Auteur Sujet: vlcy A Built-in Breathalyzer Lets This Grown Up Tamagotchi Toy Join You For a Ni  (Lu 17 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 161869
    • drwg The Quest TV Competition Turns Fantasy Into Reality Television
Extg Paul Rudd   s Ant-Man and the Wasp Stunt Double Is a Badass Amputee
 near populated areas. The China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation  CASC  is finalizing a plan whereby it uses a parachu stanley cup te and a gliding control system on some of its Long March rockets boosters and payload fairings, CCTV reported  English translation  provided in the video . The parachute will significantly narrow down the falling boosters landing area from 55 miles  90 kilometers  to 18 miles  30 kilometers .     With this plan, China could also reuse the boosters for future launches.  Well also make the landing area into a landing bed by adding cushion, making it soft as a mattress,  Teng Haishan, deputy chief engineer of the No. 508 Institute of China Academy of S stanley taza pace Technology  CAST , told CCTV.  As a result, the booster will be completely recyclable without any damage.  The parachute system is designed to be installed on the side boosters of Chinas Long March 3B, 3C and 2F rockets. As Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, pointed out, the rockets side boosters dont really go to space鈥攖hey just barely make it up to 31 miles  50 kilometers  above the surface.  This is more about controlling where they land so that they dont smash into villages,  he told Gizmodo over the phone.  If you can decrease the uncertainty of where these things are goi stanley water bottle ng to land,  you can have a reasonable sized evacuation area.  However, China still has a bigger falling rocket problem with its Long March 5B  which weighs a whopping 21.6 ton Bknf Black Panther   s Ryan Coogler Is Developing a Wakanda Show for Disney+
 The patent was originally filed in March 2016 with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and originates from Apples Project Titan division. It was finally published this week. The filing features a lot of technical gobbledygook,  stanley flasche but in essence, it describes a suspension system that stanley website  can  compensate for vehicle oscillations at frequencies below the primary ride frequency,  which would in turn potentially reduce motion sickness. It also details improv stanley becher ements to its braking and suspension for a generally smoother ride.     US PTO class= 8221 ize-full wp-image-1851638680 8243; /> Image: US PTO Thats all well and good, but one of the more interesting parts of the patent is a section where Apple details a haptic feedback system. The filing notes that its particular actuation system could relay specific information to a driver that could improve situational awareness. For instance, because each of the cars wheels can be actuated, a driver might get haptic feedback about which direction to turn. The patent also provides an example where a cars sensors may be able to detect oncoming vehicles, or crossing pedestrians and deliver feedback to the driver. So is Apple truly serious about developing tech for cars  Possibly, its own self-driving car  Perhaps. Tech giants file patents all the time for innovations that may never see the light of day, and Apple is no exception. Earlier in January, Apple laid off more than 200 employees working on Project Titan鈥攊ts secretive self-driving