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Search Result for: detail Cool
Never mind the guy talking in the vid, just watch this awesome clock do its thing, and look at the details on it. I would definitely want one of these! Enjoy!
Yup. A cool video showing some dudes having fun by putting on a pair of jeans, from all kinds of positions. I know you'll enjoy this one !
Funny
Some really upset guy, called the Dell tech support, because he can't turn off his laptop. As the tech support guy starts asking him personal details, the guy gets really mad. Don't listen to it if you're not prepaired for some string language. Enjoy!
WTF..?!
At least that's what the evangelists say! No comment!
Big in Japan
The amount of work and detail that goes into on of these lunch boxes is pretty amazing. I got to convince my girlfriend to learn to do this. Enjoy!
Gaming Videos
Another Starcraft 2 Gameplay video made its way onto Youtube. It previews some Protoss units that weren't in the official presentation game play video. This time the battlefield is presented from an aerial view, showing less detailed units...Probably didn't want to spoil the surprise for the fans! Enjoy, because it's all we're getting from Blizzard for now!
Tech
Soon with this technology, it will be possible to see every detail in a picture. Simply amazing! Respect!
Amazing
Artist Willard Wigan creates ultraprecision. This is precision work done by people and seems seems to have surpassed even machinery in the kind of details this guy is able to create. Does anyone want a statue of liberty sculpture that can fit in the ear of a needle?
An incredible miniature world, complete with trains, automobiles, and people. The details are simply staggering. This can be found in (where else?) Germany, at the Miniature Wunderland. Ja. Zer gut.
A very cool compilation of videos (some of which can be found on this site too) of crazy and amazing skills caught on video. The sickest in my opinion is the one with the spinning pens. You can view it in more detail here, but only after you see this cool compilation video first. Enjoy!
Also have a look at this girl who displays some of the best rollerblading skills I've ever seen!
A pretty spectacular video in ultraviolet capturing the transit of the Moon in front of the Sun.
Here are some more details from the authors: "A million miles from planet Earth, last weekend the STEREO B spacecraft found itself in the shadow of the Moon. So, looking toward the Sun, extreme ultraviolet cameras onboard STEREO B were able to record a stunning movie of a lunar transit (aka solar eclipse), as the Moon tracked across the solar disk."
Driving in summer can sometimes be ruined by those pesky bugs that hit the car's windshield. But did we ever stop to think that maybe we're the one's ruining their flight? The german newspaper "Der Spiegel" recently published some stunning photos taken under a microscope, which show in detail what happens when a bug hits the car's windshield.
Technology and Health News
A new instrument to simultaneously measure the magnetic field and the atomic structure of matter at the nanoscale has been developed. The applications of this are future generations of high-density memories
Snapshots of the weakest and microscopic magnetic fields generated by just a few molecules of a nanometer (billionth of a meter). The researchers have obtained the S3 Center of the National Institute for the Physics of Matter (INFM-CNR) of Modena and the University of Modena .
This is a scanning microscope combined with a new highly sensitive magnetic sensor. The microscope scans close with his point - made up of a few atoms - the area of the test and how it relates to the roughness with a resolution of several nanometers. Beside the point, the sensor records the magnetic field intensity, but with high detail ( millionth of a meter).
In this way the researchers were able to get together for the first time, images of atomic structure and magnetic properties of a thin layer of nano-magnet on a support of silicon.
"The microscope allows us to measure directly the properties of nano-molecular magnets on the surface, even at temperatures close to absolute zero, to minus 270 degrees," says Marco. "Above all," says the researcher, "it helps us to understand the magnetism on the molecular scale."
The brain responds to stimuli, tactile and visual contradiction in delaying the processing of information that comes from the skin.
A fly is laying on the right elbow. Slight itching, moving vision towards the elbow, identification of the intruder and its position and, finally, blow. This reaction is not as instantaneous as you can imagine. Indeed, the brain seems to delay affixed aware of the tactile perception, as reported a study in Current Biology Group for Research in Cognitive Neuroscience (Grnc) in Barcelona.
The brain is often having to generate rapid responses integrating stimuli that produce information in contradiction: if, for example, the subject has crossed his arms and brings his right arm on the left side and left arm on the right side, his hands will be in a position that is reversed from the original location. In this case, the brain must be able to correctly integrate the information of the tactile stimulus (for example pinch) on the right hand, although the visual stimulus comes in fact from the left. To avoid mistakes the brain needs time to make a realignment of the information space of two different maps: that rof the body and one that covers everything else.
To understand how the mechanism works, researchers have assessed the response of 32 university students to a series of visual and tactile stimuli. Each student has been subjected to 600 tests. "First we asked participants to cross the arms, so that the position of hands was in conflict with the anatomical position" says Salvador Soto-Faraco, one of the authors of the study, "we have stimulated one of two hands." Few tenths of a second later, a small light (visual stimulus) I had left or right. Both the tactile stimuli that those visual products were in a totally random. In addition, the flash of light could be generated 60 or 200 milliseconds after the tactile stimulus. In order to assess whether the time elapsed between the two stimuli does influence or not the answer.
For the first time a molecule of genetic material was observed in real time, that is able to correct damage in its structure
The repair of a damaged DNA molecules is a mechanism well known in genetics, but so far no one had given testimony in real time. Researchers of the Kavli Institute at the University of Delft, the Netherlands, were able to document at the level of a single molecule of DNA, the homologous recombination, one of the mechanisms of repair frequently put in place by the cells. The work was published in the journal Molecular Cell.
The rupture of the molecule of DNA can be caused, for example, from ultraviolet rays or X-ray, but it can also happen during normal cell division. The type of damage can affect a part of the structure internal molecules, but the cells are equipped with various mechanisms to repair it. If these damages were not immediately corrected, they could lead to changes in functional levels!
Three hours of jogging or 13 of walking per week: according to a U.S. study moderate exercise reduces the risk of breast cancer
Being fit, as we know, is not only an aesthetic issue. And now it seems that it is also useful for the prevention of breast cancer. A study of about 65,000 women by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St.. Louis and from Harvard University in Boston, just published in Journal of the National Cancer Institute, points out that women practicing sports have a 23 per cent lower risk of developing cancer before the menopause. In particular, it may be important to regularly exercise between the ages of 12 and 22 years.
"We have prevention strategies for breast cancer pre-menopausal, but our research shows that physical activity during adolescence and youth, between 12 and 35 years, may be important in the long term reduction of the risk of cancer", said Graham Colditz, professor of Prevention and Control and co-director at the Siteman Cancer Center, Washington University School of Medicine and Barnes-Jewish Hospital. "This is just one more reason to encourage young women to exercise regularly."
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