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Search Result for: fill Cool
Since Windows took 10 years in becoming the software that everyone wanted it to be, here's another version that promises to deliver even more, and wants to fill the gap which is currently filled by a number of software products (HyperSnap, Total Commander,..). Let's hope it gets better...if not...Ubuntu!
A non-newtonian fluid under stress reacts as a solid. In this case they filled a pool with a mix of cornstarch and water made on a concrete mixer truck. It becomes a non-newtonian fluid.
Update: Liquid Armor is one of this fluid's applications.
Funny
Here's a very funny video, showing how to pull a good prank on an unsuspecting friend. Fill his car with golf balls, grab a camera and position yourself somewhere where he can't see you, and watch his face! Hilarious!
Amazing
I've got to tell you, that I didn't believe in this myth. The energy from the mobile phone is so little that, you aren't able to get a spark. Things change if the energy is "stored" in the crumpled aluminum foil, and making lots of calls. The only realistic scenario I can come up with is that your car or some other piece of metal is already statically charged and your phone is the water drop that fills the glass. Anyway, it's very unlikely!
Sexy
A scorching hot video filled with sexy girls, made by the popular men's magazine Maxim, from the Maxim model search Vancouver. The search also ended in Vancouver, so pay attention and you shall see the next Maxim centerfold model! Enjoy this sexy video from Maxim magazine.
Technology and Health News
The use of an organic material has been put in place a structure capable of transmitting data at rates eight times higher than those of traditional devices .
The study of materials capable of transmitting data at ever higher speeds is the constant challenge of the technology of optical communications. The use of a new organic material, tested by a team of U.S. and European research coordinated by Ivan Biaggi of Lehigh University (United States), has enabled to achieve data transfers much higher than that obtained so far with traditional devices.
The novelty lies in the combination of structures in silicon with organic material, identified by the initials Ddmebt . This is essentially a kind of "nonlinear" device, able to change its molecular structure to the passage of light, making it propagate at high speed. To minimize interference with the passage of data, researchers have vaporized the organic material and the deposit left on the rails of silicon and in the spaces between them. In this way, explain the authors, the molecules are deposited "like snowflakes", forming a highly homogeneous plastic. It is precisely in the interstices between the rails of silicon, filled with new material, that the light passes at high speed, allowing you to transmit data up to 170 Gigabit per second (with the traditional structures, which consist only of silicon, you can reach a maximum speed around 20-30 Gigabit per second). Combining silicon with an architecture was needed to channel and confine the flow of light within very small spaces (the guide of silicon is separated by a few tens of nanometers).
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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