For what this Funny device?
Japanese Company Unveils A Thumb Attachment For Using Large Phones With One Hand. Is your smartphone display too big? This finger enlarger stylus from Japan can help.
The next stop of technology train is at the weird station located at Japan where once again we will be facing a rather bizarre product. How many of you own smartphones with big screens? Isn’t it a problem when you can’t use that big sized smartphone with a single hand? The usual fix is that you’ll have to stop acting cool and make use of both hands.
A brutal PIGS fight in China
These shocking images show the brutal moment two pigs fight to the death in front of cheering spectators at a crowded stadium.
The two desperate animals can be seen circling each other before they are forced into battle by being prodded and poked with long sticks by their trainers. As the two male beasts clash, they headbutt each other and attempt to bring their rival down by biting their neck.
The bloody show is a popular sport in China where officials have resisted calls from animal welfare campaigners to end the practice.
Amazing Future Truck
Video: Mercedes-Benz Drops Jaws With Their New ‘Future Truck 2025′ Featuring An Optimus Prime Style ‘Auto Pilot’ System Allowing Truckers To Surf Porn Sites Online While Pretending To Work! |
The Mercedes-Benz Future Truck 2025 concept made its official debut at the IAA commercial vehicle show in Hanover overnight. The Future Truck 2025 is equipped with the Highway Pilot system, which fuses together the truck’s various cameras and sensors to create a three-dimensional digital map, which includes the road, topography, and stationary and moving objects. Using this constantly updated view of its surroundings, Highway Pilot is able to steer the truck autonomously.
Let’s dance: Amazing Dancing Traffic Light
Main effect of this dance-off was to get people wait on the other side before crossing and it worked, then we are happy. |
The Dancing Traffic Light is a concept by the car company Smart that translates human dancing into real-time movements on an unconventional “Don’t Walk” light. The project is intended to make waiting at a stop light more entertaining to help dissuade people from crossing against traffic.
Amazing Real-time face tracking
“OMOTE” is an art installation by producer Nobumichi Asai and several other collaborators that features real-time face tracking and projection mapping. Throughout the installation, the model has her eyes closed, but various images are projected onto her face and contorted almost seamlessly as she moves her head.
Glowing Entities Following Russian Trains, July 26, 2014
The person that posted the video merely states; "what is it-UFO?!" Look closely at these glowing entities as they pursue and observe the train. There are three recorded instances that were posted on a Russian site and all of them have been placed into this single video. Such glowing entities have been seen following aircraft, over military bases and nuclear plants. This is what WWII pilots call foo fighters. They recording data for research purposes.
The July 26, 2014 in the railway Novgorod, Russia the presence of a possible entity or being pursued by the light rail at high speed and does it right in the middle of the tracks caught.
How to get to the beach
What better place than the city streets of Ensenada Mexico, the home of the Baja 1000, to set the stage for the sequel to Ballistic BJ Baldwin's viral hit Recoil. This short film by Monster Energy follows BJ and his 800hp Trophy Truck as he tears through this seaside Mexican city, ripping over every drop and jump the town has to offer in an attempt to win a bet set by his friend, and international playboy Dan Bilzerian. Will he win? What will he lose?
Awesome sausage for cutting vinyl records
Why You Shouldn't Brag About Growing Marijuana
Sidewalk for Smartphone Addicts is Open
Chinese City Creates Sidewalk Lane for Text Addicts |
A Chinese city has created a smartphone lane for pedestrians where they can tweet, text and surf the Internet without having to worry about where they're walking or who they're blocking.
While the 165-foot path located in Chongqing is meant to make a statement, pedestrians are warned to use them at their "own risk."
A sidewalk split down the center is clearly marked with a mobile phone icon showing it is acceptable to multitask, while the other side of the sidewalk makes it clear that smartphone multitasking isn't welcome.
"Those using their cellphones of course have not heeded the markings on the pavement," Nong Cheng, a marketing official for a group that manages the property, told the Associated Press.
Not surprisingly, Nong said it seems most people haven't even noticed the markings.
The inspiration for the bifurcated sidewalk came, according to Nong, after National Geographic Television conducted a behavioral experiment in Washington, D.C., using the concept.
While it may be more of a curiosity than a routine now, there are a few people who may benefit from a smartphone lane.
One distracted smartphone user reportedly fell into a fountain in a shopping mall in Reading, Pa., while another was so engrossed in her phone that she reportedly walked off a pier in Melbourne, Australia, in December.