29 July 2007
Firefox 3 gets full-page zoom
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23 July 2007
Amazing! Blind Kid that can see
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Technophilia: Where to Find Public Records Online
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09 July 2007
ubmit Your Video To The Best Video Networks In One Shot With Hey!Spread
Hey!Spread was released to meet an obvious but unsatisfied need: sending videos to the best online video services in one shot.
Those interested to create a BUZZ with their video files, know how time consuming this process is. One has to go and login to all those resources, load the video file etc. etc.
With Hey!Spread anybody could send their video file(s) to YouTube, MySpace, Google Video, Yahoo Videos, Dailymotion and Blip.tv in just 3 simple steps.
Step 1:
Select the video that you want to upload, add the video description and tags;
Step 2:
Add your login details for the services when you want to upload your video.
Hey!Spread will record your login details so that next time you send a video file you don’t have to re-enter your login details.
Step 3:
Go! Your video file is on the way to the video uploading sites you’ve picked up.
Hey!Spread looks like a very convenient facility to create a BUZZ with no time efforts.
The New 7 Wonders of the World Announced
On the night of 07-07-07, the New 7 Wonders of the World were announced in the official declatration ceremony held in Lisbon, Portugal. The new list was based from a poll conducted in the internet from 21 shortlisted manmade structures around the world including the Statue of Liberty in New York and the Eiffel Tower in Paris. The former 7 Wonders of the World are still in the running but unfortunately, only 2 made it to the new list.
The top 7 are now called the NEW SEVEN WONDERS OF THE WORLD and these places are…
The Pyramid at Chichén Itzá (before 800 A.D.) Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico
Chichén Itzá, the most famous Mayan temple city, served as the political and economic center of the Mayan civilization. Its various structures - the pyramid of Kukulkan, the Temple of Chac Mool, the Hall of the Thousand Pillars, and the Playing Field of the Prisoners – can still be seen today and are demonstrative of an extraordinary commitment to architectural space and composition. The pyramid itself was the last, and arguably the greatest, of all Mayan temples.
Christ Redeemer (1931) Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
This statue of Jesus stands some 38 meters tall, atop the Corcovado mountain overlooking Rio de Janeiro. Designed by Brazilian Heitor da Silva Costa and created by French sculptor Paul Landowski, it is one of the world’s best-known monuments. The statue took five years to construct and was inaugurated on October 12, 1931. It has become a symbol of the city and of the warmth of the Brazilian people, who receive visitors with open arms.
The Great Wall of China (220 B.C and 1368 - 1644 A.D.) China
The Great Wall of China was built to link existing fortifications into a united defense system and better keep invading Mongol tribes out of China. It is the largest man-made monument ever to have been built and it is disputed that it is the only one visible from space. Many thousands of people must have given their lives to build this colossal construction.
Machu Picchu (1460-1470), Peru
In the 15th century, the Incan Emperor Pachacútec built a city in the clouds on the mountain known as Machu Picchu (”old mountain”). This extraordinary settlement lies halfway up the Andes Plateau, deep in the Amazon jungle and above the Urubamba River. It was probably abandoned by the Incas because of a smallpox outbreak and, after the Spanish defeated the Incan Empire, the city remained ‘lost’ for over three centuries. It was rediscovered by Hiram Bingham in 1911.
Petra (9 B.C. - 40 A.D.), Jordan
On the edge of the Arabian Desert, Petra was the glittering capital of the Nabataean empire of King Aretas IV (9 B.C. to 40 A.D.). Masters of water technology, the Nabataeans provided their city with great tunnel constructions and water chambers. A theater, modelled on Greek-Roman prototypes, had space for an audience of 4,000. Today, the Palace Tombs of Petra, with the 42-meter-high Hellenistic temple facade on the El-Deir Monastery, are impressive examples of Middle Eastern culture.
The Roman Colosseum (70 - 82 A.D.) Rome, Italy
This great amphitheater in the centre of Rome was built to give favors to successful legionnaires and to celebrate the glory of the Roman Empire. Its design concept still stands to this very day, and virtually every modern sports stadium some 2,000 years later still bears the irresistible imprint of the Colosseum’s original design. Today, through films and history books, we are even more aware of the cruel fights and games that took place in this arena, all for the joy of the spectators.
The Taj Mahal (1630 A.D.) Agra, India
This immense mausoleum was built on the orders of Shah Jahan, the fifth Muslim Mogul emperor, to honor the memory of his beloved late wife. Built out of white marble and standing in formally laid-out walled gardens, the Taj Mahal is regarded as the most perfect jewel of Muslim art in India. The emperor was consequently jailed and, it is said, could then only see the Taj Mahal out of his small cell window.
03 July 2007
Funniest Phone Pranks - to the rudest people ever - from bbc radio 1
01 July 2007
(SYTYCD) Jaimie and Hok Top 16 Performance- The Chairman’s Waltz
I’m not really into dance, but I really enjoy this show and find it amazing how each one of them manage to dance styles which are so far away from theirs. This week, we witnessed a master piece. And again, I’m not into dance, but this routine below is so beautiful, so special, it really moved me. So I’m posting it, for those of you who missed it.
