Sunday, June 24, 2012

Alan Turing Google congratulated with interactive Doodle 100th




With an interactive Google Doodle honouring the founders of artificial intelligence, Alan Turing. The early computer genius would have turned 100 years old.

He scales as a puzzle game on Google. They should not just be ignorant to crack. It is rather a kind of intelligence test. Pressing the green button will start the game. The goal is to “Google to fill "letters with colours, by simulating a binary number code.

Is this a Tabtop or Laplet?



Microsoft's calculator "Surface" creates a link between tablet and laptop. As elegant as the iPad, it is not.

If the flat, pink keyboard near the screen, the display begins to dim light pink glow. The keyboard is blue, the user interface also shines in blue. This is a very nice gimmick and one of the few published details about the new Tablet "Surface" that Microsoft has unveiled this week. The keyboard is actually a cover of the screen, but can open and use for typing.

George is dead


He was probably the last of his kind Lonesome George, the lonely George is dead, the world famous Galapagos giant tortoise is an age of more than one hundred years have been reached.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Damp basement effectiveness



It’s certainly clear to see that damp proofing is not an important part of the constructions project; it still plays a very important role.  New build properties will, have a physical separation covering around 150mm above external ground level - a damp proof course.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Piranha 3DD Trailer


Windows 8 for 15 € or free of charge



As suspected starts this Saturday Microsoft's marketing campaign for Windows 8 Anyone up to 31 January 2013 a new PC with Windows 7 buys, you get the upgrade to Windows 8 for 14,99 €. Thus the transition in Europe is minimal expensive than in the U.S., where only $ 14.99 will be charged.

Meet the century before the sun



Wednesday morning the Venus will be visible for the last time for 105 years as a black dot on the ball of fire.

The British navigator James Cook sailed to Tahiti in 1769 to attend to the spectacle. For out of the South Seas was on 3 June of that year very well to see how a black dot moved across the blazing bright solar disk - Venus, the second planet in the solar system and our inner neighbour. Next Wednesday, it will be easier to watch these so-called transits of Venus; we have to get up very early on: From 4.58 clocks, the event could be seen from Hamburg. Open, however, whether the weather will play along: Currently, light cloud cover predicted.