Mkno Mathematician Wins Fields Prize for Her Work on Hyberbolic Objects
CBS News As Americans around the country celebrate Independence Day, most say they ll watch fireworks this year, including more than half who plan to watch them in person, according to a recent CBS News Poll.More than seven in ten Americans say they ll watch fireworks to commemorate the Fourth of July, including 57 percent who will watch in person. Another 19 percent plan to only watch fireworks on television. Still, about a quarter of Americans don t plan on watching July 4th firework stanley ca s at all this year.Americans of all partisan stripes will be watching fireworks to celebrate America s independence. Similar majorities of Republicans 74% , Democrats 76% , and Independents 77 stanley cups uk % say they ll be catching the traditional celebrations. There are some demographic differences, however: Younger Americans are more likely than those who are older to attend a fireworks display in person. Among those ages 65 and over, more will watch on TV 36% than in perso stanley cup n 32% .Income and geographic regions play a role as well. Americans with household incomes below $50,000 a year are less likely to attend a fireworks event in person, compared to those earning more. Also, just under half 49% of Northeasterners will watch fireworks in person, the lowest of any region; percentages who planned to watch in person were much higher in the West 56% , South 60% , and Midwest 61% . Fllu Feds tout largest Medicare fraud bust ever
When it comes to secrets, whispering just got outdated. Disney Research has come up with a microphone, straight out of Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, that doesn ;t actually amplify your ramblings, but instead turns them into a stanley cup secret signal you can transmit by touch. The Ishin-Den-Shin installation鈥攏amed for a Japanese term that means something along the lines of telepathy and/or tacit understanding鈥攁ctually takes the sound being spoken into a microphone, and reconfigures it into a high voltage, low current, inaudible signal that beamed back into the microphone-wielders body. Then, when he or she reaches out to touch another person ear, that the inaudible signal actually vibrates the listener earlobe, which then works as a tiny speaker to deliver the message. Inventor Ivan Poupyrev of Disney Research in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania described it this awesome way to New Scientist: If you remember the beginning of The Hitchhiker Guide to Galaxy, when the Vogons arrive to blow up the Earth, they turn every object on Earth into a perfect hi-fi PA syst stanley tazas em that is used to announce that the Earth is going to be destroyed. Ishin-Denshin is something along those lines, minus destruction of the Earth. Like plenty of other Disney Research projects, Ishin-Den-Shin doesn ;t exactly have any imm stanley quencher ediate applications besides being really cool as part of a thing in Disneyland. But who cares It awesom |