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    Thursday 19 September 2013



    Scientists accidentally discover world's thinnest glass 

    You know that amazing feeling when you find a $20 bill in an old jacket pocket? It’s an unmatched thrill. That is, unless you’ve accidentally stumbled upon a Guinness Book of World Records-setting discovery that changes the very way the world thinks about a totally ubiquitous substance.

    That’s what happened to scientists at Cornell University and Germany’s University of Ulm when they discovered the world’s thinnest sheet of glass while attempting to make graphene. They noticed what they called “muck” on the substance they were attempting to create, so they took a closer look. That look revealed something that wasn’t supposed to be there, something that had never before existed (at least, not to our knowledge). But thanks to a small air leak in their equipment, there was glass — glass that’s two atoms thick, making it the thinnest glass known to man.

    In 1932 a physicist named William Houlder attempted to map out the arrangement of glass molecules, and though he came close, he never managed to pull it off. Yet this laboratory accident has allowed researchers to produce the exact arrangement of the atoms in glass via electron microscopy.

    Interesting enough, but will it have real-world effects? Probably. While those aren’t mapped out yet, there is chatter that its defect-free, two-dimensional makeup can be used in transistors, helping to speed up computer processing. In other words, faster computers, smartphones, smartwatches, smart-whatever-we-come-up-with-next.

    In a world obsessed with all things 3D, a 2D piece of glass could take our computing power to the next level.

    If you’re a Guinness Book of World Records fan, keep an eye out for the 2014 edition, which will include this “pane” of glass.












    Scientists accidentally discover world's thinnest glass

    Posted at  02:06  |  in  Gadgets  |  Read More»



    Scientists accidentally discover world's thinnest glass 

    You know that amazing feeling when you find a $20 bill in an old jacket pocket? It’s an unmatched thrill. That is, unless you’ve accidentally stumbled upon a Guinness Book of World Records-setting discovery that changes the very way the world thinks about a totally ubiquitous substance.

    That’s what happened to scientists at Cornell University and Germany’s University of Ulm when they discovered the world’s thinnest sheet of glass while attempting to make graphene. They noticed what they called “muck” on the substance they were attempting to create, so they took a closer look. That look revealed something that wasn’t supposed to be there, something that had never before existed (at least, not to our knowledge). But thanks to a small air leak in their equipment, there was glass — glass that’s two atoms thick, making it the thinnest glass known to man.

    In 1932 a physicist named William Houlder attempted to map out the arrangement of glass molecules, and though he came close, he never managed to pull it off. Yet this laboratory accident has allowed researchers to produce the exact arrangement of the atoms in glass via electron microscopy.

    Interesting enough, but will it have real-world effects? Probably. While those aren’t mapped out yet, there is chatter that its defect-free, two-dimensional makeup can be used in transistors, helping to speed up computer processing. In other words, faster computers, smartphones, smartwatches, smart-whatever-we-come-up-with-next.

    In a world obsessed with all things 3D, a 2D piece of glass could take our computing power to the next level.

    If you’re a Guinness Book of World Records fan, keep an eye out for the 2014 edition, which will include this “pane” of glass.













    Adobe to Release iPad-Compatible Cloud

    Stylus and Digital Ruler in 2014 


    Earlier this year, Adobe unveiled two cloud-enabled hardware offerings: the "Mighty" stylus and the "Napoleon" digital guide and ruler. The tools were in the development phase at the time, but Adobe has now announced that both Mighty and Napoleon will be released during the first half of 2014.

    To bring the products to fruition, Adobe is teaming up with Adonit, known for its own line of Jot styluses. Both tools are constructed with brushed aluminum and feature Creative Cloud connectivity via Adobe software to allow users to store preferences and save their work remotely. Bluetooth LE is enabled on both tools, and Mighty, Adobe’s "cloud pen", is pressure-sensitive, letting digital artists create line drawings with variable widths based on pressure. Napoleon, the digital ruler, is designed to function alongside the stylus, allowing users to draw straight lines and arcs.
    With our first tools for the new creative — Project Mighty and Napoleon — we are confident that we can help make digital creativity both more accessible and more natural by combining the accuracy, expressiveness and immediacy of pen and paper with all the advantages of our digital products and the Creative Cloud. As we shared in our initial demo, Project Mighty is pressure sensitive, which helps it draw a natural and expressive line. It is also connected to the Creative Cloud, giving you the ability to carry all of your favorite personal digital assets, brushes and colors with you, copy/paste across devices and more.
    Along with a release date for its upcoming hardware, Adobe announced that its Creative Cloud apps have garnered more than 1 million subscribers since being released earlier this year.

