Tuesday, 08 December 2009 16:32
Tuesday, 08 December 2009 16:06
Nëse shpikjet më të mëdha të njerëzimit kanë ardhur "nga halli", e tillë është edhe kjo që do t'ju tregojmë sot. Bledar Kazia është vetëm 17 vjeç dhe është nxënës në Medresenë e Kavajës në vitin e tretë. Ai ka menduar t'i shërbejë vetes dhe komunitetit me diçka që fillimisht iu duk të gjithëve e pabesueshme, por tashmë është realitet.
Ka të bëjë me një energji alternative për të ushqyer kompjuterin kur mungon energjia elektrike.
Read more: Bledi, 17-vjeçari dibran shpik tastierën që prodhon energji
Tuesday, 08 December 2009 15:54

Tuesday, 08 December 2009 15:39

Wednesday, 04 November 2009 21:09

Michigan State University researchers are spawning robot fish to monitor the quality of lake water and the effect of harmful algae.
Saturday, 31 October 2009 12:31
With a burst of renewed interest in 3D technology, Acer seems to be slightly ahead of the curve with its Aspire 5738DG laptop, featuring a special combination of hardware and software to add 3D to games, photos, and videos. Thanks to projects such as James Cameron's Avatar, upcoming 3D TV monitors, and Nvidia's 3D Vision project, consumers are hearing more about 3D than any time since the 1950s.

The $779 Acer Aspire 5738DG takes a different approach than the 3D Vision product from Nvidia. While the Nvidia rig requires a desktop PC with a high-end video card, a dual-link DVI connection to a compatible 120Hz LCD monitor, a USB-connected emitter box, and a set of active, battery-powered glasses, Acer's laptop is mostly software-driven, using a special screen coating and standard polarized-lens glasses to produce the 3D effect.
Like the Nvidia 3D vision setup (previously reviewed here), movies and photos need to be rendered in a 3D format to be used, but virtually any video game will work, as long as it makes use of actual 3D data to generate its characters, settings, and in-game objects.
Read more: Double vision on the third dimension: Acer's 3D laptop and Nvidia's 3D Vision
Saturday, 31 October 2009 11:18

Taiwan Broadband show, Ericsson's vision for the portable computer of 2020 uses a pico-projected screen and laser-projected keyboard. And though the company's got a rough prototype (pictured above), they imagine it ultimately squeezing into this bizarre spider-leg tripod design:
Read more: Ericsson's Spider PC projects the keyboard, screen
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