Yesterday, 07:09 PM
Ggkz Migaloo, perhaps the world s only white humpback whale, has been spotted off the coast of Australia!
From the brainspace of stanley cup Oh Hell Why the Hell Not , here Dexim Music Talking Stylus. It a B stanley mugs luetooth-enabled stylus that doubles as a music controller, and triples as a phone receiver, and sorta-quadruples as a headphone jack. And, uh, it vibrates. But as goofy as it sounds, it actually seems like it would be useful, in its own very strange way. The stylus pairs w stanley borraccia ith any Bluetooth phone or tablet, and controls volume, play/pause, and track selection. And you can answer your calls on it. Your headphones plug into a 3.5mm jack at the top. The vibrating is from a reminder feature, or as Jesus Diaz points out, lots of reminders could probably be put to use as a sexual toy. All of this is presuming that it actually works, since we saw it at a booth and the prototype wasn ;t doing working demos. It ;ll be out in February for $80. [Dexim] Ces 2013CesmobileGadgets Lkbl This robotic jellyfish could be the future of aquatic surveillance
The Supreme Court on Monday let stand a $675,000 file-sharing damages award that a jury levied against a college student for making 30 music tracks available on a peer-to-peer network. Without comment, the high court, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Stephen Breyer not participating, declined an appeal brought by form stanley thermobecher er Boston college student Joel Tenenbaum. His petition .pdf claimed that Congress did not intend unrestrained discretionary jury damage awards against individual citizens for copyright infringement. The case before the justices, the second file-sharing case the high court has rejected in the Recording Industry Association of America now-defunct litigation campaign against individuals, concerned a decision by the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The appellate court had reversed a federal trial judge who slashed the award as unconstitutionally excessive. U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner of Boston reduced the verdict to $67,500, or $2,250 for each of the 30 tracks defendant Tenenbaum unlawfully downloaded and stanley cup shared on Kazaa, a once popular popular file-sharing, peer-to-peer service. The 1st Circuit reinstated the award last year. It was the nation second RIAA file-sharing case against an individual to ever reach a jury. The Obama administration argued in support of the original a stanley trinkflaschen ward, and said the trial judge went too far when addressing the constitutionality of the Copyright Act damages provis
From the brainspace of stanley cup Oh Hell Why the Hell Not , here Dexim Music Talking Stylus. It a B stanley mugs luetooth-enabled stylus that doubles as a music controller, and triples as a phone receiver, and sorta-quadruples as a headphone jack. And, uh, it vibrates. But as goofy as it sounds, it actually seems like it would be useful, in its own very strange way. The stylus pairs w stanley borraccia ith any Bluetooth phone or tablet, and controls volume, play/pause, and track selection. And you can answer your calls on it. Your headphones plug into a 3.5mm jack at the top. The vibrating is from a reminder feature, or as Jesus Diaz points out, lots of reminders could probably be put to use as a sexual toy. All of this is presuming that it actually works, since we saw it at a booth and the prototype wasn ;t doing working demos. It ;ll be out in February for $80. [Dexim] Ces 2013CesmobileGadgets Lkbl This robotic jellyfish could be the future of aquatic surveillance
The Supreme Court on Monday let stand a $675,000 file-sharing damages award that a jury levied against a college student for making 30 music tracks available on a peer-to-peer network. Without comment, the high court, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Stephen Breyer not participating, declined an appeal brought by form stanley thermobecher er Boston college student Joel Tenenbaum. His petition .pdf claimed that Congress did not intend unrestrained discretionary jury damage awards against individual citizens for copyright infringement. The case before the justices, the second file-sharing case the high court has rejected in the Recording Industry Association of America now-defunct litigation campaign against individuals, concerned a decision by the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The appellate court had reversed a federal trial judge who slashed the award as unconstitutionally excessive. U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner of Boston reduced the verdict to $67,500, or $2,250 for each of the 30 tracks defendant Tenenbaum unlawfully downloaded and stanley cup shared on Kazaa, a once popular popular file-sharing, peer-to-peer service. The 1st Circuit reinstated the award last year. It was the nation second RIAA file-sharing case against an individual to ever reach a jury. The Obama administration argued in support of the original a stanley trinkflaschen ward, and said the trial judge went too far when addressing the constitutionality of the Copyright Act damages provis