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Rinspeed will present its new sQuba, the worlds first diving car, at the Geneva Motor Show (March 6-16). The car is not only able to drive on roads autonomously with a push of a button (thus without a driver, passenger or further assistance), but can also transform into an amphibious vehicle which can be submerged in water up to 10 meters (33 feet). An electric motor with powerful torque drives the rear wheels, while the propulsion on the water is ensured by two propellers in the stern and two powerful jet drives in the bow propelling the vehicle under water while diving.

When underwater, the driver and passenger are enclosed in the vehicle thanks to light weight body components made of futuristic Carbon Nano Tubes and are supplied with fresh breathing air by the self-contained on-board system.



Source: http://www.automotivetv.net/
An advanced prototype of the flying roadster AeroMobil 3.0 was unveiled in Vienna during the Pioneers Festival that celebrates entrepreneurship, technology and innovation.

A beautifully designed fully functional prototype of a flying car developed and built in only 10 months.

Tonton Video Ini Untuk Demonstrasi Kereta Terbang


All the Best.

Credit: http://www.aeromobil.com/

Hari ini kami nak share beberapa contoh DIY yang boleh dibuat sendiri untuk menambah booster signal wifi. Anda boleh cuba sendiri dirumah.





Teknologi "Google Glass" akan berada dalam pasaran tidak lama lagi.

Google announced that it was closing down its Explorer program for Google Glass -- a scheme that let any US or UK consumer pay US$1500 for a pre-launch version of the headset -- on Jan 15. Two weeks later the company's CFO said that the project needed to be put on pause and the device's use and direction rethought.


No high-tech device in recent history has been so polarizing. The term 'Glasshole' was coined to describe users, regulators moved to ban its use while driving, and cinemas, bars, and diners started barring entry to wearers.

Apple's head of design, Jony Ive revealed that he didn't think much of Google Glass as part of a New Yorker profile published this week and, according to the piece, neither did his boss. Tim Cook is quoted as saying: "We always thought that glasses were not a smart move....They were intrusive...." He went on, looking at the Apple Watch on his wrist, "This isn't building a barrier between you and me."

However, in the realm of business, enterprises started to become more and more taken by its enterprise capabilities. Google set up the Glass at Work program and companies specializing in everything from healthcare to car building started developing very specific apps for the device.

And, according to 9to5 Google, it's these Glass at Work partners that have just received a next-generation version of Google Glass and are now busy putting it through its paces.

The publication's sources claim that there are several different prototype versions and that they have been circulating since October.

And, a possible consumer version isn't dead, yet. Tony Fadell, founder of Nest and one of the team that bought the iPod and the iPhone to life during his time at Apple, has been tasked with making the device into something that looks desirable as well as useful.

Meanwhile other companies have started launching their own smart headsets.

Lenovo and Samsung are both understood to have smart headsets in development, while Epson's Moverio BT-200 headset and Vuzix's M100 Smart Glasses have both been on the market for over a year. And the latest company to move into the smart headset market is Sony. Its SmartEyeGlass headset starts shipping in March for US$840
HP president and CEO Meg Whitman has made good on a promise to acquire more companies
Just last week, Hewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman said that her company would be "on the hunt" to acquire new companies, and now she has made good on that promise.

HP plans to buy Aruba Networks in a $3 billion transaction that, factoring in cash and debt, works out to about $2.7 billion, the companies announced Monday. The deal, which was approved by the boards at both companies, will see Aruba become part of the HP Enterprise Group, led by that division's head, Antonio Neri. Aruba CEO Dominic Orr and Chief Strategy and Technology Officer Keerti Melkote will stay on and report to Neri.

Aruba Networks, which has approximately 1,800 employees and generated $729 million in revenue during its most recent fiscal year, provides corporations with services that manage wireless networks and "trigger security actions" on mobile devices.

Its business has been built around the idea that mobility has become a major trend in the corporate world, requiring IT departments to find new ways to handle issues that arise on smartphones, tablets and notebooks, and to ensure compliance with company security protocols. All of that is done automatically, so companies don't need to have a dedicated IT person handling issues with mobile products.

Aruba Networks will complement HP's existing networking business, which provides products and services to corporations to help employees get online. In a statement, HP said that it believes "enterprises need comprehensive, integrated and secure networking solutions to help them transition legacy systems to the wireless edge," and its Aruba buy could help that effort.

The acquisition announcement comes just days after Whitman told Recode in an interview that her company must "make some acquisitions" to continue to grow. She said that while HP itself has the ability to bring some innovation to the marketplace, the quickest and best way to achieve such a goal would be to acquire other companies.

