Armin van Buuren vs Sophie Ellis Bextor
Not Giving Up On Love Official HD Music Video.
Gotta love it when Armin van Buuren is involved…
Armin van Buuren vs Sophie Ellis Bextor
Not Giving Up On Love Official HD Music Video.
Gotta love it when Armin van Buuren is involved…
Here’s the link to the article that talks about it: http://www.courant.com/
Tell us your thoughts in the comments below.
On October 5, 2010, strangers on the streets of Portland, Maine were asked how they could change a life for under $10.
What you see in the video is the result. Just beautiful!
Sometimes we just need a little inspiration to see that anything and everything is possible. Watch this and you’ll see a whole lot of possibilities.
The video below is a high speed reel of a water drop. Notice how the water drop appears to “bounce” four times, and is smaller each time. Each of these bounces is referred to as an event, and there can be between 4 and 7 events on a given water drop.
The reason for the events is due to surface tension and a fluid dynamics concept called the coalescence cascade.
Fuck Yeah Fluid Dynamics explains it very well as this:
When a droplet impacts a pool at low speed, a layer of air trapped beneath the droplet can often prevent it from immediately coalescing into the pool. As that air layer drains away, surface tension pulls some of the droplet’s mass into the pool while a smaller droplet is ejected. When it bounces off the surface of the water, the process is repeated and the droplet grows smaller and smaller until surface tension is able to completely absorb it into the pool.
Toshiba announced that it is unveiling a 13 inch tablet into the consumer market space. I find this intriguing, but not quite settled on how viable it is going to be. I can see it as a quick way for sales reps to present a full screen presentation quickly and easily on the go, so it may be more of a business tool, than a kitchen and couch appliance.
From Wired:
“The Excite 13 is what we see as a home tablet,” Jared Leavitt, a Toshiba spokesman, told Wired. “The larger size makes it an ideal kitchen tablet. You can watch how-to videos while you’re cooking, or look up recipes. And then later, you can bring it into the living room to watch videos with the kids, or to look at family photos with friends.”
But while there seems to be no consumer demand for larger tablets, the use case of watching movies as a group, or flipping through photos with loved ones on the couch, on a 13-inch slate isn’t too hard to imagine, says Jakob Nielsen, principal at the Nielsen Norman Group, a usability research firm.