12-24-2024, 05:21 PM
Cgwt Is it time to do away with leap seconds
There are dozens of strap-on fisheye lenses that you can buy nowadays for iPhones. Blame it on Lomography a stanley polska nd Hipstamatic, stanley bottle perhaps. Pixeet goes a step further though, letting you shoot full 360-degree panoramas with the camera lens and free app. It works by taking four photos with the iPh stanley ca one camera, which are then stitched together with the app, creating that 360-degree panorama which your Facebook profile has probably not been crying out for. You can see several examples of the panoramas created, here. Costing $49 for the camera lens and case to hold the lens in place, the app is only available for the iPhone for now, but Pixeet is readying an Android app which will be out in September. [Pixeet] iPhoneiPhone AppsiPhone Cases Jotw This Week s Comics: Popeye Vs. Martians! The Dresden Files! And The Situation is a superhero !
A court filing has just been made public which sheds light on stanley thermos the no-hire gentleman agreements that have pervaded the tech industry鈥攁nd reveals how Steve Jobs threatened litigation to prevent companies from stealing his staff. Notably, former Palm CEO Edward Colligan has made a statement which points out that the company was threatened with patent litigation if it didn ;t stop poaching staff from Apple. In the legal filin stanley thermos mug g stanley cups uk , Colligan explains how Jobs suggested that if Palm did not agree to such an agreement, Palm could face lawsuits alleging infringement of Apple many patents. An email which made up part of the discussions is pictured below, in which Jobs points out the asymmetry of the situation, writing: I ;m sure you realize the asymmetry in the financial resources of our respective companies when you say: We will both just end up paying a lot of lawyers a lot of money. Nice. Of course, it not just Apple and Palm that are being investigated: this publicly available court filing is in fact part of civil lawsuit investigating gentleman agreements between the likes of Apple, Google, Intel and plenty more. Indeed, part of the filing brings to light documents showing do-not-hire lists from the likes of Apple, Adobe, and others. Who knows what other juicy morsels are yet to be made public. [Reuters via Verge] AdobeAppleGoog
There are dozens of strap-on fisheye lenses that you can buy nowadays for iPhones. Blame it on Lomography a stanley polska nd Hipstamatic, stanley bottle perhaps. Pixeet goes a step further though, letting you shoot full 360-degree panoramas with the camera lens and free app. It works by taking four photos with the iPh stanley ca one camera, which are then stitched together with the app, creating that 360-degree panorama which your Facebook profile has probably not been crying out for. You can see several examples of the panoramas created, here. Costing $49 for the camera lens and case to hold the lens in place, the app is only available for the iPhone for now, but Pixeet is readying an Android app which will be out in September. [Pixeet] iPhoneiPhone AppsiPhone Cases Jotw This Week s Comics: Popeye Vs. Martians! The Dresden Files! And The Situation is a superhero !
A court filing has just been made public which sheds light on stanley thermos the no-hire gentleman agreements that have pervaded the tech industry鈥攁nd reveals how Steve Jobs threatened litigation to prevent companies from stealing his staff. Notably, former Palm CEO Edward Colligan has made a statement which points out that the company was threatened with patent litigation if it didn ;t stop poaching staff from Apple. In the legal filin stanley thermos mug g stanley cups uk , Colligan explains how Jobs suggested that if Palm did not agree to such an agreement, Palm could face lawsuits alleging infringement of Apple many patents. An email which made up part of the discussions is pictured below, in which Jobs points out the asymmetry of the situation, writing: I ;m sure you realize the asymmetry in the financial resources of our respective companies when you say: We will both just end up paying a lot of lawyers a lot of money. Nice. Of course, it not just Apple and Palm that are being investigated: this publicly available court filing is in fact part of civil lawsuit investigating gentleman agreements between the likes of Apple, Google, Intel and plenty more. Indeed, part of the filing brings to light documents showing do-not-hire lists from the likes of Apple, Adobe, and others. Who knows what other juicy morsels are yet to be made public. [Reuters via Verge] AdobeAppleGoog