All images credit Arhitektu Birojs Arhiide So much of design is governed by rules and codes. A Recreational vehicle cannot be more than 8’6″ wide, a park model home cannot be more than 12′; a modular not more than 16′ in many jurisdictions. Each set of rules will have a different set of transport and zoning restrictions. Certainly the skinnier the unit, the easier it is to move. The Esclice Home from Lavian architects Ēriks Grūbe, Toms Kokins Mārtiņš Hermansons measures in at only 2.95 meters or 9′-8″. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Will that fancy new smartphone you’re looking at buying run a version of Android that hasn’t even been announced yet? Or that Nokia 5800 — where’s the Symbian^3 upgrade? Has the lack of commitment on a launch date for the webOS 2.0 upgrade stopped you from buying a Pre on Sprint? The balance between the relative importance of hardware and software in the smartphone industry is definitely teetering toward the software side these days for a number of reasons: screens have no need to get any bigger or higher-resolution, processors likely can’t get much faster without a significant advance in battery technology, and we’re reaching a point where we’re all going to have HD camcorders in our pockets capable of taking still shots that’ll put even higher-end point-and-shoots to shame. So when you stabilize the hardware like that — that is, you get to the point where manufacturers are iterating essentially the same large slate over and over again with marginally better specs — the spotlight starts to fix squarely on the software underneath. That is to say, whether a phone receives “good” operating system builds (and receives them on a timely basis) really makes or breaks its retail success now more than ever before. All too often, the question isn’t whether a particular device is great, it’s whether the manufacturer and carrier have committed to upgrading it — quite often to a version of its operating system that hasn’t officially been announced. It’s a recipe for confusion and paralysis among consumers that really don’t have a great reason to be putting off their purchases — they just want a reasonable assurance that their new phones aren’t going to be regarded as “obsolete” in six or nine months. And why shouldn’t they? Continue reading Editorial: Should your next mobile OS update cost you? Editorial: Should your next mobile OS update cost you? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Nov 2010 12:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …How can you look at a 60+ seat House and 6 Senate seat gain and find problems?
Continue reading …By Paul Reynolds World affairs correspondent, BBC News website The two leaders emphasised US-India ties, saying relations between the two countries would be one of the century’s defining partnerships Continue reading the main story Related stories In pictures: Obama in India Indian Americans on life in US Biswas: Tough act to follow President Barack Obama’s support for India to have a permanent seat on the UN Security Council is a major foreign policy statement by the United States. Building on President George W Bush’s acceptance of India as a nuclear power, it is the culmination of a process that has seen the US move away from the suspicion of India during the Cold War to the…
Continue reading …Hard to say why OCZ Technology pushed out revision two of its RevoDrive so soon after the original launched , but it’s hard to complain with numbers like this. Just in time to shock the performance hound in your life with an outlandish Christmas gift comes the RevoDrive X2, and this here PCIe SSD solution has now been benchmarked to the hilt. The bottom line? It’s fast. Really fast. In fact, Hot Hardware calls it “simply one of the fastest PCI Express based SSD solutions” that they have tested, noting that it went toe-to-toe with Fusion-io’s ioXtreme while costing a good bit less. Critics over at Tweak Town echoed those thoughts, and while both teams felt the $680 asking price for a 240GB model was a touch pricey, neither felt that it wasn’t worth it if you’ve got the coin laying around. Hit the links below for more charts than you’d ever want to see as an eight grader. OCZ RevoDrive X2 PCIe SSD reviewed: blisteringly fast in every conceivable way originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Nov 2010 11:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Not a good idea. Image Credit Deanwissing According to a new study published in Fertility and Sterility Journal, putting a laptop on your lap will crank up the temperature of the scrotum, which could affect fertility. Reuters Health quotes an author of the study: Millions and millions of men are using laptops now, especially those in the reproductive age range,” said Dr. Yefim Sheynkin, a urologist at the State University of… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Image credit: Ecotricity , used with permission. From Dale Vince’s announcement that he would build a 100mph electric sports car to the Nemesis, as it became known, recently hitting 134mph in wild safety tests , the development of this battery-powered speed monster has been a fascinating journey—not least because Dale Vince and team provided
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