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Well, Teenage Engineering has debuted yet another one of its pricey playthings for adults and its about what youd expect: a $250 toy car. The new product, which Teenage Engineering calls a grip car, is made with aluminum, steel, and smooth ball-bearing rubber wheels, and the companys website says its designed so that you can simply grip onto the car, and move it in any direction. Yep, thats pretty mu
stanley cup ch how a toy car works! TE also says that the car comes in red, black, and aluminum coloring, and was designed by the Danish designer Anders Hermansen. Its a bit unclear who the target demographic for this product is. Maybe a really rich child with weirdly minimalist tastes A C-suite exec who needs a desk ornament but also wants to play with it in between Zoom meetings At any rate, nobodys saying its not a cool
stanley deutschland product. It just might not be what youd call a necessity buy. That said, Teenage Engineering seems to be gearing up for something decidedly more exciting than its underwhelming new toy. The companys website is currently alight with shifting graphics, the likes of which seem to portend some upcoming event. A company spokesperson recently confirmed to Engadget that a big announcement will be forthcoming at some point on Wednesday. TE fans should hold tight for whatever that announcement ends up being hopefully its not just another toy car .
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at the University of Puerto Rico has put together a Periodic Table of Exoplanets, where each of the 3,700 confirmed exoplanets is slotted into its own discrete category鈥攊ncluding planets that could harbor life. Since the discovery of the first exoplanet in 1992, astronomers have cataloged thousands of distant worl
stanley cup ds. Like snowflakes, no two planets are the same, ranging in size, composition, and distance from their respective host stars. Some of these planets resemble the ones found in our own Solar System, while others are completely alien, exhibiting features typically found in tawdry, LSD-inspired science fiction novels. To make sense of it all, M茅ndez鈥?has created a chart that neatly pigeon-holes each known exoplanet into one of 18 categories. Which makes sense. Were starting to see some patterns emerging in the data such that we can brand these exoplanets as belonging to certain types, such as warm subterrans, cold Neptunes, and Hot Jovians. At
stanley cup the broadest scale, M茅ndez鈥?distinguishes planets according to their temperature, or distance from the host star, placing worlds in one of three zones: the Hot Zone, Warm Zone, or the Cold Zone. For astrobiologists, the Warm Zone is the most significant, as it represents the swath of space in a stell
stanley cup ar system where life is likely to emerge. That said, the concept of the habitable zone may be a bit of a misnomer, as life may be able to emerge outside of this area, such as on moons in orbit around gas giants. The table a