01-01-2025, 07:22 AM
Citl This Scientific Coffee Machine Could Satisfy the Biggest Coffee Nerd
Samsung mustn ;t know whether to celebrate or not. A UK judge has ruled that the Galaxy Tab doesn ;t infringe Apple registered design, in large part because it not as cool as the iPad. Ouch. Speaking in court this morning, Bloomberg reports, Judge Colin Birss explained that the Galaxy tablets do not have the same understated and extreme simplicity which is possessed by the Apple design 8230; They are not as cool. As a result, Biriss has judged that consumers are unlikely to confuse the two tablets, meaning that Samsung product doesn ;t infringe Apple registered design. Intriguingly, he explained that the Galaxy Tab had un stanley cup usual details on the back which set it apart as different to the iPad. Apple has 21 days to appeal against the ruling which, knowing its track record, it probably will. Meanwhile, Samsung is no doubt trying to work out whether to be happy or not. [Bloomberg] stanley cup stanley cup canada Applegalaxy tabiPadSamsung Qosx RIM s Offering Cash And Gadgets to Devs Who Port Games to BlackBerry
For the most part, traditional conveyor-based baggage-delivery systems work just fine, but they are pretty slow, which can throttle your throughput. That suddenly not a problem if you treat your bags to a kart-based roller coaster that reaches speeds up to 22mph 600 meters per minute . Airplanes won ;t be the only things that are fly stanley drinking cup ing, figuratively anyway. The new Baggage Tray System developed by Dai stanley cup fuku not only accelerates your bags to record speeds for baggage but also utilizes RFID tags on each individ stanley mug ual cart to reroute each bag-toting tray to where it needs to go with no need for barcode scanning. And although it wasn ;t shown in this demo, the system also includes automated loading and unloading stations, which should be able to get bags on and off fast enough to make use of that speed. It ;d be pretty expensive to completely rip out and replace existing conveyor systems, so this new rig is being aimed mostly at large airports in growing markets like Asia and the Middle East. Still, one would hope higher-tech solutions like this鈥攅ven if they are a little less fast and complex鈥攚ill become that norm at new and newly renovated airports from here on out. The only downside is that they probably won ;t let you ride one. [DigInfo TV]
Samsung mustn ;t know whether to celebrate or not. A UK judge has ruled that the Galaxy Tab doesn ;t infringe Apple registered design, in large part because it not as cool as the iPad. Ouch. Speaking in court this morning, Bloomberg reports, Judge Colin Birss explained that the Galaxy tablets do not have the same understated and extreme simplicity which is possessed by the Apple design 8230; They are not as cool. As a result, Biriss has judged that consumers are unlikely to confuse the two tablets, meaning that Samsung product doesn ;t infringe Apple registered design. Intriguingly, he explained that the Galaxy Tab had un stanley cup usual details on the back which set it apart as different to the iPad. Apple has 21 days to appeal against the ruling which, knowing its track record, it probably will. Meanwhile, Samsung is no doubt trying to work out whether to be happy or not. [Bloomberg] stanley cup stanley cup canada Applegalaxy tabiPadSamsung Qosx RIM s Offering Cash And Gadgets to Devs Who Port Games to BlackBerry
For the most part, traditional conveyor-based baggage-delivery systems work just fine, but they are pretty slow, which can throttle your throughput. That suddenly not a problem if you treat your bags to a kart-based roller coaster that reaches speeds up to 22mph 600 meters per minute . Airplanes won ;t be the only things that are fly stanley drinking cup ing, figuratively anyway. The new Baggage Tray System developed by Dai stanley cup fuku not only accelerates your bags to record speeds for baggage but also utilizes RFID tags on each individ stanley mug ual cart to reroute each bag-toting tray to where it needs to go with no need for barcode scanning. And although it wasn ;t shown in this demo, the system also includes automated loading and unloading stations, which should be able to get bags on and off fast enough to make use of that speed. It ;d be pretty expensive to completely rip out and replace existing conveyor systems, so this new rig is being aimed mostly at large airports in growing markets like Asia and the Middle East. Still, one would hope higher-tech solutions like this鈥攅ven if they are a little less fast and complex鈥攚ill become that norm at new and newly renovated airports from here on out. The only downside is that they probably won ;t let you ride one. [DigInfo TV]