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Syeda Arshiya

How to Move Your Apps To Memory Card in Windows Phone 8.1? - 0 views

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    Learn how to transfer and install your apps to memory card in your Windows 8.1 Smartphone. Here is the quick tutorial. The most advanced Smartphone by Nokia Windows Phone previously had a great flaw in it. Like iPhone, Windows Phone was not manufactured with microSD support. Because of this drawback, its users were facing lots of issues. Further with limited internal memory, users can't download all their favorite applications. Read Complete Article - http://goo.gl/JHUVu1
Aasemoon =)

What next for microcontrollers? - 1 views

  • The embedded world is constantly changing. You might not have noticed, but if you take a minute to recall what a microcontroller system was like 10 years ago and compare it to today's latest microcontroller systems, you will find that PCB design, component packages, level of integration, clock speed, and memory size have all going through several generations of change. One of the hottest topics in this area is when will the last of remaining 8-bit microcontroller users start to move away from legacy architectures and move to modern 32-bit processor architectures like the ARM Cortex-M based microcontroller family. Over the last few years there has been a strong momentum of embedded developers starting the migration to 32-bit microcontrollers and, in this multi-part article, we will take a look at some of the factors accelerating this migration.
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    IMHO this is more VENDOR-driven than USER-driven... At the low, cheap-end, 8 bits are perfectly usable and still deliver !
Aasemoon =)

Icosatetraped Robot Walks On 24 Soft Legs | BotJunkie - 0 views

  • Icosatetraped does, in fact, mean “twenty-four legged.” I’m not sure how to inject “soft” into that word (icostatetrasquishaped?), but this robot does have 24 soft legs. Or rather, 8 legs are soft (and moving) at any one time, while the other 16 are pressurized to carry the weight of the bot. It can move at about 1 meter per minute, which isn’t especially fast, but who cares, look at all of those little legs go! Made from plastic medical tubing, particle board, a bunch of solenoids, a Mac Mini, and some 24 volt rotary vane compressors salvaged from Gulf War nerve gas detecting equipment, this is about as DIY as it gets, and it’s awesome.
jhonny bravo

Hard Drive Guide - 0 views

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    If you are using Windows Operative Scheme, a deleted file present be basic sent to your machine's recycle bin, depending on your settings. However, with added stage, the file that was deleted does not get touched to the employ bin and is removed from your machine's file grouping. Ill a enter that has been moved into the reprocess bin is elementary, just station it in the reuse bin and proper plosive on the record, then decide the change option. Nevertheless, if your reprocess bin has been emptied, you gift not long be fit to renew files using this method.
jon jak

Dell Desktop Hard Drive Replacement - 0 views

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    Dell Desktop Hard Drive Replacement : The petrous travel on your Dell computer tower is intentional to stock programs same the computer operative group, programs and personal settings. The stiff move on your Hollow machine is bespoken by a punctuation located on the lie of the pillar change behindhand the screening crust.
Syeda Arshiya

Leapband: Meet with the Activity Tracker for Kids - 0 views

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    #DigitalSoon These days, Wearables market is heating up. These gadgets are not only manufactured for adults but also into world of kids. Kids love to use their parents' smart devices like #tablets, Smartphones, cars and much more. Manufactures never tend to disappoint any age group; same thought by LeapFrog (Toy Manufacturing Company) drove them to a great invention of new device called LeapBand. LeapBand is a version of #fitness-tracker for adults. It monitors and rewards kids for all the activities they do. The more your child moves, the more points he gains. Gaining points will unlock new games and win treats. Your child can have virtual pet also, it can be a cat, dog, penguin, dragon, unicorn or panda. Cool isn't! Let's check out the features of the band one-by-one. Get More Details: http://goo.gl/wNjjcj
repairserv

Air conditioning repair louisville ky - 1 views

Once it requires air-con instrumentality platforms, easy and simple using discover if the piece of equipment expects correct or perhaps many should be to desire in-tuned with the help of associate ...

started by repairserv on 05 Jul 15 no follow-up yet
afterhouracs

Air conditioner repair louisville ky - 1 views

At any time when hot weather conditions are coming, at this stage most people will embark on planning about air conditioner maintenance. Air conditioner platforms will be highly-priced to put and a...

