Saturday, June 26, 2010

This Picture Was Taken 24 Miles In the Air With A Crappy Camera Attached To A Balloon [Photography]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5573131/this-picture-was-taken-24-miles-in-the-air-with-a-crappy-camera-attached-to-a-balloon

This Picture Was Taken 24 Miles In the Air With A Crappy Camera Attached To A BalloonWhat do you get when you combine a styrofoam box, duct tape, orange paint, a weather balloon, and 2 old Canon cameras? Apparently, images that look like they're from NASA.

The Pacific Star II Project was conceived by Colin Rich. He set up 2 cameras, insulated them in a styrofoam box and attached the box to a weather balloon. The cameras were programmed to take 3 pictures every 3 minutes and then shoot a minute of video and this video is what came out of it.

Some people say the best camera is the one that's with you, I guess we should also include the camera that's 125,000 feet up in the air, as well.

Video by Colin Rich

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The iPhone 4 Voice Command Cheat Sheet [IPhone]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5573166/the-iphone-4-voice-command-cheat-sheet

The iPhone 4 Voice Command Cheat SheetYou probably know you can make your iPhone do stuff using your voice. "Play music!" Old hat, but there's a few new commands for iOS 4, like "What time is it?" [ATMac]

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HTML5 speed test finds IE9, Firefox 3.7 lead the pack in Windows, Chrome a distant last

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/06/25/html5-speed-test-finds-ie9-firefox-3-7-lead-the-pack-in-windows/

Curious to see how the latest preview release of Internet Explorer 9 stacks up against the competition when it comes to HTML5 performance in Windows? So was Download Squad, and it's now revealed its findings in some vivid, if not entirely scientific tests. The end result is that Internet Explorer 9 and Firefox 3.7 were well ahead of the pack in the 1,000-fish stress test (with Firefox about 5 or 10 percent ahead of IE), while Opera was stuck somewhere in the middle, and Chrome placed a distant last (and maxed out the CPU) -- all with hardware acceleration enabled, of course, although that had to be done via command line switches in the case of Chrome. Head on past the break to check out the four-way showdown for yourself, as well as an earlier test with just IE9 and Chrome.

Continue reading HTML5 speed test finds IE9, Firefox 3.7 lead the pack in Windows, Chrome a distant last

HTML5 speed test finds IE9, Firefox 3.7 lead the pack in Windows, Chrome a distant last originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Jun 2010 03:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDownload Squad &nb! sp;|&nbs p;Email this | Comments

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Google flexes biceps, flicks Android remote kill switch for the first time

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/06/25/google-flexes-biceps-flicks-android-remote-kill-switch-for-the/

We knew Google had the power to remotely remove Android apps -- Microsoft and Apple have backdoors into their mobile operating systems, too -- but it's always a little disconcerting to see a kill switch used. Such is the case today, as we've just heard Google unleashed the hounds this week, siccing bits and bytes of remote deletion power on a pair of "practically useless" but still Terms of Service-infringing apps. Curiously enough, Google admits that most who'd downloaded these programs had deleted them already, and that this "exercise" of the remote application removal feature was merely a cleanup operation. Google says users will get a notification beamed to their phone if an app is removed, however -- so as Big Brother as that all sounds, at least the company's being nice and transparent about the whole matter, eh?

Update: To be clear, the developers of the offending apps had already removed them from the Android Market, so this was technically a cleanup. The only question is why Google would go out of its way to mop up an app that absolutely no one would miss.

[Thanks, Matt]

Google flexes biceps, flicks Android remote kill switch for the first time originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Jun 2010 04:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAndroid Developers Blog  | Email this | Comments

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Motorola's Droid X up for pre-order today at Best Buy: $200, no pesky mail-in rebates

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2010/06/25/motorolas-droid-x-up-for-pre-order-today-at-best-buy/

Sweatin' those iPhone 4 reception issues? Got a thing for beastlier phones? Still perturbed that your white iPhone 4 pre-order didn't exactly "work out" as expected? If you've found yourself nodding that noggin' up and down upon reading any of the above questions, you should know that Best Buy's offering pre-sales of Motorola's forthcoming Droid X starting today. The benefit, naturally, is that you can avoid Verizon's pesky $100 mail-in rebate, paying just $199.99 (plus all applicable taxes and bribes) to BB while grabbing a coveting spot in line for the next giant Android phone. Not like you needed an excuse to take a half-day today, but hey -- at least you've now got a legitimate one.

Continue reading Motorola's Droid X up for pre-order today at Best Buy: $200, no pesky mail-in rebates

Motorola's Droid X up for pre-order today at Best Buy: $200, no pesky mail-in rebates originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 25 Jun 2010 10:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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