Sunday, July 14, 2013

Video: Moto X combines Google Glass listening feature with Google Now

Voice interaction is expected to be a top feature of the upcoming Moto X handset, based on a leaked video promo made by Rogers Wireless in Canada. Much like Google Glass, Moto X will always be listening for voice commands that integrate with Google Now and other phone features. With mid-range specifications and a relatively lower cost than other flagship devices, Moto X could bring more useful voice commands to the masses with this smartphone.

Here?s the leaked video, spotted by Android Central on Sunday, showing off the touch-free voice interaction with Google Now:

Adding to the hands-free experience is a tweak to the device?s notifications feature. Instead of showing a little notification light alert, the home screen pulses on and off to show important messages.

Having the microphone always on could be a drain on the battery, but it also explains why the phone is likely to use a 720p display with a last-generation processor. If Moto X had all of the same hardware features of today?s high-end phones, the handset?s battery simply couldn?t hand the additional power drain of an always on microphone.

I?m curious though: Is this feature a Moto exclusive or will it be part of Android, so that other handset makers can take advantage of it. Keeping it in-house would help the Moto X stand out from the crowd, but I?d like to see this option come to other Android phones in the future. Or even on older phones with a software update.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/jkOnTheRun/~3/ITfbMeLdkog/

pregnancy test

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Boy with Down syndrome uses iPad to help him communicate

AUBURN, AL (WTVM) -

Like many best friends, 7-year-old Hal Bradshaw and Sophie Snyder don't need a lot of words, their bond is rock solid.

Hal has Down syndrome. He began signing as a baby, but verbal words remain a challenge.

"You want the best for your children, you want them to be able to output to the world, not just input," said Hal's mom Samantha Bradshaw.

Hal began lessons with Kelly Cadden, a speech pathologist at All for Children in Auburn. His family bought an expensive language output device, but it was complicated and Hal didn't like it.

"We knew how much he loved playing games on the iPad, and so we started using it as a way of communication and he liked it and picked it up immediately," said Cadden. "He likes to carry it with him, doesn't like others to touch it, it is his voice, one he didn't have before."

Using picture icons Hal taps the screen to create simple sentences, expressing his needs and wants.

"We are hoping over time he will start to imitate it, and will spontaneously utter the phrases clearly instead of having to use the device," said Cadden.

"You put the iPad in front of him and it is amazing what is inside his brain, and I was like, I knew he knew, I knew it, he just can't get it out," said Bradshaw.

Hal completed Kindergarten in Auburn this year. His teachers are totally on board with his iPad speaker: technology allowed Hal to join in and fit in.

"The iPad is cool and the kids were like, awesome he's allowed to have one at school, so it also helps with socially acceptable in that area as well," said Bradshaw.

While they have an unspoken bond, it's nice to be able to tell your friend how you are feeling.

"It's good to hear him communicate so well and he understands," said Sophie Snyder, Hal's best friend.

Copyright 2013?WTVM. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.wtvm.com/story/22770252/boy-with-down-syndrome-uses-ipad-to-help-him-communicate

dalai lama tamera mowry slow jam the news madden cover obama slow jams the news metta world peace ron artest

Jump for your life: Bipedal rodents survive in the desert with a hop, a skip and a jump

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Researchers have found that bipedal desert rodents manage to compete with their quadrupedal counterparts by using a diverse set of jumps, hops and skips. A new study suggests that it is this unpredictable movement that allows the bipedal rodents to coexist in Old World deserts with quadrupedal rodents.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/lVti4Hpqy1g/130705212217.htm

Accidental Racist Fallon Fox Chris Webber linda perry WrestleMania 29 Lilly Pulitzer Ben And Jerrys

Friday, July 5, 2013

Mandela: Government denies he is "vegetative"

JOHANNESBURG (AP) ? Nelson Mandela is in critical but stable condition, the South African government said Friday, while a close friend said the anti-apartheid leader was conscious and responsive earlier this week.

The government reiterated that Mandela is not in a vegetative state, contrary to recent court documents.

A court paper filed June 27 concerning Mandela family graves said affidavits would be provided from his physicians to show that Mandela "is in a permanent vegetative state." A later filing dropped that phrase. Both court filings, however, said that Mandela's breathing was machine assisted.

