Завод Volkswagen | БОЛЬШОЕ и Ричард Хаммонд | Discovery
Дата премьеры: 25 февр. 2020 г.Площадь производства в три раза больше Монако.
1 новый автомобиль каждые 16 секунд. Частная железная дорога в 60 километров и сеть автодорог в 70. Это город внутри города. Это завод Volkswagen.
Как утроено производство, в чем секрет качества и зачем на заводе 6 тысяч велосипедов? Смотрите прямо сейчас!
Ричард Хаммонд — инженер в душе — отправляется в кругосветное путешествие, чтобы познакомить нас с поражающими своими размерами шедеврами инженерного искусства. Чтобы узнать, как строился самый длинный железнодорожный тоннель или корабль размером с 4 футбольных поля, он побеседует с теми, кто их создал — с инженерами, конструкторами и другими неизвестными героями.
О том, почему размер имеет значение, смотрите по вторникам в 22:00 (мск) на телеканале Discovery!
Technology Meets Contemporary Design | The Serif TV by Samsung
Опубликовано: 26 дек. 2019 г.Television’s are fundamental in almost every home, often becoming a feature of your living room whether you like it or not. Recently it was the Frame from Samsung that began to revolutionise the way a TV should act, with its preference towards being an artwork rather than a flat black box. However this new collaboration between Samsung and Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec, takes this concept even further; with their design of the Serif TV blurring the lines between furniture and technology, and how they integrate within our lifestyle.
With a distinctive I shaped profile inspired by the Serif font, this TV is also packed with Samsung's Quantum Dot QLED technology and unique ambient mode features. We recently took the Serif for a test drive and love how unique and distinctive it is in a market still dominated by black squares on walls.
⚡ Home, Design & Lifestyle ⚡
Making your home awesome since 2010. Your go-to source of inspiration for home, design & lifestyle. Home Tours, How To's and the Latest in Homewares. https://www.huntingforgeorge.com/
Опубликовано: 6 янв. 2020 г.Let's be real: Panasonic isn't the most exciting or talked-about technology company. But if you've ever stopped and wondered «what is the Japanese titan up to these days?» then we heartily recommend watching its CES 2020 press conference. The company used its precious stage time to talk about the projection technology it deployed for the Tokyo 2020 'One Year to Go' ceremony and various Disney attractions including Star Wars: Galaxy Edge. Panasonic also touched on the power assist suit that will be used by weightlifting assistants during the 2020 Paralympic Games, as well as CIRRUS, a vehicle-centric data platform that's being trialled in Utah.
Samsung's 'SelfieType' aims to let you type on an invisible keyboard
Using nothing but your device's selfie camera
In context: When you think of keyboards, your mind is probably instantly drawn to the traditional, QWERTY-based physical devices you see in just about every modern home, business, and office throughout the world. Or perhaps you think of the smartphone and tablet-based digital keyboards many of us interact with daily. Either way, neither of these keyboard form factors are enough for some companies, and it seems Samsung is one of them.
The company today announced that it will be showing off five «innovative» products from its C-Lab start-up incubator. One of the products is «SelfieType,» a piece of software that can use a device's front-facing «selfie» camera — whether it's a laptop, smartphone, or tablet — to create an invisible keyboard for users to take advantage of.
To use SelfieType, you angle your device's front-facing camera toward your hands and begin typing. So long as all of your fingers are visible, SelfieType's «proprietary» AI engine should be able to analyze your finger movements and interpret them as valid key presses.
The software itself seems quite innovative, but in the real world, we wouldn't be surprised if users have a tough time using it. Just about every digital keyboard out there offers haptic feedback when a button is pressed — usually a quick vibration combined with an audible «click.» Further, when operating the average digital keyboard, users can see precisely which key they're pressing at any given moment, and mistakes are easy to fix.
By necessity, SelfieType appears to be throwing all of that out the window. The software doesn't seem to have any audio or