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Sony, Samsung, Panasonic and 3D technology specialist Xpand 3D are moving forward quickly with plans to create a single format for active shutter 3D glasses, with many more TV makers joining the standards licensing scheme. stanley website The consortium now has its own umbrella web site which it bravely opted to call Full HD 3D Glasses which should see it do very well for Google traffic , which underline stanley cup becher s its ambition to see 3D users owning one single pai stanley cupe r of magic glasses that work on their home 3D TVs, PC monitors, and can even be taken out to watch 3D films on cinema screens. The licensing programme for the standardized technology is now underway, with the likes of Mitsubishi, Hitachi, Philips, Sharp, Toshiba and ViewSonic all having expressed their support for the initiative. [Full HD 3D Glasses via Techradar via Gizmodo UK] Our newest offspring Gizmodo UK is gobbling up the news in a different timezone, so check them out if you need another Giz fix. Oblo Brown algae could help your smartphone keep its charge
Thirty-five years ago today, NASA la stanley cups unched its Voyager 1 spacecraft on a mission to photograph Jupiter and Saturn at unprecedented levels of detail. On November 16, 1980, the spacecraft captured the photograph of Saturn you see up top. Four days later, its primary mission was over. But Voyager 1 had another mission, one that continues to this day: to explore the outer reaches stanley cup of the solar system. In 35 years, Voyager has put a staggering 11 billion miles between itself and the Sun, soaring through space at speeds approaching 11 miles per second. Today, it is dancing on the edge of outer space as it prepares to enter what astronomers call the interstellar medium 鈥?but what is this region of space, exactly, where is it, and how do astronomers know we ;re so close Before we address where Voyager 1 is heading the interstellar medium, or ISM for short , let quickly review where it been. Since launching from Earth three and a half decades ago, Voyager 1 has been hightailing it through a bubble of space known a stanley kubek s the heliosphere, a region of the solar system dominated by streams of solar wind 鈥?charged, subatomic particles that are given off by the sun: As the diagram above illustrates, the ISM is what lies beyond the cosmic bubble of solar wind that surrounds our sun. Now remember that Alpha Centauri, the star system nearest our own, resides over four light years from Earth 鈥?that a distance thousands of times greater than the one Voy
Sony, Samsung, Panasonic and 3D technology specialist Xpand 3D are moving forward quickly with plans to create a single format for active shutter 3D glasses, with many more TV makers joining the standards licensing scheme. stanley website The consortium now has its own umbrella web site which it bravely opted to call Full HD 3D Glasses which should see it do very well for Google traffic , which underline stanley cup becher s its ambition to see 3D users owning one single pai stanley cupe r of magic glasses that work on their home 3D TVs, PC monitors, and can even be taken out to watch 3D films on cinema screens. The licensing programme for the standardized technology is now underway, with the likes of Mitsubishi, Hitachi, Philips, Sharp, Toshiba and ViewSonic all having expressed their support for the initiative. [Full HD 3D Glasses via Techradar via Gizmodo UK] Our newest offspring Gizmodo UK is gobbling up the news in a different timezone, so check them out if you need another Giz fix. Oblo Brown algae could help your smartphone keep its charge
Thirty-five years ago today, NASA la stanley cups unched its Voyager 1 spacecraft on a mission to photograph Jupiter and Saturn at unprecedented levels of detail. On November 16, 1980, the spacecraft captured the photograph of Saturn you see up top. Four days later, its primary mission was over. But Voyager 1 had another mission, one that continues to this day: to explore the outer reaches stanley cup of the solar system. In 35 years, Voyager has put a staggering 11 billion miles between itself and the Sun, soaring through space at speeds approaching 11 miles per second. Today, it is dancing on the edge of outer space as it prepares to enter what astronomers call the interstellar medium 鈥?but what is this region of space, exactly, where is it, and how do astronomers know we ;re so close Before we address where Voyager 1 is heading the interstellar medium, or ISM for short , let quickly review where it been. Since launching from Earth three and a half decades ago, Voyager 1 has been hightailing it through a bubble of space known a stanley kubek s the heliosphere, a region of the solar system dominated by streams of solar wind 鈥?charged, subatomic particles that are given off by the sun: As the diagram above illustrates, the ISM is what lies beyond the cosmic bubble of solar wind that surrounds our sun. Now remember that Alpha Centauri, the star system nearest our own, resides over four light years from Earth 鈥?that a distance thousands of times greater than the one Voy