Snapdragon 8 Gen 5: el nuevo chip de Qualcomm para los flagship más accesibles
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Snapdragon 8 Gen 5: el nuevo chip de Qualcomm para los flagship más accesibles
Concept: Kintsugi crabs
Massive-growing hermit crabs who have adapted to live in plastic housing. They catch larval oysters, clams, mussels, and abalones and use a backwards brushing movement to deposit them on their "shells," where the symbionts will remain for life. The crab throws bits of food to its partners using the same movement. As the shell cracks, or the crab adds new plastic onto it, the ridealongs fill in gaps with nacre, creating a pearlescent Kintsugi appearance over time. Eventually, the shell will be mostly made of pearl or similar materials, with only a plastic "skeleton." Unlike Earth hermits, crabs in this family keep and build the same shell their whole lives, or until they find a house that works better, at which point they abandon their little spiral cities to the ocean floor. Another crab may come along and move into an abandoned shell, picking up where the previous homeowner left off.
For kintsugi crabs, time, shell size, and predation are the only real limits on growth size. If they can stay alive long enough to evade most active predators, they can come to rival the size of whales. Occasional bloops suggest there may be even bigger crabs crawling the floor of some less-explored oceans. House-height kintsugis have been reported scavenging whale falls; when the crab arrives, much of the other early scavengers bolt and scatter until kintju has its fill and wanders off.
Kintsugi crabs began, and have primarily remained, marine dwellers. However, some made their way onto land. They use their backwards waving, combined with an innate Create Water spell, to brush seawater onto their shells and keep the symbionts moist enough to function. Terrestrial kintjus can't get as big as the greatest marine crabs thanks to land gravity limits, but it is common for them to grow to tree height.
Why Apple's 2nd Gen UWB Chip is Exciting?
With over 10 years of experience in spatial and location technologies, including Bluetooth, Ultra Wideband, and Cellular IoT, we at Estimote are thrilled about the newly announced iPhone 15 and its upgraded second-generation Ultra Wideband chip.
In this blog post, we'll explain why we're excited, we will try to forecast the potential use-cases of this second-gen chip, and highlight the opportunities for developers to create groundbreaking context and location-aware apps.
SPATIAL AWARENESS
Many people aren't aware, but every iPhone from the iPhone 11 onwards has a hidden super-power. It can measure the distance and orientation to nearby phones or other compatible devices. Think of it as an invisible string connecting your phone to objects with AirTags attached, a HomePod, or even your car.
This super-power is made possible by the first generation Ultra Wideband chip (U1 chip). This chip is a small radio transmitter that sends, receives, and processes tiny radio signals. These signals are so low-power that they're almost indistinguishable from the background noise in a broad range of frequencies (5-9 GHz). That's why it's called Ultra Wideband, or UWB for short.
Whenever a nearby device communicates with an iPhone using UWB, the phone calculates the duration of this interaction. The greater the distance, the more time it takes for the radio signal to make the round trip. The U1 chip then multiplies this travel time by the speed of light to determine the inch-level distance to nearby phones or tags.
Life is hard.
I don't think you heard me son. That protest shit only works if you're Ghandi, now get your ass over here.
@unrepentantwarriorbaby
My first art post on tumblr
schedule update
i finally have my schedule finalized for autumn quarter (which starts end of september)! i’m so relieved that i know what i’m taking. i’ve never taken classes this late either (most are the only sections offered) so i actually have a lot of time to study! below are my classes and details. ALSO I HAVE FRIDAYS OFF!!!!
CSS 301 - advanced technical writing. i do really enjoy writing and i’m hoping this will be an easy class that will be my one savior from lots of math this quarter. i managed to get into this class by signing a class petition and waving the prerequisite. my advisor just got back to me today and put me into this class. i’m glad i can get all of my writing out of the way my very first quarter!! i do hope i can be technical enough.
B EE 215 - fundamentals of electrical engineering. okay, the course description looks terrible, i’ll be honest. it’ll be my first electrical engineering course and two years since i’ve done anything even remotely with circuits. i’m pretty nervous, but ready to learn more about the major i picked and hopefully make some friends since everyone in the department has to take it! i hope i can last with 4 hours of this class on monday...
STMATH 324 - multivariable calculus (aka calc 4). my final calc class!!!! i am so excited to get this over you guys have NO idea. i’m terrible at calc. i’m not looking forward to triple integrals. guys, i’m probably going to die from this class. i hope i can make it. it’s funny isn’t it? i’m an engineer who’s bad at math! my previous math grades were less than 3.0...but i’m ready and i’m going to aim for a 3.5! only one more “math” class after this (just a statistics)!
One of my offered college courses...is not like the other...