Auteur Sujet: dyje A New Set Of Wheels  (Lu 44 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 161869
    • drwg The Quest TV Competition Turns Fantasy Into Reality Television
dyje A New Set Of Wheels
« le: Janvier 01, 2025, 07:47:58 am »
Shbw NBA s Jason Kidd arrested for DWI
 A single picture from a cell phone camera may have saved the Gulf of Mexico from a few more weeks; if not months; of oil gushing from the BP well.  A new study from the presidential oil spill commission de stanley flask scribes the behind-the-scenes, excruciating tension and mistakes behind the three-month effort to cap the busted well. New details include the story of a lone scientist working from a cell phone photo who saved the day by convincing the U.S. government that a cap it considered removing was actually working as designed.  The cap that eventually stopped the oil from flowing was almost pulled a day or so after it was installed in mid-July because pressure readings looked high. BP wanted the cap to remain and the well to stay shut, but government science advisers were firm and near unanimous in wanting the cap removed because of fear of bigger, more catastrophic spill, the report said. One scientist took a cell phone picture and e-mailed it to a government researcher in California for advice.   Oysters Hit La. Thanksgiving Tables Despite Spill BP Deep-cleaning Gulf Beaches Amid New Worr stanley cup ies White House Altered Oil Report, AP saysJust using that cell phone photo, Paul Hsieh, a U.S. Geological Survey scientist, create stanley usa d a model for what was happening under the cap. He was convinced that the containment cap wouldn t blow. He got more data, which bolstered his case. He persuaded the other scientists to wait a bit.          The government waited six hours, then a day. Nothing happened. Boqg Possibly one of the weirdest geological formations in the world
 People are understandably really excited about the latest hoverboard currently being crowdfunded at Kickstarter. It   called the Hendo and it   being developed by Greg and Jill Henderson for their company Arx Pax. Is it real  Yes. Has our Back to the Future hoverboard finally arrived  Sadly, no.     The New York Times reporters who tried out the Hendo explain that the device isn ;t quite the hoverboard we were promised in 1989 鈥? let alone the one we saw earlier this year. The thing only works on a special metal stanley cups uk lic surface, the battery lasts just a few minutes, and it   incredibly noisy. The Verge said it could only be described as a high-pitched screech and a cacophony of squeals. It   not exactly Marty McFly   hoverboard. Now it only works on special surfaces, and the battery life is only a few minutes long. And it   tough to ride, the New York Times explains in a new video shot at Arx Pax in Los Gatos, California. The biggest problem for those of us pining for a real hoverboard is that the Hendersons and Arx Pax are admittedly just using this particular application of their technology as a publicity stunt. Long term, they ;re not actually interested in developing a hoverboard. The company has patents for building foundation systems to prevent earthquake damage, wh stanley cups uk ich is their real goal. According to the New York Times: The business plan is to develop ma stanley termosky gnetic technologies