Apple fans can really do some crazy things sometimes. Things such as getting an apple tattoo and getting an apple haircut were not as amazed as it used to be anymore. However, this apple on apple sure is something we have never seen before.
The idea can be dated back to 3 years ago according the Japanese blogger at Blog Nobon but not until the beginning of last month did they decided to take the action.
The whole procedure actually wasn’t that hard at all. In the beginning of October, the sticker seals such as apple logo and ipod were designed and handcraft by penknife.
The stickers were then placed on the still growing apples to make sure the covered area is not exposed to sunlight.
After patiently waiting for one month, these are the results they obtained.
You can now travel back in time and see Ancient Rome as it was in 320 A.D. Google has added a 3-D simulation new layer in Google earth that enables you to fly over more than 6,000 buildings of ancient Rome, including the Colosseum, the Roman Forum and the Forum of Julius Caesar.
Other than the astonishing exterior of nearly 7,000 buildings, some of the monuments will feature full interior view. You are also able to find out more historical information on a particular monument when you click on the yellow place mark icon on top of the building.
Using laser scans of today’s ruined monuments and advice from archaeologists, experts worked for about a decade to reconstruct ancient Rome within its 13-mile-long (21-kilometer-long) walls, said Bernard Frischer, who heads Virginia’s Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities.
More ancient sites may be available in the future on the Web, and Frischer said his team is already working on a reconstruction of colonial Williamsburg in Virginia.
If you still remember the gesture control from Mgestyk I posted few days ago, here’s another Minority-report-like system in real life. Oblong Industries, the developer of the g-speak spatial operating environment (SOE) brought the astonishing effect that we see in the popular Steven Spielberg film into reality.
The g-speak platform is a complete application development and execution environment that redresses the dire constriction of human intent imposed by traditional GUIs. Its idiom of spatial immediacy and information responsive to real-world geometry enables a necessary new kind of work: data-intensive, embodied, real-time, predicated on universal human expertise.
Some of the SOE’s core ideas are already familiar from the film Minority Report, whose characters performed forensic analysis using massive, gesturally driven displays. The similarity is no coincidence: one of Oblong’s founders served as science advisor to Minority Report and based the design of those scenes directly on his earlier work at MIT. Other foundational components are less directly visible but as crucially transformative.
Compared to the Mgestyk gesture control, it is noticeable that Oblong g-speak runs much smoother and have fewer lag issues. But to utilize and maximize the system performance, one needs to have large amount of space to set up and use the system efficiently. Maybe it is less practical to use it in normal household but I sure can see the system being put into use in some larger work area such as company presentation and seminars.
Hello, you have a long lost relative that needs your help. You will be promised $[Insert your big number here] within mintues if you first transfer xx amount of money to xxx account. By the way, please transfer the funds though an untraceable wire service because we think that this operation should be kept confidential. Please also note that the transaction you have with the Central Bank of Nigeria is noting but legal. ps: please ignore any spelling mistakes you see because I do not have a spell checker.
I’m sure all of you have seen this kind of email scam before and you may wonder who would fall for this popular-known Nigerian scam anyway. Well, here’s one such person and the sum she sent out to the Nigerian con artist is not small too. Janella Spears, a nursing administrator from Oregon has finally decided to go public with her story in hopes that her story will warn others to listen to reason and not to fall for these scams.
Spears received just such an e-mail, promising her that she’d get $20.5 million if she would only help out a long-lost relative – identified in the e-mail as J.B. Spears – with a little money up front. “That’s what got me to believe it,” Spears said. It turned out to be a lot of money up front, but it started with just $100.
While not completely foolproof, Visa Europe has unveiled their new card that features input buttons and a display screen that goes one step beyond by generating a unique security code each time you planned to use the card.
The card will have built in alpha-numeric display and keypad. When customer wants to make a transaction online, all they need to do is to key in their PIN into the card and the card will then create a one-time security code. The security code will function like the fixed ccv you have at the back of your credit card. Having this feature built in means that those who stole your card will not be able to use your card because they do not know your pin to generate the security code.
AVG Antivirus is popular for its simplicity and user-friendliness, and the best thing about it is probably because it is free. However, the most recent update (Nov 8, 2008) of AVG 8 suggested that a Windows system file “user32.dll” is a Trojan horse. Users who went one step further by deleting the file will have their system endlessly rebooting or unable to reboot at all.
Here’s the original wording by a representative of AVG.
AVG is actively working to remedy the problem some users are experiencing related to the most recent update to commercial and free versions of AVG 7.5 and AVG 8.0 in some languages. A number of users who installed the update mistakenly received a warning that the Windows system file user32.dll product version 5.1.2600.3099 was infected with a Trojan virus and were prompted to delete a file essential to the operation of Windows XP.
The problem appeared to only affect users of AVG 8 products running the Dutch, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish language and have Windows XP as their operating system. AVG had immediately corrected the virus signatures when the case was reported. AVG also offered guide and utility that will fix the problem for those who are unfortunate enough to have deleted the file. So, if your friends are facing this problem, help’em out because they will need you to access the information and download some files for them.
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