chipmaker Quantenna Communications says that it can push 1Gbps over regular WiFi without defying the laws of physics. The company's initial goal is to cover houses with a combination of high bandwidth and mesh networ...
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