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  • Tweet from ^ Pretty Ole ’ Jaaii (@princess_morse)

    ^ Pretty Ole ’ Jaaii (@princess_morse) tweeted at 8:26 PM on Tue, Feb 19, 2013: Cross Me 1 Shame On You Cross Me 2 Shame On Me Cross Me A 3 Time Nawll That’s A Pussyy Movee (https://twitter.com/princess_morse/status/304039253111881728) Get the official Twitter app at https://twitter.com/download

    • 2 months ago
    • 3 months ago
  • thisistheverge:

Rehabilitation robot suit to undergo clinical tests, hopefully help patients walk again
Starting in March, Cyberdyne’s robot HAL suit will undergo clinical tests in ten Japanese hospitals. No, this isn’t the same robot outfit that was used during cleanup efforts after the Fukushima nuclear disaster. Instead, this iteration of HAL has been designed to help accelerate rehabilitation for patients suffering from muscle and nerve diseases.

    thisistheverge:

    Rehabilitation robot suit to undergo clinical tests, hopefully help patients walk again

    Starting in March, Cyberdyne’s robot HAL suit will undergo clinical tests in ten Japanese hospitals. No, this isn’t the same robot outfit that was used during cleanup efforts after the Fukushima nuclear disaster. Instead, this iteration of HAL has been designed to help accelerate rehabilitation for patients suffering from muscle and nerve diseases.

    Source: theverge.com
    • 3 months ago
    • 53 notes
  • thisistheverge:

This game is a movie: ‘New Cinema’ explores the altered future of film
Peter Jackson’s high frame rate Hobbit and the second coming of 3D have probably been the most publicized attempts to revive the stagnating movie industry. But elsewhere, the future of cinema seems to be converging on something more closely resembling a video game as artists, hackers, and filmmakers process the language of film through the lens of code.

    thisistheverge:

    This game is a movie: ‘New Cinema’ explores the altered future of film

    Peter Jackson’s high frame rate Hobbit and the second coming of 3D have probably been the most publicized attempts to revive the stagnating movie industry. But elsewhere, the future of cinema seems to be converging on something more closely resembling a video game as artists, hackers, and filmmakers process the language of film through the lens of code.

    Source: theverge.com
    • 3 months ago
    • 59 notes
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