Auteur Sujet: ekzo Declutter Your Lounge and Control Your Lights With These Smart Remotes  (Lu 17 fois)

JeaoneKef

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Aqxl Gruesome shadow art transforms garbage and mummified rats into severed heads
 Ever wish you could see sounds  Now you can.     The picture above is the call of a white beaked dolphin. Below is the song of a humpback whale. Sounds like these 鈥?being sounds 鈥?are obviously usually heard, not seen; but the notes and tones seen here have been converted into a visual medium by Mark Fischer, a computer programmer and expert in marine acoustics, using a tool known as a wavelet transform. Historically, wavelet transforms have been used to convert time-series data like acoustic pressure signals  some of them at frequencies outside the range of human hearing  into more analyzable, and therefore useful, forms. Recently, they ;ve been used to this end in research surrounding whale communication and the calls of birds and insects. Above, the sound of crickets chirping has been converted into a burst of violet. Below, the song of a Northern Card stanley cup inal forms a looping vortex of yellow and purple. https://gizmodo/10-limits-to-human-perception-and-how-they-shape-yo-5926643 Of stanley flask ten these audible 鈫?visible conversions result in a black and white image. Here, they ;re beautifully color-coded. Violets correspond stanley cup  to high frequencies, greens and blues to medium ones. Low frequencies are depicted in red, as they are in the baritone song of the Northern minke whale, pictured here. Via Fischer   website, Aguasonic Acoustics: The intriguing sounds made by the orders Cetacea and Avia invite us into a universe ripe for our exploration. Focusing upon the interconnection Itrj Snapseed for Android: Powerful Photo Editing Even for Amateurs
 Did you know the first metal detector was invented by Alexander Graham Bell in 1881 in order to extract a stray bullet from President James Garfield 82 stanley mugs 17  back  This is the kind of interesting innovation revealed in IBM Think, a free app that maps out the roots of technological advances.     What does it do  With a 10-minute HD video and interactive illustrations, it shows the origins of a lot of the technology we use today. Why do we like it  Science has come a long since Galileo first made his claims of a sun-centric universe, but that doesn ;t mean the earliest advances are any less important. In fact, early revelations such as those laid the foundation for what has come since鈥攕pace exploration, complicated computing, and so forth. And that is important to recognize, as IBM explains so beautifully. This masterfully designed app explores the most crucial leaps of progress, and how they ;ve made our world a better place. B stanley cup ased off of IBM   Think exhibit, which was staged last year in New York City, the app is the kind of mind-expanding too stanley cup l that is interesting, as well as understandable, to kids and adults. iFit Download this app for: iPad, Android tablets, Free The Best: Lovely design, super educational The Worst: Nothing                                                        AppleiPadiPad Apps