Website rates best and worst cellphones by radiation output levels -- how do...

 
 

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via Engadget by Laura June on 9/27/09


You're surely aware that your cellphone bleeds radiation into your face the whole time you're on the phone with your mom, best friend or lover, right? Yes, it's a fact we try not to think about most of the time, but now there's a tool out there on the internets for the more reality-facing folks among us. The Environmental Working Group's launched a website dedicated to rating cellphones on their radiation output alone. Ranking highly (meaning they put out the lowest levels of radiation) are the Motorola RAZR V8, and AT&T's Samsung Impression. In fact, it seems that Samsung is cranking out the healthiest phones these days! Phones with poor showings includes T-Mobile's myTouch 3G and the Blackberry Curve 8830. So hit the read link and tell us, how does your phone rate?

[Via bookofjoe]

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Website rates best and worst cellphones by radiation output levels -- how does yours stack up? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 27 Sep 2009 08:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google Docs Viewer is a Tool You Should Bookmark!

 
 

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via Google Tutor by Christine Buske on 9/25/09

When you receive a PDF, or PowerPoint, file by email you can already choose to view it in your browser, or to download the file to your computer. This is endlessly handy if you don't want to clutter your computer hard drive with files you just really need to see once, and can delete after or keep in your Gmail inbox for future referencing.

Google has expanded the possibility of online file viewing, and announced this yesterday on the Google Docs Blog.

Google Docs Viewer is an easy to use tool. The page itself is pretty simple, just containing two text boxes: one for the link to your online file you want to view, and one optional text box for a link text.

How to view documents online with Google Docs Viewer

  1. First, surf to Google Docs Viewer
  2. In the link text box, copy and paste the link location of your file. If you are getting it from a website, you can right click on the link and copy the link location. See the example below, I was trying to view the schedule for drop in fitness classes, but don't really want to download the entire pdf to my hard drive: Picture 8
  3. With the link location copied, you can go back to Google Docs Viewer and paste it into the link box: Picture 8
  4. Click on "Generate link", and you will receive a link you can paste into an email or IM. You will also get some HTML code if you want to integrate your document into your website or blog, and you can also opt to paste it into a website in an embedded viewer. This option looks pretty cool, and en example of how it looks is on the Google Blog post. Don't miss the little blue link right at the bottom that says "click here" if you just want to see your file directly in your browser:Picture 9
  5. Once you open the file in your browser, essentially you see something like this:Picture 10

So your file looks like a regular Google Docs file, which you can still download or print if it turns out to be a document you will need to save after all.

I love that I won't need to download, open, and then delete every single PDF file I need to reference online anymore. So, this is definitely a tool worthy of a bookmark as far as I'm concerned!

Has anyone used this tool yet to embed a pdf into a blog or website? I'm curious if you think this is useful, or if you're just so used to downloading all your files that you can't see yourself using this very often? Tell us in the comments!

Gmail problems or confused about Picasa? I'll help you in the forums.

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Impressive. My 5 year old kid successful get all MAX, I tried many time & only manage to get max 3 MAX Level. Get it Kidzui Flash Game at http://games.kidzui.com/games/253

7 More Amazing Engineering Wonders of Today & Tomorrow

 
 

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via WebUrbanist by Steve on 9/20/09

Eng_Wonders_main
Megaproject… even the word sounds big! As technology evolves to meet the demands of our dreams, more and more wondrous feats of engineering will transform our world; and us with it. These 7 amazing engineering wonders push the envelope of what can be accomplished on Earth – and someday, beyond.

Dubai's World Islands

Eng_Wonders_1a(images via: Homes Dubai and Ursi Paltenstein)

Following on the successful completion of other offshore artificial island communities like the Palm Islands, Dubai's World Islands was intended to be even more ambitious, not to mention larger. Imagine owning a private island in the shape of a country or continent, surrounded by the warm waters of the Persian Gulf – and your equally "worldly" neighbors?

Eng_Wonders_1b

Eng_Wonders_1x(images via: ESA and Amazing Dubai Islands)

While Dubai's vision of a 300-island floating world may someday come to fruition, things aren't so rosy at the moment thanks to the ongoing world economic crisis. As of late summer 2009 only a single island has been developed and it belongs to Dubai's ruling Sheik; "the rest looks like a pile of muck" according to a local realtor. With property prices crashing by 50 to 75 percent, many of Dubai's spectacular construction projects have been put on indefinite hold if not canceled outright.