It almost makes me want to learn how to dance. :-)
29 June 2007
First artificial life 'within months'
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28 June 2007
The Rubberboy Auditions in Americas Got Talent
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22 Things You Didn't Know You Could Get for Free
Classes at MIT Language Lessons Business Education Computer Classes Museum Admission Concerts, Movies and Shows Pets Gym Membership Photo Prints 411 Service Phone Calls Email Reminders Ice Cream Used Books Household Items Makeup Face Cream Good Samples Comic Books CPR Courses Legal Music Coffee
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PHOTOS with remarkable color contrast - surreal
photo credits: Avi Ornstein, I DID IT Productions
27 June 2007
Make Your Own Firefox Extensions
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Amazing Connie Talbot Sings on Britain's Got Talent Finale
An Alternative for Your Conventional TV Remote
25 June 2007
Afternoon Walk on Helsinki's Highest Hill
Kakorama: Guess What Happened on the Day You Were Born
More DaBug Invites
24 June 2007
People shooting jumping Asian carp with a bow and arrow
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21 June 2007
Webware 100 awards 2007
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Photo gallery: Head-turners: 10 most attractive cars
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Air Disinfection Unit to Make Hospitals Cleaner, Safer
A device that mimics the naturally disinfecting quality of fresh air could be used to purge hospital wards of superbugs, its makers claim.
The Air Disinfector, launched in London, UK, on 19 June pumps a continual stream of reactive hydrogen radicals into the atmosphere, killing microbes within minutes.
"The same results could be obtained simply by opening all the windows of hospital wards, but that's not practical," says David Macdonald, co-inventor of the device and chief scientific officer of Inov8 Science, which developed it.
Macdonald and co-inventor Derek Elwood identified the so-called open-air factor phenomenon more than 15 years ago through experiments at the UK government’s chemical and biological defence labs at Porton Down in Wiltshire. They established that outdoors, microbes are killed by hydroxyl radicals, highly reactive agents constantly produced through natural reactions between airborne ozone and organic scented chemicals from plants such as pine trees.
Radical generation
Now, Macdonald, Elwood and collaborators say they have recreated this effect using a customised device the size of a flower vase that constantly generates the radicals. To do this, it draws in oxygen and exposes it to electric currents to produce a cold plasma rich in ozone. The hydroxyl radicals are generated by constantly reacting the ozone with pre-loaded supplies of scented chemicals, called terpenes, in cartridges that need renewing each month. The ozone and terpenes are retained within the device and not released into the room.
Bacteria, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Clostridium difficile - two of the most notorious hospital-acquired superbugs - were undetectable within as little as an hour of the device being switched on, Macdonald says. "In earlier experiments, in which we flooded rooms with more than a billion bacteria, levels were effectively down to zero within an hour," he adds.
Although hydroxyl radicals are lethal to microbes - disrupting their ability to absorb nutrients – they appear harmless to humans.
The device is now on sale in the UK and is also being tried in wards at three hospitals. There are also plans to launch it in the US, where it is being tested at 17 veterans’ hospitals.
How to: Get Google and AJAX to Play Nice
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20 June 2007
Top 20 Magic Trick Tutorials Of All Time
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19 June 2007
Starting Ruby on Rails: What I Wish I Knew
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17 June 2007
Shooting the Sheeps Game to Test Your Reaction Skills
This is a game to test how fast are your reactions.
Click the tranquilizer button whenever you see a sheep leaving leaving the flock and running for freedom. There are five sheeps to stop. If you happen to shoot a dart when no sheep is running, you will receive a 3 seconds penalty.
You are a turbo-charged cheetah if you nailed the test. If you suck, you are a sluggish nail. If for the first time you play the game and you didn’t get in the “sluggish nail” category, i guess you’re good.
(Click on the photo to play the game)
Japan's Human Tetris
Man, I love Japan so much. What other country would have a game show that consists of contestants dressed in metallic spandex trying to squeeze through moving walls with holes obviously smaller than they are carved into them? Although I've gotta admit I lost some respect for those contestants when none of them just dove through the middle of the cut-out shapes. You could have fit, guys!
I love the fact that the fellow contestants are busy laughing at their oponents for missing the gap and not for being dressed up as something resembling nothing so much as a novelty metallic condom.
14 June 2007
Summer vacation 2012 destination? SPACE
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Samsung's 70-inch LED-backlit LCD television now on sale
Samsung's gettin' busy this morning in Korea with the launch of their 70-inch Full HD LCD television. Not only is it the world's largest commercially available LCD, this 1080p pup also brings a 120Hz refresh along with Samsung's local dimming LED backlighting solution for a reported 500,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio... for whatever that measurement's worth. The LN70F91BD is another ACAP packer featuring 3x HDMI 1.3 terminals and a USB 2.0 jack for purposes unknown. Available in S.Korea only at the moment with worldwide sales starting in the second half of the year. Only ₩59,000,000 for the privilege which translates to about $63k or €48k -- chump-change for culturally ambiguous superstars.
