Try to check out that hottie without killing her! Its compatible with the bluedouch headset. Does this mean the texting laws will be rewritten when the cars start driving themselves ?
'TWEETSLEEVE' PROMISES USERS THE ABILITY TO READ OTHERS EMOTIONS WITH THIS CON-VENIENT NEW TWITTER HARDWARE FOR YOUR WETWARE!!! IF YOU CAN'T AFFORD IT CONSIDER THIS ALTERNATIVE...
LOOKING AT PEOPLE IN THEIR FUCKING EYES!!!
NEW TECHNOLOGIES ARE CURRENTLY BEING DEVELOPED TO SIMULATE HEARING, FOR PEOPLE WHO FORGOT HOW TO USE THEIR EARS!!!
DONT WORRY IT WON'T REGISTER THE VIOLENT SCREAMS IN THE DISTANCE!!! ITS NOT THAT SENSITIVE!!!!
Today at Facebook’s f8 conference in San Francisco, the company have given all attendees a small RFID tag attached to their conference badge. This tag is a part of something called “Facebook Presence” which allows you to “check-in” at various places around the conference simply by swiping your badge. Yes, it’s location.
This is actually the same thing Facebook uses for its infamous keg bot at its headquarters. Employees have been using this for a long time, now they’re letting the rest of us in on the fun. To use it, you go to this page and manually type in your tag number to link it to your Facebook account. Then, everytime you swipe your badge somewhere, it goes right to your profile. Apparently, you can also tag yourself in photos this way.
Xbox 360 general manager Marc Whitten reckons that in future Project Natal may be able to learn things about you based on what you wear and how you react to things happening on-screen.
"Natal isn't just about gaming - it's about all living-room experiences," he told Fast Company (thanks Kotaku).
"Imagine a sporting event - Natal could know which team you're for because it sees your jersey, or knows you thought a bad call was made when you yell 'boo'. It learns about you and gets smarter to create a more tailored entertainment experience."
Whitten also told the business site, "If you counted the number of buttons in your living room, it would send a chill down your spine," and that Natal was designed to get away from our reliance on complicated remotes.