    The company's Photoshop Photography Program has also gone live today, giving current owners of Photoshop CS3 or higher an opportunity to purchase both Photoshop and Lightroom for $9.99 per month.

    Adobe to Release iPad-Compatible Cloud Stylus and Digital Ruler in 2014

    Posted at  01:57  |  in  Up coming Technology  |  Read More»


    Adobe to Release iPad-Compatible Cloud

    Stylus and Digital Ruler in 2014 


    Earlier this year, Adobe unveiled two cloud-enabled hardware offerings: the "Mighty" stylus and the "Napoleon" digital guide and ruler. The tools were in the development phase at the time, but Adobe has now announced that both Mighty and Napoleon will be released during the first half of 2014.

    To bring the products to fruition, Adobe is teaming up with Adonit, known for its own line of Jot styluses. Both tools are constructed with brushed aluminum and feature Creative Cloud connectivity via Adobe software to allow users to store preferences and save their work remotely. Bluetooth LE is enabled on both tools, and Mighty, Adobe’s "cloud pen", is pressure-sensitive, letting digital artists create line drawings with variable widths based on pressure. Napoleon, the digital ruler, is designed to function alongside the stylus, allowing users to draw straight lines and arcs.
    With our first tools for the new creative — Project Mighty and Napoleon — we are confident that we can help make digital creativity both more accessible and more natural by combining the accuracy, expressiveness and immediacy of pen and paper with all the advantages of our digital products and the Creative Cloud. As we shared in our initial demo, Project Mighty is pressure sensitive, which helps it draw a natural and expressive line. It is also connected to the Creative Cloud, giving you the ability to carry all of your favorite personal digital assets, brushes and colors with you, copy/paste across devices and more.
    Along with a release date for its upcoming hardware, Adobe announced that its Creative Cloud apps have garnered more than 1 million subscribers since being released earlier this year.

    The company's Photoshop Photography Program has also gone live today, giving current owners of Photoshop CS3 or higher an opportunity to purchase both Photoshop and Lightroom for $9.99 per month.


    Vertu TI Luxury Phone



                                   


    Vertu TI Luxury Phone Available At Rs. 6,49,990 (10833 

    USD) in India 


    So cost of Samsung Galaxy S4 or iPhone 5 was out of 

    budget for you. Here we gonna talk about world’s costliest 

    mobile handset. The luxury mobile maker Vertu has launche
    Vertu TI in India. The smartphone has been priced at a

     whopping Rs. 6,49,990. On the specs side, it comes with a

     dual-core 1.7GHz processor along with 1GB of RAM and 


    64GB of internal storage. For camera, there is an 8-

    megapixel camera rear camera that can also record 


    1080p videos and a 1.3-megapixel front-facing camera. Vertu TI sports 3.7-inches WVGA


     screen and runs on Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich).

    Vertu describe it more specifically that it contains about 184 individual parts, it’s body is
     made of Grade 5 Titanium (yes you heard right), and has a set of Bang & Olufsen stereo 
    speakers. It’s screen is protected and virtually scratch proof as it rendered by Sapphire Crystals.

    Vertu TI key specifications

    3.7-inches the WVGA screen

    1.7GHz dual-core processor


    1GB RAM


    64GB internal storage


    8-megapixel rear camera


    1.3-megapixel front-facing camera


    Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)




                                   




    Vertu TI Luxury Phone

    Posted at  01:54  |  in  Up coming Technology  |  Read More»


    Vertu TI Luxury Phone



                                   


    Vertu TI Luxury Phone Available At Rs. 6,49,990 (10833 

    USD) in India 


    So cost of Samsung Galaxy S4 or iPhone 5 was out of 

    budget for you. Here we gonna talk about world’s costliest 

    mobile handset. The luxury mobile maker Vertu has launche
    Vertu TI in India. The smartphone has been priced at a

     whopping Rs. 6,49,990. On the specs side, it comes with a

     dual-core 1.7GHz processor along with 1GB of RAM and 


    64GB of internal storage. For camera, there is an 8-

    megapixel camera rear camera that can also record 


    1080p videos and a 1.3-megapixel front-facing camera. Vertu TI sports 3.7-inches WVGA


     screen and runs on Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich).

