Posts

WhatsApp Web lets you continue chatting on Google Chrome

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Meet WhatsApp Web, the chat app’s new web client that will allow you to move your smartphone conversations onto the desktop. WhatsApp Web isn't a separate chat app, it just mirrors what’s happening on your smartphone. This means all your messages still live safe and sound on your device, and not stored on your computer. To use WhatsApp Web, you'll need up to date versions of both Google Chrome and WhatsApp. Then, head here, scan the QR code from within the WhatsApp application (there'll be a WhatsApp web option in the menu) and voliĆ , you're up and running. Because the web app only mirrors your phone, your phone will need to be connected to the Internet. Now there'll be no more side-eyeing your phone to see what’s new in your 24 group chats, and you can pretend to be working on a spreadsheet, when you're actually talking about lunch plans. Come on. We all do it. It's a feature that WhatsApp users have been hankering after for years, and for Andro

People get emotionally attached to their smartphones: Study

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LONDON: People are becoming emotionally attached to their smartphones, show researchers from Loughborough University and University of Iceland in Reykjavik. The emergence of devices such as the Apple iPhone in January 2007 gave users a computer in their pocket. Now apart from making phone calls and sending text messages, smartphone users have immediate access to the internet, social media and network systems, e-mail accounts, video clips, music files and a vast array of phone-based software apps. "Smartphones are creating a huge ripple in the pond of human behaviour and it is important that, as smartphones develop, we continue to study the way they affect behaviour, emotions and emotional attachments," said Tom Page from Loughborough University Design School. People grow emotionally attached to their smartphone, or at least the connectivity and the technology that the device facilitates, pointed out Tom Page and professor Gasli Thorsteinsson from the Univer

Beware the Machines: Stephen Hawking and Elon Musk Warn about the Rise of AI

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Stephen Hawking and Elon Musk have signed an open letter warning that more precautions need to be taken around the further development of artificial intelligence (AI). The letter, which is backed by dozens of other scientists, entrepreneurs and investors, specifically states that there needs to be a greater focus on the safety and social benefits associated with AI. The letter and an attatched research paper from the Future of Life Institute (FLI), which recommends how scientists should develop AI, come amid growing fears that machines are going to surpass the capabilities of humans in both the jobs market and many other areas of life. It argues that scientists and technologists need to safely and carefully coordinate and communicate advancements in AI to ensure it does not grow beyond humanity's control. "Because of the great potential of AI, it is important to research how to reap its benefits while avoiding potential pitfalls," the FLI's letter says. &q

HIP HOP

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                      Hip hop is a musical genre which developed alongside hip hop culture, and is commonly based on concepts of looping, rapping, freestyling, DJing, scratching, sampling and beatboxing. The music is used to express concerns of political, social, and personal issues. Hip hop began in the Bronx inNew York City in the 1970s, primarily among African Americans, with Jamaican and Latino American immigrant influence. The term rap  is often used synonymously with  hip hop , but  hip hop denotes the practices of an entire subculture. Rapping, also referred to as MCing or emceeing, is a vocal style in which the artist speaks lyrically, in rhyme and verse, generally to an instrumental or synthesized beat. Beats, almost always in 4/4 time signature, can be created by looping portions of other songs, usually by a DJ, orsampled from portions of other songs by a producer. Modern beats incorporate synthesizers, drum machines, and live bands. Rappers may write, memorize, or improv

Skycar - Drive and Fly

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          Gilo Cardozo, a self-taught aviation engineer, inventor and founder of British-based Parajet has created a two-seat flying car. The Skycar is powered by a modified 1000cc, four cylinder, 140hp, ethanol burning, Yamaha R1 superbike engine with a lightweight automatic CVT(continuously variable transmission) gear-box. It has independent four wheel suspension and rear wheel drive. Road acceleration is 0-60 mph in 4.5 seconds with a top speed of 110 mph. To convert to flight mode, the driver unfolds a parafoil wing from the trunk (boot) and attaches it to the rear of the car. He then flips a switch to change the transmission from road mode, which powers the wheels, to flight mode, which powers the rear fan. Converting from “road mode” to “fly mode” and visa-versa takes about three minutes thanks to the flexible wing technology invented by Mike Campbell Jones, of Paramania Powergliders. The fan’s thrust propels the car forward, providing lift for the wing as the

Gyro Technology

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          This wild new motorcycle, invented by 19-year-old Ben J. Poss Gulak, is among the latest inventions to capture attention. Debuting at the National Motorcycle Show in Toronto, the "Uno" uses gyro technology for balance and acceleration. It is a battery charged machine that accelerates by leaning forward and slowing down by leaning backwards. It weighs approximately 129 pounds (58 kg.) and has a top speed of 25 mph (40 klms).

Einstein Invention

         Scientists at Oxford University have reconstructed an Albert Einstein invention in the hopes of developing an eco-friendly refrigerator. Einstein invented a green technology refrigerator in 1930 that operated without electricity or any moving parts. The need for eco-friendly cooling technology is becoming more important given the demand by developing countries for air conditioning and refrigeration. Replacing current technologies with energy efficient, green technology is why scientists are now resurrecting Einstein's invention.