A close friend of Mandela's, Denis Goldberg, told Sky News on Friday that he visited Mandela on Monday and that Mandela was conscious and responsive to what he was saying. Goldberg also quoted from something Mandela's wife told him.

"There is no sign of a general organ collapse and therefore they do not recommend switching off the machine because there's every chance that his health will improve," Goldberg quoted wife Graca Machel as saying. "The matter has been discussed and the decision was against."

A "persistent vegetative state" is defined as the condition of patients with severe brain damage in whom coma has progressed to a state of wakefulness without detectable awareness, according to the New England Journal of Medicine.

Goldberg said the legal papers that said Mandela was "vegetative" might have been written when Mandela was in a coma or unconscious, and that perhaps Mandela then improved.

"Maybe he's recovered a bit and that's what I assume," he said. "The lawyers can say what they like. I'm telling you what I saw."

Still, Mandela's situation is grave. Another court affidavit said that "the anticipation of his impending death is based on real and substantial grounds." A South African doctor, Adri Kok, said it was unlikely that a person of Mandela's age ? he is 94 ? can be taken off mechanical ventilation, another word for life support, and recover.

The court filing came in a case brought by 15 Mandela family members against a Mandela grandson who had moved the remains of three Mandela children from their original burial site. A court ordered the bodies to be moved back to Mandela's hometown of Qunu.

The family feud drew a rebuke late Thursday from retired archbishop Desmond Tutu who appealed to the family of Mandela, also known by his clan name Madiba, to overcome their differences.

"Please, please, please may we think not only of ourselves. It's almost like spitting in Madiba's face," Tutu said in a statement released by his foundation. "Your anguish, now, is the nation's anguish ? and the world's. We want to embrace you, to support you, to shine our love for Madiba through you. Please may we not besmirch his name."

The leader of South Africa's anti-apartheid movement, Mandela spent 27 years in prison during white racist rule. He was freed in 1990 and became South Africa's first black president in 1994.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mandela-government-denies-vegetative-121400998.html

Earth Day 2013 westboro baptist church meteor shower Al Michaels Canelo vs Trout 420 Meteor Showers 2013

Thursday, July 4, 2013

The European Space Agency's Jupiter Mission Control Made of Lego

The European Space Agency's Jupiter Mission Control Made of Lego

The French Space Agency (CNES) commissioned Damien Labrousse to recreate the Jupiter Mission Control Room in Lego for display at the Kourou spaceport. The impressive build features 6,000 bricks, 80 minifigs, a working video screen that shows the rocket launch sequence and a sound system, displaying launch countdown.

The Jupiter Control Room is where the European Space Agency and the French Space Agency CNES, conduct launches from Kourou (the spaceport where the ESA sends supplies to the International Space Station). Two Lego models were built, one was on display last week at the 50th Paris Air Show at Le Bourget, and the second will be displayed at the Kourou Space Center. On a side note, it would be wonderful if Lego revived and expanded its Classic Space theme series, with updated spacecrafts, rockets, mission control rooms, and space stations. I'd probably go broke, but it'd be totally worth it. [Flickr via Brothers Brick]

The European Space Agency's Jupiter Mission Control Made of Lego

The European Space Agency's Jupiter Mission Control Made of Lego

The European Space Agency's Jupiter Mission Control Made of Lego

The European Space Agency's Jupiter Mission Control Made of Lego

The European Space Agency's Jupiter Mission Control Made of Lego

You're reading Leg Godt, the blog with the latest Lego news and the most awesome Lego models in the web. Follow us on Twitter or Facebook.

Source: http://lego.gizmodo.com/the-european-space-agencys-jupiter-mission-control-mad-665054859

joseph kony joseph kony ipad 3 release date apple store down apple live blog ohio primary cell phone jammer

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

American culture unapologetically romanticizes the lives of the first pioneers. Through rose-colored glasses, we see Manifest Destiny as fate, leading our heroic ancestors across a perfectly manicured landscape. In reality, the frontier was a terrifying, dangerous wilderness. And you were only as good as the tools you carried.

Pioneers were responsible for clearing their own land, building their homes, defending themselves, sewing their own clothes, and hunting for their own food. And the devices and tools they brought with them?severely limited by weight and size?were vital lifelines to succeeding in all of those pursuits. So what were they?


