exobrain / tumble 2008-02-21T08:02:07Z WordPress http://exobrain.net/tumble/feed/atom/ niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[OneMoreLevel.com - Avoider]]> tag:nueh.de://5386daff6e43ef22283e0127d0b721e8 2008-02-21T08:02:07Z 2008-02-21T08:02:07Z ]]>

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niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[chumby]]> tag:nueh.de://e81aae18a11c1eaee9fd8619697d901a 2008-02-17T16:58:08Z 2008-02-17T16:58:08Z niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[The first smart rabbit - Nabaztag]]> tag:nueh.de://a241fae54845b26e5d75e00157bd29bb 2008-02-17T16:01:22Z 2008-02-17T16:01:22Z niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[NachDenkSeiten - Die kritische Website  » Gesundheitspolitik: Was derzeit wirklich passiert]]> tag:nueh.de://70592143eb58309c3c9579f3ea2053df 2008-02-14T18:40:17Z 2008-02-14T18:40:17Z niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[Fiction Podcasts: Online Only: The New Yorker]]> tag:nueh.de://e571534effa56841e0e23b243bed3710 2008-02-13T20:46:22Z 2008-02-13T20:46:22Z niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[PONG-Story: Main page]]> tag:nueh.de://7e0826afd4b603490282d139d5f30269 2008-02-13T17:00:53Z 2008-02-13T17:00:53Z via)]]> »As early as 1951, a young 29-year old TV engineer named Ralph Baer worked at Loral, a TV company. His Chief Engineer, Sam Lackoff, asked him to Build the best television set in the world. Designing a TV set was an easy task for Ralph, and he wanted to add a new concept that his boss did not understand: playing games on the television set. The video game concept was born, but could not be implemented since the boss refused the idea. In September 1966, Ralph came back to his 1951 idea of playing games on TV sets and started building the first video game prototypes. Therefore, Ralph Baer is accordingly credited as the inventor of the video game.

1947, however, is believed to be the first year when a game was designed for playing on a Cathode Ray Tube (CRT). This very simple game was designed by Thomas T. Goldsmith Jr. and Estle Ray Mann. A patent application was filed on January 25th, 1947 and U.S. Patent  #2 455 992 issued on Dec 14th, 1948.« (via)

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niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[Aufkleber »Werbung ist unerwünscht!«]]> tag:nueh.de://67c2c3d99ee322bfe71605d4bba8aa93 2008-02-06T21:51:35Z 2008-02-06T21:51:35Z ]]>

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niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[Satellite spotters - Boing Boing]]> tag:nueh.de://31721dbbd515e2f89241858a26e3d685 2008-02-05T21:02:13Z 2008-02-05T21:02:13Z »John Schwartz reports in today's New York Times about the global community of "satellite spotter" hobbyists who track the heavenly motions of satellites -- some of which are secret government projects -- and share what they find online«

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niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[Rands In Repose: Out Loud]]> tag:nueh.de://6fc8792919748fa26e30d6318802d189 2008-02-05T20:55:12Z 2008-02-05T20:55:12Z »If you’re looking for advice on giving a presentation, the Internet is chock full of endless advice. I’ve been here, too. If you’re looking for tips on writing the presentation, the Internet goes dark — for a fairly simply reason. To think about how to write a presentation, you need to think about how you speak, and that’s not what you’re doing when you read or write. I’ll demonstrate. Say the following out loud right now:

I am reading this out loud to no one in particular.

Were you surprised to hear your voice? I was. Did you actually read it out loud? No? Why not? Sitting in a coffee shop? Worried that the guy next to you will think you’re a freak? This basic discomfort is the reason it’s tricky to explain how to present in an article. The skills involved in writing a clever paragraph are completely different from those used for developing and delivering that clever paragraph to a room full of strangers.

You still haven’t read it out loud, have you?«

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niklas http://exobrain.net/tumble/ <![CDATA[Richard Feynman Physics Lecture: 01 - Photons, Corpuscles of Light]]> tag:nueh.de://90826265cfbba2d6dcfffb2aba8bd081 2008-02-05T18:52:42Z 2008-02-05T18:52:42Z