    Vertu describe it more specifically that it contains about 184 individual parts, it’s body is
     made of Grade 5 Titanium (yes you heard right), and has a set of Bang & Olufsen stereo 
    speakers. It’s screen is protected and virtually scratch proof as it rendered by Sapphire Crystals.

    Vertu TI key specifications

    3.7-inches the WVGA screen

    1.7GHz dual-core processor


    1GB RAM


    64GB internal storage


    8-megapixel rear camera


    1.3-megapixel front-facing camera


    Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)




                                   





    HTC One Mini coming to EE and Phones 4U 'later this year'



    Honey, HTC's shrunk the kid! The HTC One Mini was officially unveiled this morning. Check out Andy's glorious hands-on photos, video and carefully considered opinions here. Go on, I'll wait.
    Pretty nifty, huh? The One Mini will be available in the UK "later this year" according to high-street phone-flogger Phones 4U, who'll be selling the bejeezus out of it.
    EE and O2 would also like you to know they're selling the mid-sized metal marvel, but had no further deets to share. It's a 4G phone, so it'll work on EE's pricey superfast network.
    We don't yet know how much the One Mini will cost, either SIM-free or on a contract, with HTC keeping schtum on the subject.






    The aluminium One Mini is clearly inspired by Samsung's Galaxy S4 Mini, a mid-range blower with the same style as the mighty S4. Both are slightly disingenuously sold as being just as powerful as their bigger-screened brethren, when their specs are significantly weaker.
    A dual-core processor sits inside the One Mini, in theory less powerful than the One's quad-core bruiser. Makers Qualcomm claim the chip's new design means more grunt for less battery power than the quad slurps, but we'll have to judge that for ourselves when we get it in for review. Saving the battery is a reasonable concession, as it's inevitably a less capacious cell in the phone's smaller chassis.
    The S4 Mini, meanwhile, is measurably less powerful than the normal S4, but was still able to play 3D games comfortably. In general it's up to most things Android can throw at it, but you are losing bragging rights over the S4 and S4 Active.
    As for the screen, it's shrunk from 4.7 inches on the One to 4.3 inches on the One Mini and lowered the screen resolution and pixel density. At 720p though, it's still slightly sharper than theiPhone 5's 4-inch screen and Andy reported it looked "satisfyingly sharp" in his hands-on.
    What do you reckon of the One Mini so far? How cheap does it need to be? Is it a shame it's not packing a quad-core chip, or a sensible battery-saving decision? Leave a comment below, or over on our uncompromising

    HTC One Mini coming to EE and Phones 4U 'later this year'

    Posted at  01:41  |  in  Up coming Technology  |  Read More»


    HTC One Mini coming to EE and Phones 4U 'later this year'



    Honey, HTC's shrunk the kid! The HTC One Mini was officially unveiled this morning. Check out Andy's glorious hands-on photos, video and carefully considered opinions here. Go on, I'll wait.
    Pretty nifty, huh? The One Mini will be available in the UK "later this year" according to high-street phone-flogger Phones 4U, who'll be selling the bejeezus out of it.
    EE and O2 would also like you to know they're selling the mid-sized metal marvel, but had no further deets to share. It's a 4G phone, so it'll work on EE's pricey superfast network.
    We don't yet know how much the One Mini will cost, either SIM-free or on a contract, with HTC keeping schtum on the subject.






    The aluminium One Mini is clearly inspired by Samsung's Galaxy S4 Mini, a mid-range blower with the same style as the mighty S4. Both are slightly disingenuously sold as being just as powerful as their bigger-screened brethren, when their specs are significantly weaker.
    A dual-core processor sits inside the One Mini, in theory less powerful than the One's quad-core bruiser. Makers Qualcomm claim the chip's new design means more grunt for less battery power than the quad slurps, but we'll have to judge that for ourselves when we get it in for review. Saving the battery is a reasonable concession, as it's inevitably a less capacious cell in the phone's smaller chassis.
    The S4 Mini, meanwhile, is measurably less powerful than the normal S4, but was still able to play 3D games comfortably. In general it's up to most things Android can throw at it, but you are losing bragging rights over the S4 and S4 Active.
    As for the screen, it's shrunk from 4.7 inches on the One to 4.3 inches on the One Mini and lowered the screen resolution and pixel density. At 720p though, it's still slightly sharper than theiPhone 5's 4-inch screen and Andy reported it looked "satisfyingly sharp" in his hands-on.
    What do you reckon of the One Mini so far? How cheap does it need to be? Is it a shame it's not packing a quad-core chip, or a sensible battery-saving decision? Leave a comment below, or over on our uncompromising

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