13 June 2007
Amazing 6 year old girl sings, 'Somewhere Over The Rainbow' on Britain's Got Talent
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40+ Tooltips Scripts With AJAX, JavaScript & CSS
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12 June 2007
Gigantic 3000-foot Pyramid Proposed for Tokyo Bay
Unbelievable. A proposal has come forth to build a massive pyramid over Tokyo Bay. When I say massive, I mean it. Godzilla would have a tough time wrecking this structure, because at 2,004 m tall, it would stand 12 times higher than the pyramids of Giza. The building, or rather, collection of buildings reminds me of the Arcologies from SimCity, or maybe Blade runner. It might be a pipe dream to imagine seeing this any time soon, though, as construction relies on materials that aren’t even available yet, like carbon nanotubes. Still though, if it was going to be built anywhere, it would be Tokyo. Hit the jump for a video showcasing this very unique design.
Here's an 8-minute video that shows you a grandiose idea somebody dreamed up: building a 3000 foot-tall pyramid in Tokyo Bay. This megacity would be so tall, and has such tremendous volume that 24 80-story skyscrapers can be suspended within, and people would travel inside it via the tubes that are also supporting the enormous structure. It's extreme engineering, indeed. You gotta feel sorry for those people living in Tokyo, all crammed together like sardines in a can, so maybe this grandiose idea can give them some elbow room. To rent the amount of space made by this huge structure, it would cost $10 billion a year within the city of Tokyo. If built, it will be the largest structure in the world. Go for it!
$3 Gadget Produces Safe Drinking Water
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A Killer Airbrush Photoshop Post Editing Tutorial!
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Most Distant Black Hole Discovered
The Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope spotted the bright burst of light the black hole created as it sucked up nearby gas, heating it and causing it to glow very brightly in what's known as a quasar.
The distance to the quasar, which sits in the constellation Pisces, was determined by measuring the amount of redshift in the lines of the quasar's spectrum, or prism of light. Because light is "redshifted" to longer wavelengths as an object moves away from an observer, the higher the redshift, the further away the object is-and this quasar had quite a large redshift.
"As soon as I saw the spectrum with its booming emission line, I knew this one was a long way away," said team member Chris Willott of the University of Ottawa.
Because the Big Bang is believed to have occurred around 13.7 billion years ago, astronomers are seeing the quasar as it appeared a mere 1 billion years after the Big Bang, which gives them a unique view into universe's past.
Sometime around the universe's one billionth birthday, the first stars and galaxies began to shine and ionized all of the hydrogen atoms in the universe (or removed an electron from each atom). The quasar's bright light illuminates the hydrogen gas in front of it, which lets astronomers see whether the atoms still have their electrons attached or not, which could help pin down the date of this momentous event.
The quasar might also be able to help astronomers learn about the growth of the first black holes; the black hole powering this quasar is estimated to be about 500 million times the mass of the sun, which is thought to be unusual for an early black hole.
"It is puzzling how such enormous black holes are found so early on in the universe ... because we believe that black holes take a long time to grow," said team member John Hutchings of the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics.
The finding was announced at the annual conference of the Canadian Astronomical Society.
When a supermassive star dies, its corpse collapses into a knot so tight not even light can escape. And this drain on the fabric of the Universe can actually warp the shape of space... and of time.
See the video here.
Find out how the black holes form in this video.
Unveiled: The World's First Zero Emission Home [Pics]
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11 June 2007
MIT Dudes Develop Mind-Boggling Wireless Electricity
Now those eggheads at MIT have done something truly magic, figuring out a way to send power seven feet away, and look ma, no wires. Their trick uses resonant coupling, turning electricity into magnetic energy resonating at a certain frequency that proved to have that old black magic.
For some reason, 10MHz is that certain magic number. Resonating a coil at that frequency on one side of the room, it sends its magneto-goodness over to the other side where there's another coil that also resonates at that same 10MHz frequency. Yeah, for some strange reason, this magnetic energy is able to jump across a 7-foot space, but only at that specific 10MHz frequency. Cool.
There must be a catch to this.
For one thing, the power is transferred with 45% efficiency, which won't exactly be energy-saving. Also, with all those techno-power magnetic waves floating around, some crackpots will be tempted to get out their tinfoil hats, and those who believe that magnets can have profoundly dangerous effects on the human body will also be getting pretty jittery.
Never mind all that, say the genius researchers, who declare the power transmission safe, even for pacemaker wearers. They admit it might be a few years before we see this jaw-dropping tech in general use, but this is a start. They've proven that the idea works, and now they just going to need to perfect it. Wireless electricity?
Can you tell the difference between a fake smile and a real smile?
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Top Ten of Programming Advice NOT to Follow
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10 June 2007
Joost Very First Commercial
Anyone who would like to receive an invitation to test Joost Beta, please leave your full name and email address.
Movie Review: Pirates of the Caribbean At World's End (7/10)
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