Bering Strait Bridge

Eng_Wonders_2a(images via: Mr. James and William Bacon)

A bridge across the Bering Strait connecting Russia and Alaska? No, this is not a repeat from 11,000BC. OFF Architecture won the 2nd Prize in the Professional Category at the 2009 Bering Strait Project competition (yes, there is such a thing) with their grandiose and green bridge-tunnel combo. The design would greatly reduce circulation between the Arctic and North Pacific Oceans, thus cooling the former and mitigating the effects of global warming. Or so they say.

Eng_Wonders_2x(image via: Inhabitat)

The 53-mile wide Bering Strait is surprisingly shallow – it was a natural land bridge back in Ice Age times – so OFF Architecture's design would reach from just above the water's surface down to the ocean floor 100 to 150 feet below. Such a design would necessitate circular "pass throughs" for migrating marine mammals and whales. The thought of a whale having a panic attack inside one of the tunnels gives a whole new meaning to "Thar she blows!!"

Large Hadron Collider

Eng_Wonders_3a

Eng_Wonders_3b(images via: BBC, Discover Magazine and Device Daily)

The Large Hadron Collider, or LHC being built by CERN is without question the largest and most complex machine ever constructed by Man. It has to be – the universe doesn't give up its deepest secrets very easily. The LHC is the world's largest refrigerator, requiring 10,080 tons of liquid nitrogen and nearly 60 tons of liquid helium to bring the temperature of the collider's huge electromagnets down to -271.3°C (1.9 Kelvin). Want more? The interior of the LHC's ring tunnel is the emptiest place in the entire solar system – the machine's particle beams will travel through an ultra-high vacuum with ten times less pressure than you'll find on the Moon.

Eng_Wonders_3c

Eng_Wonders_3x(images via: Sun HPC)

Huge as it is, the LHC doesn't look too impressive from the air since the actual 17-mile (27 km) tunnel lies buried an average 330 feet (100 meters) underground. It IS big however – part of the ring is in France; part is in Switzerland. Since this short blurb gives only a hint of the LHC's workings, check out this Schoolhouse Rock style rap on the LHC from TeacherTube:

LHC Rap, via TeacherTube

Gotthard Base Tunnel

Eng_Wonders_4(images via: WTC 2013 and Popular Science)

The 95.3-mile (153.5 km) long Gotthard Base Tunnel network now being drilled out beneath the Alps, when finally completed in about ten years, will be the longest underground tunnel ever constructed. High-speed trains traveling at 155 mph (250 kph) will significantly reduce travel times between Zurich, Switzerland and Milan, Italy while at the same time relieving the bottleneck of commercial and passenger traffic now clogging existing mountain highways and train lines. Hannibal would most definitely approve.

Eng_Wonders_4x(image via: Railway Technology)

The most difficult portion of the tunnel is the 57 km (35.4 mi) stretch that will run nearly 2,000 feet (600 meters) under the Gotthard massif below the existing Gotthardbahn track. It's estimated that 459 million cubic feet (13 million cubic meters) of crumbly, porous rock will have to be removed during the course of tunnel construction – that's enough to fill the Great Pyramid of Giza five times over. In the above image, one of the huge tunnel-boring machines is shown just as it breaks through to one of the completed sections of the tunnel.

Japan-Korea Undersea Tunnel

Eng_Wonders_5(images via: InventorSpot)

Though the shovels have yet to shift any dirt, the blueprints are ready for construction to begin on one of Asia's most momentous megaprojects: the Japan-Korea Friendship Tunnel. Or the Korea-Japan Friendship Tunnel – the fine details are still being discussed. Should the project get the nod from the politicos, work will begin on joining the southwestern Japanese city of Karatsu with the South Korean port of Busan with a 79-mile (128-km) train tunnel. The distance is more than three times that of the Anglo-French "Chunnel" but the technology is proven. As for North Korea's take on the project, either Kim Jong Il hasn't been told or everyone's scared to bring up the subject.

The wags at Asiadog have put together a nifty video of what they refer to as the Korea < -> Japan Undersea Tunnel, backed by a bouncy beat:

Korea <-> Japan Undersea Tunnel, via Asiadog

Space Solar Power Station

Eng_Wonders_6(images via: Inhabitat, Treehugger and Pink Tentacle)

The challenges and difficulties involved in large-scale orbital construction projects are immense… yet someday they will be tackled as the demand for interplanetary spacecraft, space elevators and orbiting power stations becomes irresistible. The latter – a solar power station in geostationary orbit – is now on the drawing board and has been given a sky-high price tag of 2 trillion yen ($21 billion).

