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posa Wisconsin Senate approves GOP-backed abortion bills
« le: Novembre 19, 2024, 02:27:22 pm »
Xoay New legislation could ban public Wi-Fi if passed
 The Scripps News investigative team has unearthed decades-old videos that help explain why the fallenFrancis Scott Key Bridgein Baltimore was not equipped with stronger protection around its supports to guard against getting hit by a ship.The first video is a story that aired in 1977 on WMAR-TV, Scripps News Baltimore, days before the bridge opened.As a reporter drives across the gleaming new span over the Patapsco River, construction crews are seen finishing up last-minute work.The report focuses on the traffic the bridge would alleviate from a busy nearby tunnel.But just three years later, in 1980, a catastrophic event in Florida would suddenly shift attention to the support structure beneath the Key Bridge, and others like it around the U.S.A cargo ship smashed into a piling on the towering Sunshine Skyway Bridge in Tampa, bringing down part of the bridge and spilling cars into the bay below, killing 35 people.Another re stanley cup port from WMA stanley taza R-TV shows how the disaster opened eyes in Maryland to the threat of a ship striking the Francis Scott Key Bridge, just 3 years old at the time. Some 4,000 ships travel in and out of the bay every year,  the reporter says in the story that aired in May 1980.  The question is: Could what happened in Florida happen here  SEE MORE: Workers apparently had little warning as Maryland bridge collapsedA senior pilot who helps guide ships in and out  stanley quencher of the port then explains why he thinks a vessel striking a pier on the Key Bridge would be so unlikely.H Pbsj History in your hands: New Milwaukee LGBT walking tour app launches in honor of Pride month
 PROVO, Utah 鈥?You ve likely watched the scene from Star Wars: A New Hope where Princess Leia delivers a message in the form of a Hologram.Now engineers at Brigham Young University in Provo are getting closer to the goal of making this a reality.Professor Daniel Smalley and his team can now project small holographic animations into the real world.It works by trapping a single particle in the air with a laser beam and then moving it around.It leaves behind a trail of light that floats in mid-air, kind of like a 3D printer for light. You can draw images in the air that appear to be continuous in the same way that you can draw your name in the air with a sparkler,  said Smalley.The team created a virtual stick figure capable of walking along and jumping off of a student s finger to demonstrate this.For now, the animations are tiny, at about a centimeter cubed, but the hope is to get them to about 8 inches, the same size as the Princess Leia Hologram from Star Wars.This new development paves the way for an immersive experience where people can interact with virtual objects in real life.Smalley said,  You can imagine a teacher who just uses a regular ev garrafinhas stanley eryday classroom globe, but now she has satellites flying back and forth over the top of it, or shes showing weather patterns and how they can move back and forth. Future versions of this technolog stanley cup y could also enhance video calls by bringing people into the roo stanley portugal m in a hologram. That head could then turn and make eye contact and look a