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How to Enable Titlebar Text and Icon in Mozilla Firefox 28 and Later?

We told you earlier that Mozilla has launched the "Australis UI" in Firefox 28.0 version which is currently under development and testing and can be downloaded using Nightly branch: Mozilla Firefox Nightly Build News and Updates There are many big UI changes in this new Australis UI and one of these changes is the removal […]



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This Astronomical Watch Puts A Planetarium On Your Wrist

Van Cleef & Arpel have showcased the stunning new astronomical watch at Geneva’s annual Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie.


The 44mm Midnight Planétarium displays the numerical time along with the rotation of the planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, all of which are visible from Earth. The sun sits at the heart of the watch. The planets, all made from semi-precious and precious stones, rotate the central stone in the same amount of time that it takes for the real planets to orbit the sun. So for example, the stone representing Mercury will complete a full rotation in 88 days. Saturn, however takes a little while longer at 29 years.


Minight Planetarium Watch


Another pretty highlight of this beautiful watch is the “Lucky Day” feature. The bezel can be used to select a special day of the year, at which point the Earth will fall underneath the painted star on the watch’s crystal on the day that is selected.


Van Cleef & Arpel joined up with Dutch designer Christiaan van der Klaauw, who is renowned for his astronomic expertise because it wanted to add a special watch to its Poetic Astronomy series. Denis Giguet, master watchmaker for the company, said that the most difficult thing was to make the planets rotate properly on the thin, small frame.


Such a stunning timepiece obviously doesn’t come cheap. Yet at $245,000, it would be worth every penny to have this on your wrist.



[Image via Luxois]


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AIMP 3.55.1338

AIMP is a free audio player with support for large number of formats and playlists. It works with multiple playlists immediately, allows creation of bookmarks and also has a playback queue.





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ALLPlayer 5.8.1

ALLPlayer is one of the most popular programs for watching movies with matching subtitles. It plays all known media formats, RAR files, and futhermore has an implemented LiveUpdate function to update the latest codecs if there is a problem with opening a movie file.





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New E-Whiskers Could Help Robots “Feel” Their Environment

Faculty scientist Ali Javey is leading a research team made up of researchers from Berkley Lab and the University of California, in a bid to create tactile sensors from composite films of carbon nanotubes and silver nanoparticles. These are loosely based on highly sensitive whiskers that would normally be found on cats and rats.


So far we’ve seen nanotechnology applied to e-skin or electronic eye implants. This new research, supported by DARPA, found that e-whiskers can respond to a tiny amount of pressure, as small as a single pascal, which when put in to perspective relates to the same amount of pressure exerted by a dollar bill when laid on a table surface.


Cat whiskers


“Whiskers are hair-like tactile sensors used by certain mammals and insects to monitor wind and navigate around obstacles in tight spaces,” says Javey. “Our electronic whiskers consist of high-aspect-ratio elastic fibers coated with conductive composite films of nanotubes and nanoparticles. In tests, these whiskers were 10 times more sensitive to pressure than all previously reported capacitive or resistive pressure sensors.”


The team used a carbon nanotube paste to form an electrically conductive network matrix, which was highly flexible. This was then loaded with a thin film of silver nanoparticles, which gave the matrix high sensitivity to mechanical strain.


“The strain sensitivity and electrical resistivity of our composite film is readily tuned by changing the composition ratio of the carbon nanotubes and the silver nanoparticles,” Javey explains. “The composite can then be painted or printed onto high-aspect-ratio elastic fibers to form e-whiskers that can be integrated with different user-interactive systems.”


It is hoped that this development in nanotechnology could give robots the ability to “see” and “feel” their surroundings. E-whiskers could also be used in measuring heartbeats and pulse rates.


“The ease of fabrication, light weight and excellent performance of our e-whiskers should have a wide range of applications for advanced robotics, human-machine user interfaces, and biological applications,” says Javey.


[Image via NZVA.org]


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[Changelog] What’s New in Microsoft Edge 130 and Later Versions

UPDATE: Addition of Microsoft Edge 132.0 version. In this exclusive changelog article, we are providing information about all versions of Mi...