martes, agosto 23, 2011

iPhone to Carry Earthquake Warnings

 
 

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vía Geeks are Sexy Technology News de JLister el 22/08/11

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Apple is adding earthquake notification for Japanese users of the iPhone. But the alerts aren't in an app: instead they are built into the operating system itself.

The iOS5 feature was uncovered by 9to5Mac, which was sent a screenshot of the Japanese edition. It connects the device to an early warning system launched in 2007 by the Japan Meteorological Agency and the National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention (who are responsible for the image above). The system issues alerts through a combination of broadcast media, cellphones and facilities with large populations such as factories or schools.

Earlier this year when an earthquake and subsequent tsunami devastated part of Japan, the system sent out alerts just three seconds after the earthquake struck. Time noted that although the alert often gives notice of a matter of seconds before the secondary, destructive waves of an earthquake hit, that can be enough to take important steps from simply taking cover to halting medical surgery.

It's likely that the combination of the alert system and Japan's engineering expertise with construction saved thousands of lives in March's quake — a factor that was understandably overlooked by most reports of the tragic loss of life.

iPhone users will have the option to switch the alerts on or off. The one downside is that the monitoring will create additional demands on the phone's battery.

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10 servicios gratuitos de almacenamiento y respaldos en la nube

 
 

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vía GeeksRoom de Hector Russo el 23/08/11

A continuación tienen una compilación de 10 sitios que prestan el servicio de almacenamiento de ficheros y respaldos en la nube.

Algunos de ellos presentan algunas características más que los otros, como sincronización a través de distintos dispositivos o gestion de los ficheros y respaldos a través de smartphones.

Todos los sitios presentan cuentas gratuitas y en la lista, además del nombre y enlace al servicio, tienen la cantidad de Gb almacenamiento gratuito que ofrecen.

ADrive - 50 Gb.

Box.net – hasta 50 Gb, pero solo los 5 primeros Gb son Gratuitos (gracias Martin por avisar!)

Dropbox - 2 Gb

ElephantDrive - 2 Gb

FilesAnywhere - 1 Gb

FlipDrive - 1 Gb

FreeDrive - 1 Gb

OpenDrive - 5 Gb

SkyDrive – 25 Gb

Storegate - 1Gb

[Fuente Practical eCommerce]


 
 

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Cómo defenderse de los villanos de la Social Media, incluídos los trolls #In...

 
 

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vía GeeksRoom de Hector Russo el 23/08/11

Hace unos meses atrás el sitio MandoMando tradujo al español una infografía de Daniel Wesley llamada How to get rid of villains in Social Media.

Esta infografía, además de comentar sobre los trolls, que casualmente ayer les mostré una infografía sobre cómo identificarlos y combatirlos, también nos indica sobre otro tipo de villanos de la red, más precisamente de la Social Media.

Es así que conocerán las tácticas, características, rasgos y cómo defenderse de los trolls, los perturbadores, los enterradores, los escépticos, enlazadores descarados, hipersensibles unidos, sabelotodo y los acusadores santurrones.

Es una infografía muy completa que nos pinta perfectamente cada uno de estos personajes que abundan en las redes sociales y en los blogs.

[vía]


 
 

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miércoles, agosto 17, 2011

Now that’s what I call a point-and-shoot camera

 
 

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vía Geeks are Sexy Technology News de JLister el 9/08/11

Two hackers have built a home-made version of an Israeli grenade-launcher camera. It doesn't actually work, but hey you can't have everything.

Vlad Gostom and Joshua Marpet were the latest pair to show off their work at the DEF CON event in Vegas. They took their idea from a device that's been developed by an Israeli defense contractor for military use: a wireless camera that can be launched by a 40mm grenade launcher. The idea is to get footage from areas that are near enough that an unmanned drone isn't necessary, but in a situation where it's not safe to explore on foot. The military version can fire the camera up to 500 feet though only gives around eight seconds of footage before the camera crashes.

Gostom and Marpet believe the technology could be adapted for civilian or police use and should be possible for around $500. With grenade launchers being somewhat frowned upon in civilian life, they are attempting to recreate the concept using a 37mm flare gun.

The first test firing, which took place just before DEF CON and was covered during the presentation, was unsuccessful as the device didn't fully ignite. The camera only traveled 30 feet and the accompanying parachute caught fire.

However, the pair are convinced the concept could work, and they believe the flare gun model could eventually fire a device 250 feet. They say that if the plan works, the device could be used for getting more comprehensive coverage in search and rescue missions, and could also be useful for police preparing for raids into hostile territory.

And while individual enthusiasts and explosive materials don't always mix well, Gostom appears to believe leaving things to the experts isn't always the best idea: a few weeks ago he retweeted the Dave Barry quote "Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic."

(Picture credit: Tech World)

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Insert Coin: A Stop Motion Animation with Coins [Video]

 
 

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vía Geeks are Sexy Technology News de Geeks are Sexy el 9/08/11

Yikes! These guys sure do have a lot of patience. If you think this is fake, keep on listening till the end for the explanation on how they were able to pull this off.

[Via]

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Awesome Stop-Motion Portal 2 Music Video Has a Sad

 
 

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vía Geeks are Sexy Technology News de ACrezo el 11/08/11

Poor Lab Rat. That guy's had a really hard life, y'know? YouTuber  (Hae-Joon Lee) created this video using Stop-Motion Animation and After Effects (and a little sartorial donation from his mom, who made the costume for his puppet), and if you know Portal and can watch this without feeling the sting of exploding lemons in your eyes (because those aren't tears, no sir), well, you're a little more GLADoS than human.

[nerdbastards]

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Origami Robot [Video]

 
 

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vía Geeks are Sexy Technology News de Neato el 15/08/11

Thanks to MIT student Jie Qi, humanity is taking one step closer to welcoming our Origami Robot Overlords. Behold, self-folding paper using Flexinol wires:

Think that's pretty nifty? Check out the self-flapping crane:

[Source | Via]

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viernes, agosto 12, 2011

Incluso sabiendo que son globos de helio asustan un poco

 
 

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vía WTF? Microsiervos de no-reply@microsiervos.com (Alvy) el 12/08/11

Air Swimmers, inquietantes tiburones y peces «voladores» a radiocontrol

Probablemente será uno de esos juguetes que luego poco tienen que ver con la «demo»… pero mola

(Vía Neatorama)

Microsiervos { Ecología + Fotografía + Juegos + Ciencia + Internet + Aviones + WTF }

 
 

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