There has been speculation that those hormones in meat end up in us which is also a contributing factor towards people becoming uber fat
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Robopocalypse : The thread of the future
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Originally posted by EvilBoris View PostThere has been speculation that those hormones in meat end up in us which is also a contributing factor towards people becoming uber fat
We have never eaten food like we have mentioned in our entire history. I refuse (where I knowingly can) to give my money to what is ultimately a profit driven experiment on our health.
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Mmm, it's frightening. In an ideal world everybody would grow, catch and kill their own food. As things are, it's enough to make a man consider veganism as choosing and buying food (for me at least) is usually an incredibly long-winded and complicated moral dilema. Even when you believe you're buying food which you believe is ethically sound, chances are it isn't.
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Originally posted by MartyG View PostI think you're in creationism denial. The Earth after all is only 3000 years old.No offense to Howiee, I love the guy, a more tolerant, charming and articulate Christian you seldom find. And I know he won't mind me lightly poking fun at his faith.
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That quadrocopters thing is mint.
Anyway, scientists have devised a blood swimming nanobot: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/02...antable_robot/
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Originally posted by koopatroopa90 View PostBasically all the **** in the MGS games is coming to life isn't it. Soon enough we will all have codecs...
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This is it. Here's an exclusive first look at some sample shots taken with Nokia's freshly minted 808 PureView imaging powerhouse -- and wow, just wow! The collection contains photos taken at different resolutions in various conditions that show exactly what the 41-megapixel camera is capable of. Feast your eyes in our gallery below -- we'll have a ZIP file with the original pictures for you to download shortly. Also, stay tuned for our upcoming interview with Damian Dinning, program manager for imaging at Nokia. Update: Our very own Andy Yang of Engadget Chinese slapped a few of these shots on GigaPan for your zooming pleasure -- check it out after the break. You can also grab the originals (a 31.8MB download) from Nokia Conversations.
Nokia Unveil their 41 Megapixel cameraphone with ZEISS optics
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Ok, the pics from that Nokia are impressive. But...
41 megapixel sensor is not designed to deliver 41 megapixel images. The quality would be horrific from a sensor that small . Instead they combine all the noisy pixels together to produce cleaner, smaller images e.g. 5mp. You only get maximum image quality at the wide end. Soon as you zoom in there's less data to average out so image quality degrades. In short, this isn't really anything remarkable IMO but that doesn't mean that it won't take excellent photos, probably the best from any phone. It's got a faster lens and bigger sensor than practically any other phone I think and that's the biggest difference here.
There's definitely an argument that using a same-physical-size sensor but with less photocells on it would reduce the amount of noise per photocell and thus reduce the need to combine as many of the cells to get a clean image. Actually, there's not an argument for that, it's a fact.
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