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<title>Haaze.com / cmarkmammm / All</title>
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<pubDate>Mon, 09 May 2011 07:10:39 +0000</pubDate>
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<title><![CDATA[Mobile Make Out: Pucker up on your iPhone]]></title>
<link>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=mobile-make-out-pucker-up-on-your-iphone</link>
<comments>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=mobile-make-out-pucker-up-on-your-iphone</comments>
<pubDate>Mon, 09 May 2011 07:10:39 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>cmarkmammm</dc:creator>
<category>Technology</category>
<guid>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=mobile-make-out-pucker-up-on-your-iphone</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Mmm, tastes like iPhone.(Credit:Sparkling Zoo)Mobile Make Out is an iPhone app on a mission. It wants to help your cheating heart get some release without completely destroying your real relationship. The free app works by connecting to another user over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. You then smooch away on a pair of lips on youriPhone's screen while your app partner mashes lips on his own device. This raises an interesting question. Is kissing someone else through your iPhone considered cheating The app makers encourage you to invite your colleagues, friends, and strangers at parties to join you in your kiss-a-thon. Try explaining to your significant other why you were caught making out with your mobile phone. Somehow, I don't think that will go over well.The best part about Mobile Make Out's marketing is its insistence that loving up your iPhone is &quot;almost like the real thing.&quot; I'm not quite ready to test that out, but I suspect that necking the cold hard glass of an iPhone is pretty far from the real thing. The app does give a helpful warning that too much lipstick can damage your iPhone. So, ladies, go easy on the Avon.Related links &amp;149' Cloud Girlfriends teach you how to fake it &amp;149' How to kiss your Facebook friend online for real &amp;149' Blow a Valentine's kiss with your iPhoneThere is a catch. It takes two iPhones to make the app work. That means having a potentially embarrassing conversation with the object of your crush. &quot;Um, excuse me. Sorry to interrupt you in your cubicle as you're crunching spreadsheets, but would you mind downloading an app that will allow me to virtually smooch you up during work hours Yes, I am married, but this is purely platonic, of course.&quot; Good luck with that. The app's YouTube promo video invites you to make out with all of your Facebook friends. I don't know what your Facebook friend list looks like, but mine includes close relatives and colleagues. One word comes to mind: &quot;Eww.&quot; Still, this app could be a godsend for Apple fanboys who finally have an excuse to lay some real lovin' on their beloved iPhones.<br/><br/>0 Vote(s) ]]></description>
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<title><![CDATA[Enryu rescue robot gets Fukushima mission]]></title>
<link>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=enryu-rescue-robot-gets-fukushima-mission</link>
<comments>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=enryu-rescue-robot-gets-fukushima-mission</comments>
<pubDate>Sat, 23 Apr 2011 07:10:04 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>cmarkmammm</dc:creator>
<category>Technology</category>
<guid>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=enryu-rescue-robot-gets-fukushima-mission</guid>
<description><![CDATA[The T-53 Enryu can hoist about 440 pounds.(Credit:Tmsuk)TOKYO--Japan's robotics response to the disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant has been disappointing so far, but a 5-ton rescue robot developed after the 1995 Kobe earthquake may see some action at the facility soon. Created by Fukuoka-based Tmsuk in 2007, the T-53 Enryu (PDF) is a hulking, 9-foot-tall machine on treads with a bulldozer attachment and giant arms to move debris. Enryu (or &quot;Rescue Dragon&quot;) is expected to clear highly radioactive rubble at the plant to provide machines and people better access, but it may need to be shielded with lead to protect it from radiation. It would be the second Japanese robot on the scene following a radiation detector robot, which apparently hasn't been used much. Each of Enryu's arms has six joints and can hoist about 220 pounds. The machine can be operated directly from the cab or remotely via suitcase-portable hardware, for which it has seven cameras. A lighter, more compact version of its predecessor T-52, the T-53 helped in recovery efforts after the 2007 earthquake that hit Kashiwazaki City in Niigata, home to the world's largest nuclear power plant by capacity. Despite that experience, Tmsuk has only recently sent the T-53 to a holding center in Tsukuba, Ibaraki Prefecture, north of Tokyo, following a request from the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry. Remote-controlled robot loaders from Qinetiq North America are also undergoing evaluation at the center. The robots will next be sent to J-Village, a site near the Fukushima plant where machines are decontaminated following exposure to radiation. Two iRobot PackBots, often used by the U.S. military, have already been used to explore and image the interior of reactor buildings. Here's some video of the T-53 at a demo. It won't have the stirring music at Fukushima. (Via Kyodo News)<br/><br/>0 Vote(s) ]]></description>
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