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Marea negra. La renovación supuso unas nuevas mecánicas de reestructuración social y económica alrededor del nuevo Dios que permitía una nueva pujanza entre las competencias de un mundo que ha girado siempre sobre lo que reconoce como motor principal de sus recursos, aunque aún no los termine de entender, y siempre concluya suplantándolos por otros. El tiempo después de la renovación fue largo junto al ritmo de las ambiciones, y esa carrera alrededor del elemento sustancial y simbólico de la también simbólica riqueza, ha llegado, otra vez, al punto de donde solo puede retrocederse con la violenta marea en las narices.

La Primavera Árabe condujo a una disminución en la producción de crudo, y fue la primera piedra en el pozo que causó la ola del caos. El drama actual radica en que esa producción ha retornado a sus niveles conocidos, pero ha frenado su demanda. La inversión de la ecuación, por lo demás, no suprime los desplomes del mundo. Johnny Chung Lee - Projects - Wii. As of June 2008, Nintendo has sold nearly 30 million Wii game consoles. This significantly exceeds the number of Tablet PCs in use today according to even the most generous estimates of Tablet PC sales.

This makes the Wii Remote one of the most common computer input devices in the world. It also happens to be one of the most sophisticated. It contains a 1024x768 infrared camera with built-in hardware blob tracking of up to 4 points at 100Hz. Any software on this page is primarily meant for developers and may not run without proper the development tools installed. NOTE: For most of these projects, you don't need the Nintendo Wii console. Coming Later: 3D tracking, and more.... Unfortunately, time constraints in the next couple of months have significantly reduced my ability to work on more projects. 1,000,000,000,000 Frames/Second Photography - Ramesh Raskar. Nokia's new PureView ad is amazing, too bad it's faked. The new PureView camera might be amazing, but a bizarre easter egg has revealed that the company's advertisements don't give an honest view of its technology.

Amid Nokia's flurry of press today — if you haven't heard, it released a new flagship phone along with some other gear — one video advertisement in particular caught our eye. In the ad, Nokia shows off the PureView's image stabilization technology. The opening segment (which, importantly, isn't qualified by a "screen images simulated" notice), shows a young man and woman cheerily riding bikes along a scenic river. As he films her breezily laughing, the ad shows side-by-side video — obviously intended to represent the phone's video capabilities. On the left, Nokia shows the non-stabilized version, which, predictably, looks terrible, and on the right the ad shows the perfectly smooth capture, purportedly enabled by Nokia's optical image stabilization technology. The only problem is that the video is faked. Wall Photos. Project Glass: Google’s Augmented Reality Experiment.