How to Install Android on Your iPhone. (Editor's note: David Wang is an accomplished iPhone hacker and member of the iPhone Dev Team. Tinker with your gadgets at your own peril--we're not responsible for what happens if you brick your iPhone, however unlikely that may be.) Maybe you want to liberate your iPhone from Apple's clutches. Maybe you just want to tinker with something new. Either way, you've seen Android running on the iPhone, and you want to try it for yourself. Still a Work in Progress Although this port does everything that you expect your smartphone to be able to do, it isn't usable for day-to-day activities just yet--I haven't implemented any power-management functions, so a fully charged iPhone running Android will last only an hour or so.
A few bugs and performance issues remain, too, so while the phone will be usable, it won't be fast. Finally, media syncing is not working, so loading your media onto your phone is kind of a pain. Required Reading What You Need 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Learn to Be a SPY! Tactics and Training... « Hard To Find Software. Check out these spy training E-Books! Great resources on how to incorporate real spy tactics to improve your own invisibility and privacy in a world that is going the other way. COUNTER SURVEILLANCE: CLEANING RUNS- Advanced Security Tradecraft. This in the only book (or eBook) you will find that teaches you how to do a professional Cleaning Run!
This eBook explains the art of the Cleaning Run, which is a very advanced form of Counter Surveillance used extensively by KGB agents and still taught by all top agencies today. SAFE HOUSES- Advanced Security Tradecraft. These are just two of the ebooks offered, there are many more on several very important spy and surveillance techniques. check them out today by clicking on the learn more button! Wave Bubble.
Two Wavebubbles. Left is an earlier revision with the top removed and with external antennas. Right is v1.0 with internal antennas, fit into a pack of cigarettes. This website details the design and construction Wave Bubble: a self-tuning, wide-bandwidth portable RF jammer. The device is lightweight and small for easy camouflaging: it is the size of a pack of cigarettes. An internal lithium-ion battery provides up to 2 hours of jamming (two bands, such as cell) or 4 hours (single band, such as cordless phone, GPS, WiFi, bluetooth, etc). The battery is rechargeable via a mini-USB connector or 4mm DC jack (a common size).
Output power is .1W (high bands) and .3W (low bands). Self-tuning is provided via dual PLL, therefore, no spectrum analyzer is necessary to build this jammer and a single Wave Bubble can jam many different frequency bands - unlike any other design currently available! This design is not for sale or available as a kit and never will be due to FCC regulations. Basic Trigonometry by Khan Academy. Philosophy since the Enlightenment, by Roger Jones. Dynamic Periodic Table. Usenet Physics FAQ. Version Date: August 2013 This list of answers to frequently asked questions in physics was created by Scott Chase in 1992. Its purpose was to provide good answers to questions that had been discussed often in the sci.physics and related Internet news groups.
The articles in this FAQ are based on those discussions and on information from good reference sources. They were later maintained and enlarged by Michael Weiss and Philip Gibbs. Others who have written for the FAQ are credited at the top of the items they submitted, while many more who have made smaller contributions have been thanked privately. Most of the entries that you'll find here were written in the days when the Internet was brand new. But rather than showing their age, this means that they were written in a time when most contributions to the Internet came from authors who had a lot of knowledge of their subject.
This document is copyright. General Physics Particle and Nuclear Physics Quantum Physics Relativity and Cosmology. TED: Ideas worth spreading. The Secret of the Fibonacci Sequence in Trees. As I headed to the exhibit where the hamadryas baboons ( Papio hamadryas ) resided, I knew something interesting would happen over the next few hours. As I walked into the exhibit, I found two mothers pulling their infants' tails to keep them from straying. This particular act reminded me of how some parents put leashes on their children so they won't wander too far. This example demonstrated how similar the behavior of hamadryas baboons and humans can be. Throughout my life I have enjoyed observing animals and the way they interact with their surroundings. Walking through parks I have watched squirrels, birds and other animals, always curious to know what their actions meant. When I visit zoos, I always wonder how much the animals' behavior is affected by their captivity.
The null hypothesis for my first question is that there will be no differences in the behaviors of captive hamadryas baboons compared to wild hamadryas baboons. Simen, a 19-year-old Alpha Male Flannery, Sean. Body's Defenses Made Mightier by Microbes, Study Says. <br/><a href=" US News</a> | <a href=" Business News</a> Copy When it comes to bacteria, many people have a pretty simple view: Germs are bad, and our lives should be as free of them as possible.
But an alternate idea suggests just the opposite: Germs are a necessary part of a healthy immune system, helping our body's defenses beef up and fight future illnesses. When a person's exposure to germs is decreased, problems may arise. The idea is called the hygiene hypothesis. For years, scientists have suspected that it played a role in how diseases affect people in the modern hand-sanitized world, but they never had any specific evidence.
But a new study from researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston has changed that. Researchers studied two kinds of mice: One group had been exposed to a normal bacteria environment, and another group that was germ-free. But all was not lost for the germ-free mice. Dr. Artificial photosynthesis hits record speed. Swedish researchers say they've built a molecular catalyzer that can oxidize water to oxygen very quickly - reaching speeds not far off those of natural photosynthesis. While artificial photosynthesis has been under development for 30 years, it's the first time that such a conversion rate has been reached - about 300 turnovers per second, compared with 100 to 400 for natural photosynthesis. "Speed has been the main problem, the bottleneck, when it comes to creating perfect artificial photosynthesis," says Licheng Sun, professor of organic chemistry at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH).
"This is clearly a world record, and a breakthrough regarding a molecular catalyzer in artificial photosynthesis. " The result, he says, could make it possible in the future to create large-scale facilities for producing hydrogen in the Sahara, or combine the technique with traditional solar cells. The team plans to continue working to try and drive down the price of the technology.