Eng_Wonders_6x(image via: Bloomberg)

The project, conceived by the Japanese government and industry researchers, will see a space-based solar power station built in orbit 22,360 miles (36,000 km) above the earth. The station will generate 1 gigawatt of power from sunlight and beam the energy down to a receiving station where it can be used to power almost 300,000 homes.

Terraforming Mars

Eng_Wonders_7a(images via: All These Worlds, Daily Galaxy and Electro-plankton)

The most extreme engineering project in the history of the world will be performed OFF the world… on Mars. A variety of schemes have been floated over the past few decades with the intent of making Earth's nearest neighbor more amenable to life of the earthly variety – in other words, Terraforming. Naturally the scale is huge – comets may be redirected to impact the Red Planet to provide water for oceans, which would be seeded with algae in order to boost the oxygen content in the Martian atmosphere. Other schemes entail the placement of giant orbiting mirrors to focus sunlight upon Mars' polar icecaps, thus releasing liquid water and gaseous carbon dioxide to kick-start a greenhouse effect.

Eng_Wonders_7b

Eng_Wonders_7x(images via: LA 2101 and WonderlandJACK)

Terraforming Mars is no pie-in-the-sky scheme; it could be the salvation of our species should our actions on Earth continue to reduce our home planet's livability. It would be most fitting if someday, as predicted/depicted in The Million-Year Picnic, a short story from Ray Bradbury's book The Martian Chronicles, this scene should take place: A father answers his children's desire to see Martians by suggesting they look into the canal their boat is floating on… in which they view their own reflections.


 
 

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Sony's PS3 Slim gets the ColorWare treatment

 
 

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via Engadget by Joseph L. Flatley on 9/13/09

You know, sometimes it's just fun to go to ColorWare's site and see just how ugly we can make our favorite consumer electronics. It was while trying to find just the right shade of puce for that Cisco 7900 Series desk phone when someone pointed out that the company is now offering custom-colored Sony PS3 Slims. Color the logo, the top, the base, and up to four controllers. They'll sell you a console outright for $449, or send yours in and they'll ugly it up for $149 (controllers cost extra).

[Via Chip Chick]

Sony's PS3 Slim gets the ColorWare treatment originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 13 Sep 2009 10:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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If you love Snow Leopard Icon, feast your eyes at cultofmac by Leander Kahney.



Al-Fatihah

“Aku adalah pengejar syurga akhirat, bagiku dunia ini adalah tempat mempersiapkan segala sesuatu untuk meraih syurga akhirat; aku yakin bahawa syurga akhirat tidak akan pernah dapat aku raih kecuali aku boleh menikmati syurga dunia terlebih dahulu. Maka rumah dan keluargaku adalah syurga dunia paling indah buatku. Tempat kerja syurga dunia harianku. Tetangga, masyarakat, dan bangsa adalah syurga duniaku yang lebih luas. Ke manapun dan sampai bila-bila pun syurgaku selalu bersamaku...”

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Al-fatihah........

Free 90-day PlayStation® product warranty extension

Receive the email from Sony on early August, but just today I open the mail. It says;

Dear PlayStation®Network Member,

Sony Computer Entertainment Hong Kong Limited shall launch a new upgraded PlayStation®Network Membership service on 18th August, 2009.Now you can enjoy more value-added services such as online gaming, PlayStation®Home and exclusive membership offers.

Login the PlayStation®Network’s “My Page”, you can quickly and easily check your trophy lists and friend list with your PC. What’s More! You can also get 90-day free warranty extension* by registering your purchased products* in your PlayStation®Network account. Don’t miss it.. more>>

So I get extra warranty until end of the year.



Free 90-day PlayStation® product warranty extension

Receive the email from Sony on early August, but just today I open the mail. It says;

Dear PlayStation®Network Member,

Sony Computer Entertainment Hong Kong Limited shall launch a new upgraded PlayStation®Network Membership service on 18th August, 2009.Now you can enjoy more value-added services such as online gaming, PlayStation®Home and exclusive membership offers.

Login the PlayStation®Network’s “My Page”, you can quickly and easily check your trophy lists and friend list with your PC. What’s More! You can also get 90-day free warranty extension* by registering your purchased products* in your PlayStation®Network account. Don’t miss it.. more>>

So I get extra warranty until end of the year.



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