live with the world: 06/18/15

ABOUT GIVING VALUE

I always think of many things that has no value 

later I realise that everything in this world has some value 

whether it is of more or less value 

then I get a thought that everything in this nature is born likely 

so I point out myself that, the value is same to every born

if you treat it as valuable then it is valuable 

if not then it is invaluable.....


Andy Biersack

“Stand up for what you believe in, even if that means 

standing alone.” 

A Tracking Camera Drone

Camera drones certainly are growing in popularity -- or further polluting the sky, depending on your perspective. A new model plans to follow your every move, thanks to a tracker on your wrist.

After you throw Lily, it will fly up to 50 feet in the air and 100 feet away from you, knowing where you are and keeping its lens focused on whatever you're doing. A smartphone app helps you adjust the camera angle, and has two cameras to boost the number of possible angles.

Lily also uses an accelerometer on the tracker to recognize when your motion shifts suddenly -- like if you're a BMX addict jumping off a ramp -- and will momentarily switch to slow motion footage to give your moment of glory a little more shine. Rad.

I would have loved to have something like Lily when I walked in the Scottish Highlands to capture myself in the majesty of that natural beauty -- well, at least in the early part of the trek, before every step felt like the last I'd ever take.

City Of The Future – Britain Showed How Cities Could Look Like

Can you imagine how would your home town look in, let’s say, 100 years? You don’t need to try to guess anymore, because very well known architects from all around the 
world created model of a city of the future that could be real sooner than you might think. And trust me, it is really worth it.
Many famous scientists agree that underground cities will be normal part of our daily life. Under cities that exist now, builders could construct another parts of the cities, that could accommodate millions of people. This is one of the most logic solutions, especially in cities, like London or in Asian cities.

luke arm

Luke is the most advanced prosthetic arm approved by the FDA that can perform highly complex tasks; and it is a transformative innovation in upper-limb prosthetics.

interesting fact is

Driven by science. Inspired by science fiction. Enabled by innovation. Supported by Analog Devices. This is the Luke arm, named for Luke Skywalker’s prosthetic arm from Star Wars: the Empire Strikes Back*, and made real by the engineering minds at DEKA Research and Development Corp.

EVERYTHING

Good or bad 

that depends on how you see, not on what you see. 

Mount Everest Moves 1 Inch After Earthquake

The incredible energy unleashed by the magnitude-7.8 earthquake that hit Nepal on April 25 moved Mount Everest more than an inch.

The world's tallest mountain shifted 1.18 inches (3 centimeters) to the southwest during the quake, according to the state-run China Daily newspaper, which cited a new report by China's National Administration of Surveying, Mapping and Geoinformation
It's impossible, however, to predict when such a quake might occur, or whether April's quake influenced the chances of a later temblor.

"Movement on this fault will have affected nearby faults, and some of the faults will be promoted closer to failure [causing a quake], and some will be pulled farther away from failure," Briggs said. "The trouble we have is the timing part. We don't know where all these faults are in their kind of 'clocks' and how close they were to kind of going anyway."

Complicating the guessing game is the lack of geological evidence. The type of quake that shook Nepal doesn't necessarily leave a strong trace in the rock record, Briggs said. 

Imagine a hand pushing on a metal ruler until the instrument bows. When the ruler finally springs back against the pressure, as the Eurasian plate did against the pressure of the Indian plate, it changes shape. But the overarching pressure of the hand (or Indian plate, in this case) continues, deforming the ruler back into its bowed shape.

"Kathmandu is going to go down, and it's going to move back in the direction of Asia, and the Himalaya [region] is going to come back up," Briggs said. The changes in the Earth are elastic, he said, and "they're mostly canceled out in between the big earthquakes."

The quake was also what is known as a "blind rupture," meaning there was no visible fault line or cracking at the surface. That makes it harder to see how many times such a quake has happened before, and how likely it is to happen again.

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