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A 6-month-old baby was killed Saturday and her mother injured by a falling tree branch at New York s Central Park Zoo.Police said the 33-year-old New Jersey woman was posing with her baby in front of the sea lion exhibit and her husband was taking their picture when the branch fell.The woman and infant were taken to New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornel
stanley usa l Medical Center, where the baby was pronounced dead. The mother was listed in stable condition.Police identified the baby as Gianna Ricciutti of Union City, N.J.Max Pulsinelli, a spokesman for the Wildlife Conservation Society, which runs the zoo, said he could not comment on the accident beyond what the police had said. Our thoughts and prayers are with the family, he said.Trung Tran, who was with his own partner and baby at the park when the accident happened, said he heard the branch crack and looked over. The baby wasn t crying or anything. So that seems to me it s a bad situation, he told WNYW-TV. We didn t hear anything at all. It s the second fatality caused by a tree branch this
stanley cup year at Central Park. A 46-year-old man died in February when a branch heavy from sn
stanley termos ow fell and hit him.In July 2009, a Google engineer was knocked unconscious after being hit on the head by a rotted tree branch at the park. ponent--type-recirculation .item:nth-child 5 display: none; inline-recirc-item--id-9521a942-8c88-11e2-b06b-024c6 Jecf Deadly Arctic Blast Grips Northeast, Midwest
Meet Jibo. On track to exist next year, Jibo is being marketed as the world first family robot. The bulbous little guy can read to kids in the living room, recite recipes in the kitchen, take photos in the yard, and perform a handful of other simple tasks. Jibo is also a little bit creepy. The idea of a robotic family helper is a terrifically timeless one. At least as far back as the original Jetsons series, we squishy humans have longed for someone to do our dirty work around the house. And over the years, we ;ve gotten various versions of homebots. While Sony robotic dog Aibo and iRobot roaming cleaner Roomba aren ;t quite Rosie, progress has been steady, however slow. Jibo, however, looks like a leap forward.
https://youtube/watch v=3N1Q8oFpX1Y At first, Jibo just looks like a screen on a stand. But with three joints that would let it emote and express itself physically, Jibo could follow people around the room, and thanks to an on board camera with facial recognition capabilities, it could recognize the different mem
stanley taza bers of the family. This f
stanley cup eature would come in handy when you want to take photos, say, at a birthday party. The teddy bear-sized device
stanley termosky would also work as a telepresence robot, record messages, offer up reminders at just the right time, and even read stories to the kids. Jibo is the brainchild of MIT Media Lab professor Cynthia Breazeal who spent the last few years researching personal robots. While she