Air conditioner repair louisville ky

started by afterhouracs on 20 Jun 15 no follow-up yet
Aasemoon =)

How to build a Magic Mirror (Part 1) - 0 views

  • Imagine that a guest is about to depart from your house. She (or he) pauses to check her appearance in an antique-looking mirror mounted near the front door. Suddenly, the image of your guest undergoes a Matrix-like 'ripple' and is replaced with a strange face saying… …actually, we'll move on to consider what the face might say in a moment, but first let me introduce you to a few underlying concepts. Just a few days ago as I pen these words, I came across about a very cool website that describes a really cunning idea called a Magic Mirror (http://diymagicmirror.com).
Aasemoon =)

Carnegie Mellon's Incredible Robot Snake Climbs a Real Tree | Singularity Hub - 0 views

  • Carnegie Mellon has taught its robotic snake to climb trees, though one hopes it won’t start offering your spouse apples. “Uncle Sam” (presumably named for its red, white, and blue markings) is a snake robot built from modular pieces. The latest in a line of ‘modsnakes’ from Carnegie Mellon’s Biorobotics Lab, Uncle Sam can move in a variety of different ways including rolling, wiggling, and side-winding. It can also wrap itself around a pole and climb vertically, which comes in handy when scaling a tree. You have to watch this thing in action. There is something incredibly life-like, and eerie, about the way it scales the tree outdoors and then looks around with its camera ‘eye’. Projects like Uncle Sam show how life-mimicking machines could revolutionize robotics in the near future.
Aasemoon =)

SRI International's Electroadhesive Robots - 0 views

  • Events such as natural disasters, military actions, and public safety threats have led to an increased need for robust robots — especially ones that can travel across complex terrain in any dimension. The ability to scale vertical building surfaces or other structures offers unique capabilities in military applications such as urban reconnaissance, sensor deployment, and setting up urban network nodes. SRI's novel clamping technology, called compliant electroadhesion, has enabled the first application of this technology to wall-climbing robots that can help with these situations.  As the name implies, electroadhesion is an electrically controllable adhesion technology. It involves inducing electrostatic charges on a wall substrate using a power supply connected to compliant pads situated on the moving robot. SRI has demonstrated robust clamping to common building materials including glass, wood, metal, concrete, etc. with clamping pressures in the range of 0.5 to 1.5 N per square cm of clamp (0.8 to 2.3 pounds per square inch). The technology works on conductive and non-conductive substrates, smooth or rough materials, and through dust and debris. Unlike conventional adhesives or dry adhesives, the electroadhesion can be modulated or turned off for mobility or cleaning. The technology uses a very small amount of power (on the order of 20 microwatts/Newton weight held) and shows the ability to repeatably clamp to wall substrates that are heavily covered in dust or other debris.
Aasemoon =)

TechOnline | Enabling LTE Development with TI's New Multicore SoC Architecture - 0 views

  • The goal of Long Term Evolution (LTE) is to achieve higher data rates through more efficient transmission, and thus improving the cellular phone user experience by enabling powerful new devices. The changes required in this technology present new challenges for base station vendors and their suppliers. Supporting 4G systems efficiently requires a number of innovations in DSP design; these innovations are moving the industry toward SoC architectures to support such systems. This paper will explore how TI's new architecture enables the key features in 4G systems.
Aasemoon =)

Robot Pack Mule to Carry Loads for G.I.s on the Move: Scientific American - 0 views

  • Within the next three years, the U.S. military will test the feasibility of sending a quadruped robot out into the field as a trusty pack mule to carry supplies for its troops, wherever they go. If the testing goes well for Boston Dynamics's Legged Squad Support System (LS3), company founder Marc Raibert will have come a long way from the one-legged hopping robots he pioneered in the 1980s. Actually Raibert has already come a long way, to the point where the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's (DARPA) Tactical Technology Office and the U.S. Marine Corps awarded his company a 30-month, $32-million contract last week to deliver a prototype LS3. This would be the first step in fulfilling the military's call for an autonomous, legged robot that can carry up to 181 kilograms of supplies for at least 32 kilometers without refueling.
Aasemoon =)

Multi-Core and Parallel Programming Practices | The Knowledge Chamber | Channel 9 - 0 views

  • In case you haven’t realized it, the new trend in computer chip technology is multi-core. This is where most of the speed improvements moving forward will come from on our computers. To take full advantage of this however it is necessary to design your applications using Parallel Programming practices, also known as "parallelism". In today’s episode, we will meet with Stephen Toub, who will share with us some of the overarching concepts associated with parallelism, and some of the ways we are trying to empower developers to develop applications to take advantage of it.
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    For anyone who like me, missed this year's PDC almost completely.....
Aasemoon =)

IEEE Spectrum: Build a Custom-Printed Circuit Board - 0 views

  • Breadboarding a new circuit is a key skill and an important step in many projects—especially early on, when you need to move wires around and substitute components. But that very flexibility also makes it easy to knock wires out. Eventually, if your project is a keeper, you’re going to want something with a bit more permanence. Printed circuit boards (PCBs) solve all those shortcomings. But most people don’t even consider translating a one-off project into a PCB design. For one thing, PCB fabrication has traditionally been expensive, viable only in commercial quantities. (One alternative is to do it yourself with etches and silk screens, a messy and time-consuming process.) Also, there are technical constraints involved with PCB designs that are daunting to the casual hobbyist. But it turns out that nowadays you can produce a professional PCB very inexpensively.
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    This comes handy....
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