Archive for June 28, 2012


Tweaking Moore’s Law Intel’s Future Vision


Intel has taken their perception, vision and predicitons on how the future of our productive lives will most likely look like. The video offers and array of scenarios that are futuristic in our time!

List_of_emerging_technologies

As a boy I had a repeating dream that I could fly.


“I’m Flying”

Flying dreams fall under a category of dreams known as lucid dreams. Lucid dreams occur when you become aware that you are dreaming. Many dreamers describe the ability to fly in their dreams as an exhilarating, joyful, and liberating experience.

If you are flying with ease and are enjoying the scene and landscape below, then it suggests that you are on top of a situation. You have risen above something. It may also mean that you have gained a new and different perspective on things. Flying dreams and the ability to control your flight is representative of your own personal sense of power.

Image Source: http://explow.com/human_flight

Forbes report argues that Google Glass will be standing in the way of Facebook’s maneuvering for a larger mobile presence.

 

By allowing professional photographers to preview the device, Google is signaling that Project Glass is not simply a mobile device, but also as a social device. Photos are a key part of modern human social interaction, and Glass will provide a way for users to share their first-hand experiences, to allow others to see things from their perspective. Facebook wants users to fill their Timelines with a record of their life. However, if all of those experiences are filtered through the view of a Google product, will Facebook ever be able to get ahead? Source: webpronews.com/

 

Google gave quite the dramatic presentation when Sergey Brin interrupted a Google+ presentation to demo the much talked about Project Glass. This is the Project Glass presentation in its entirety.


The announcement behind all the spectacle was that Google I/O attendees will be able to pre-order the “Explorer Edition” of Google Glass for $1,500. U.S.-based convention attendees will be able to have the device shipped to them “early next year.”

 
Image Source: Wired.com / Google