Saturday, December 31, 2011
An app that lets you see through clothing
It’s hard to think of a better way to showcase augmented reality technology than by making use of it to undress models.
Oh Gizmo
Friday, December 30, 2011
Finally a robot cooking your food
17 years old highschool student developed cancer fighting Nanoparticle
Zhang, the only female individual finalist, said her research was in part motivated by her family. Her great grandfather had liver cancer and her grandfather died of lung cancer when she was in seventh grade.
The particle she designed improves on current cancer treatments because it delivers a drug directly to tumor cells and doesn't affect healthy cells around it. The particle is also able to release a drug when activated by a laser. The idea is still years away from being used in patients, however. Zhang says it could take 25 years between clinical trials and other steps before her research is helping patients.
Geekologie
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Double Helix Lamp
Yeah, lava lamps were cool a few decades ago, but there has to be a way to update that kind of aesthetic to celebrate our growing knowledge of DNA sequencing, right? LucidMovement created his DIY, Grown Crystal Double Helix Lamp by submerging a double helix wire formation in a warm alum solution for a while, removing the crystal-covered wires, placing them in a glass tube, and filling in the gaps with clear silicone.
Geekosystem
The best 3D projection turn your living room into the movies you're watching
These are three videos showing off some crazy-ass video projection system that has the power to turn your living room into the movie you're watching. By attaching the PlayStation Move to the camera, we can track projections to screens in real time, enhancing the effect of spatial deformation and false perspective on the projections and allowing viewers to look round (virtual) corners, bend walls, create a hole in the wall, or remove the walls altogether to reveal vast expanses of virtual worlds.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
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