The Aruba acquisition is slated to close in the second half of 2015, pending regulatory approval. Aruba must also gain shareholder approval.

HP shares rose 23 cents, or 0.66 percent, to $35.07 in premarket trading. Aruba's shares were down 40 cents, or 1.6 percent, to $24.41.

HP and Aruba Networks both declined to comment on the report.
Samsung’s latest flagship smartphone is thinner, made of glass and metal, and has a curved screen version

Samsung’s Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge is the Korean company’s new weapon against Apple and Chinese competitors. Photograph: Manu Fernandez/AP


Samsung’s new Galaxy S6 flagship smartphones have powerful processors, very high resolution screens and a new metal and glass design – but sacrifices have been made in pursuit of premium materials and a curved screen in Samsung’s war with Apple.

1. To curve, or not to curve
The Galaxy S6 Edge has a gently curved screen on the left and right sides. Samsung has not one, but two Galaxy S6 models – one with a standard, flat screen similar to most other phones and the Galaxy S6 Edge with a screen that curves around both left and right-hand edges of the phone.

2. It packs in the pixels
Curved or not, the Galaxy S6 has one of the most pixel-dense screens available. The 5.1in screen has a quad HD resolution with a density of 577 pixels per inch (ppi), making it denser than the 432ppi Galaxy S5, 401ppi Apple iPhone 6 Plus– and 43 more pixels per inch than the 534ppi 5.5in LG G3.

The denser the screen the sharper the image, up to a point. Whether users will be able to see the difference is unknown, although quad HD is quickly becoming the new standard for smartphone and tablet screens.

3. The curved screen isn’t just for show

As with the Note 4 Edge, the curved screen on the S6 Edge adds a few features that slide out from the side of the phone. These include ticker-tape news alerts, a clock along the edge at night and a feature that places contact photos along the edge for quick access and to recognise who’s calling.

4. They’ve ditched the plastic
Out is Samsung’s trademark, yet criticised, chromed plastic construction – the S6 is an all-metal and glass affair. A curved metal band surrounds the edges of the phone holding together a glass front and back.

5. Thinner than an iPhone, just

Thinner than an iPhone 6, by 0.1mm. The S6 and S Edge are 6.8mm thick, which is 0.1mm thinner than Apple’s iPhone 6, although both are roundly trounced to the thinnest smartphone crown by the Oppo R5, which is just 4.85mm thick.

6. Don’t get it wet
To achieve that thickness and premium design, the S6 has lost a few features. A microSD card for adding additional storage, waterproofing and a removable battery are all missing, which was a cornerstone of Samsung’s previous Android smartphones.

7. A choice of storage – all fixed
With no external storage support, Samsung has adopted Google and Apple’s model of fixed storage variants – users will have a choice of buying a 32, 64 or 128GB version.

8. It uses Samsung’s shiny new chip
The S6 uses Samsung’s own Octa-core 64-bit Exynos processor. Previous Samsung smartphones have used Qualcomm’s Snapdragon processors, although Exynos variants have been available in some countries.

9. No cable needed

The S6 Edge on a wireless charging plate. Samsung has pledged to force wireless charging into the mainstream, and the S6 is the first smartphone from the company to have it built-in. It will work with any wireless charging pad currently available, which is good, because there isn’t one included in the box.

10. Fingerprints: touch, don’t swipe
Samsung’s improved fingerprint sensor takes a leaf out of Apple’s book, requiring only a single touch rather than swipe across (as was standard with previous Samsung models), which should make it more accurate and easier to use.

11. Another step towards a world without credit cards?
Credit cards are dead, if technology firms are to be believed. Samsung has launched “Samsung Pay”, which allows users to pay for goods and services using a credit card swipe terminal, joining Apple Pay, Google Wallet, PayPal, mobile phone carriers and others attempting to be the new vector for paying for things.

12. It’s virtual reality ready (if you get a smaller Gear VR)

Samsung Gear VR will come in a smaller version for the Galaxy S6. The Gear VR – Samsung’s virtual reality headset that was made in partnership with Facebook’s Oculus Rift for use with a Galaxy Note 4 – will have a smaller version for the Galaxy S6.

13. Less bloat – kind of
Samsung proclaimed that it has cut back on unnecessary bloat and feature overload by 40%, but that doesn’t include Intel’s McAfee security software and Microsoft’s apps, including Skype, OneDrive and OneNote, which now come pre-installed on the S6.