An allegorical depiction of "American progress" carries telegraph wire westward. Behind her, settlers follow with stagecoaches, conestoga wagons, and railroads, symbolizing the virtue of taming the western frontier. But in truth, such conveniences took decades to appear.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Painting: George A. Crofutt/Library Of Congress


This was the reality most settlers knew. A family in front of a typical sod house, in 1886, in Nebraska, Custer County. Instead of a plush toy the boy on the right is holding a young bull. Note the ornament high on the facade.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Solomon D. Butcher/Library Of Congress


Pioneers would make their own clothes, from shearing the wool and spinning it into thread, to actually weaving the fabric, and finally, fashioning it into a garment.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Frontier Culture Museum


A spinning wheel from the 1820s.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Frontier Culture Museum


The print below shows two women preparing supper on a small, portable stove?a relative luxury?in front of their tents, in 1866.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Image: James F. Gookins/Library Of Congress


"You need only one soap: Ivory soap," proclaims this ad from 1898, which shows a pioneer washing with a novelty?floating! soap, at his campsite. You can observe other household objects and tools in the background as well.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Image: Strobridge & Co. Lith./Library Of Congress


Frontier utility knives: a butcher knife, a skinning knife, and a small antique paring knife.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Heritage Auctions


Farm kitchen cutlery and kitchenware.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Frontier Culture Museum


A grain reaper was a vital piece of agricultural machinery. Invented by Cyrus H. McCormick, of Virginia, in 1831, this contraption still serves as the basis for modern-day grain harvesting machines.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Frontier Culture Museum


A grain fanner, from the 1850s, would blow air through wheat to separate the chaff?an otherwise time-consuming task.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Frontier Culture Museum


This illustration from 1899 shows messengers warning settlers of a Native American uprising?but note the hand-operated plow and broad axe in the picture.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Drawing: Reginald Bathurst Birch/Library Of Congress


Water crossings were another major danger, thanks to the crude ferries often used by early settlers. Here, people cross the Red River, in Texas, during a flood in 1874.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Engraving: Robert Hoskins/Library Of Congress


By the late 19th century, families were more established. Here, we see a family standing in front of sod house with a windmill?a fairly high-tech detail?inCoburg, Nebraska in 1884.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Solomon D. Butcher/Library Of Congress


This apple crusher and cider press was also high-tech, for its time.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Frontier Culture Museum


Some settlers were lucky enough to have brought cast iron stoves from back east?like this one, from the 1820s.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Frontier Culture Museum


A carving bench let craftsmen whittle and carve comfortably.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Frontier Culture Museum


Theft was common, too. This lambskin money vest, from 1853, was designed to (theoretically) protect a settler's valuables. The vest has three rows of button pockets for holding gold and silver coins, the medium of exchange in California.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Heritage Auctions


And finally, the two ultimate survival tools for the pioneers. First, a colt revolver?

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Heritage Auctions


?and second, a Winchester.

15 Tools That Helped Pioneers Survive on the American Frontier

Photo: Heritage Auctions


Our opening image: The "New home" in the far west by W.U. Morgan & Co. Lith, Cleveland, O. This trade card advertising a New Home sewing machine, show a happy family outside of their house, c1881. Source: Solomon D. Butcher/Library Of Congress

Source: http://gizmodo.com/15-tools-that-helped-pioneers-survive-on-the-american-f-577187190

james van der beek dyngus day indonesia quake stephen strasburg shabazz legion baby found alive in morgue

Apple's New Google Docs Competitor Is Now in Beta

Apple's New Google Docs Competitor Is Now in Beta

Apple's long-overdue stab at a cloud editing service has finally come to, well, some of the masses. If you happen to be an Apple developer, iWork for iCloud is available to you right now.

The new, cloud-dwelling incarnation of the iWork suite will finally catch Apple up to Google and Microsoft office, which have long been dominating the field. Plus, iWork should even work much more smoothly with Microsoft Office, letting Apple slowly but surely get their claws in wherever they can.

Since the service is still in beta?a very early beta, at that?Apple recommends backing everything up, which you should probably be doing anyway. You can head over here to claim it for your very own.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/apples-new-google-docs-competitor-is-now-in-beta-662081894

james jones black forest aladdin ufc 144 fight card ufc 144 results acura nsx all star weekend 2012