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CBS News Gladys, the baby gorilla that was abandoned by her mother at birth, has a new mother, and a fresh start on life. CBS This Morning: Saturday reported back in March about Gladys, who was moved to the Cincinnati Zoo from Texas after her birth mother rejected her.Watch: Caring for a baby gorillaThe staff at the zoo was faced with a challenge back then: take an abandoned baby gorilla, raise her until she s ready to be placed with a new gorilla family, and hope that she s accepted. CBS This Morning: Saturday checked back in this week with Gladys, and found the five-month-old baby now thriving. Gladys got her first glimpse of the outdoors,
stanley polska playing and sitting in a tree with M Linzi, a 31-year-old veteran mother gorilla who s adopted Gladys as her own. Gladys, a baby gorilla rejected by its birth mother, has been adopted by a 31-year-old gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo.
stanley flask CBS News Thane Maynard, of the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden, told CBS News Terrell Brown, You know, it s really neat to see that she is settled in with M Linzi, each day doing a little more. Very early on M Linzi would try to hold her, but sometimes Gladys would get bad and maybe try to bite her, bite her on her finger. But over time, they settled in, and certainly the sign that they re sleeping together is a great example. Fo
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Smartwatches, Google Glass, even humble fitness trackers: all great, apart from the fact that the batteries last for what seems like minutes. But now, a new
stanley mug kind of low-power processor could change that. Developed by a startup company Ineda Systems, the new chip is actually intended to work alongside another, more powerful processor鈥攁nd that the clever part. You see, this little, low-power chip is the eyes and ears of a wearable: it listens for voice commands, senses a little of what going on around it, runs simple apps, and gives the primary silicon a shove when it required. Indeed, Ineda Systems realised that, in most cases, wearables are in ambient mode or only running simples apps 90 percent of the time. By allowing the main chip a little more chance to
stanley thermobecher be powered down, this chip allows for massiv
kubki stanley e power savings. So far, Ineda is testing two prototype designs, featuring two and three processor cores. One core has very little computational power, but also uses commensurately little energy, and is always on. The other one or two only come alive when they need to. And if that grunt isn ;t enough, the wearable main chip would be called into action. The simplest core can monitor motion sensors to detect movement, maintain a Bluetooth connection, or recognise one key spoken phrase. At full tilt, the other cores can play music or run a simple app, like a heart-rate tracker. Sounds pretty great. And even better, Ineda plans to move into m