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HTC Rosie Screenshots

HTC Rosie Screenshots

Main Screen: We’ve seen the videos from Haykuro’s HTC Hero ROM and apparently the brand new UI is called “Rosie”. The upcoming June 24th HTC Event flyer shows a hipster laying in the grass with a rose laying on his chest, further proof that the issue at hand will be the announcement of the

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Nokia Hybrid Slider E75: For People Who Enjoy Lots of Buttons

Nokia Hybrid Slider E75: For People Who Enjoy Lots of Buttons

The long-since-leaked E75 has been announced by Nokia, offering bring a new form-factor to Nokia's smartphone lineup. We've known about the E75 since November, but here's the rundown: a 2.4in, 240x320 screen, S60 OS, full 3G capabilities (CDMA and GSM), 3.2-megapixel camera, 4GB of storage wit

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E-Fuel MicroFueler Turns Sugar, Stale Beer Into Gas For Your Ride [Alternative Fuels]

E-Fuel MicroFueler Turns Sugar, Stale Beer Into Gas For Your Ride [Alternative Fuels]

The dream of a home ethanol pump has been realized, says the New York Times, thanks to inventor named Floyd S. Butterfield. One of the world's only celebrated non-hillbilly still-makers, Butterfield has invented the $10,000 E-Fuel 100 MicroFueler, a gadget that combines heaps of sugar and a sprinkli

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Progress through processors: Intel's new Facebook app

Yesterday I signed up for Intel’s “Progress Through Processors” application on Facebook. Essentially, through a small local application that interfaces with GridRepublic and BOINC, as well as your Facebook account, the application enables your Mac or PC to donate spare processing power to a va

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What is Google Wave?

What is Google Wave?

Google Wave is a real-time communication platform. It combines aspects of email, instant messaging, wikis, web chat, social networking, and project management to build one elegant, in-browser communication client. You can bring a group of friends or business partners together to discuss how your d

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Ecosquid Is Like Expedia For Gadget Selling, Recycling

Ecosquid Is Like Expedia For Gadget Selling, Recycling

Services like Gazelle and ecoNew are great, because you can sell them your old, unwanted gadgets for a decent price, and they'll be recycled, which is better than just throwing them in the trash. Ecosquid makes this process easy. Instead of manually entering in your info on multiple sites, Ecosqu

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Google Launches Voice Actions for Android

Google Launches Voice Actions for Android

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGbYVvU0Z5s&feature=player_embedded[/youtube] At today’s press briefing it was revealed that one 1 out of every 4 searches made on an Android phone is done so by voice. While this number comes as a bit surprising, Google doesn’t quite see it that w

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Quantum Chess Kills Computers

Quantum Chess Kills Computers

An undergraduate computer science student has created a "quantum chess" game that stumps computers' ability to search all possible outcomes of possible moves by having chess pieces mimic particles that are subject to quantum mechanics. The chess pieces follow the principle of superposition: they

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Apple iTunes 7.7.0

Apple iTunes 7.7.0

iTunes lets you create your own personal digital music library, allowing you to manage and play your music collection with drag-and-drop simplicity. iTunes, the software part of the equation that lets you pack 7,500 songs in your pocket, automatically synchronizes with the sensational new iPod at

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Brain Scans Can Access Your Memories

This week, we’re looking at the ever-increasing digitization of memory, and indeed, today’s technologies can even access memories stored on the most closely-guarded of hard drives: our brains. In a recent study, MRIs accurately predicted what individuals were remembering.

Researchers at University College London conducted the tests, in which individuals were repeatedly shown three different video clips, forcing them to form distinct new memories of each. Then, they were attached to MRI machines and asked to remember the scenes as vividly as they could. Their brain activity was recorded as they remembered each successive clip.

The scans showed that the recollection of each scene resulted in a distinct pattern of neural activity, and when the participants were told to remember any one of the clips, researchers could accurately determine which it was by comparing the MRI scans to their initial readings.

Each act of remembering resulted in similar scans for all ten participants, suggesting that the ways our brains handle different memories might not vary as much from person to person as you’d think. That just makes it all the easier for the Thought Police to know when you’re reminiscing of the good old days before the New World Order. [Neurophilosophy via io9]

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