Posted by on under sunday night blues, enjoying your work, 8 ways, thud, signals, wiki, earth |

The Sunday night blues can be an indicator that you're not enjoying your work or study week, or they can be simply a reflection of your overly high expectations about the weekend and you hit Earth with a thud. Whatever the cause, your body is providing you with signals that make you feel blue before the weekend has even ended. And this means that you need to take notice of what your blues are trying to make very clear to you.
Tagi: sunday night blues, enjoying your work, 8 ways, thud, signals, wiki, earth
Posted by on under analog to digital, tv converter, signals, televi |

Now that all television signals have gone from analog to digital, older television sets will require a TV converter box.
Tagi: analog to digital, tv converter, signals, televi
Posted by on under gizmodo, ohgizmo, harvester, chargers, gadget, rca, wifi, signals, gadgets, fi |

Forget PowerMats and wireless charging and the like, because the Airnergy wi-fi signal harvester is my new front runner for the future of gadget charging. It's not exactly new tech, as ohGizmo...
Tagi: gizmodo, ohgizmo, harvester, chargers, gadget, rca, wifi, signals, gadgets, fi
Posted by on under ecomic, cbs news, wall street journal, advers, usa today, washington post, businessweek, reuters, stimulus, middle class tax, wall street, signals, news articles, nbsp, cbs, white house |

Tagi: ecomic, cbs news, wall street journal, advers, usa today, washington post, businessweek, reuters, stimulus, middle class tax, wall street, signals, news articles, nbsp, cbs, white house
Posted by on under fiber optics cables, light scatter, x rays, dco, x ray, deciphering, ultrasounds, visible light, surfaces, airports, signals, images |

disco_tracy writes "Some day we may not need X-rays to see inside people, thanks to a new way to decipher light that passes through opaque surfaces. Normally visible light becomes too scattered to detect after passing through opaque surfaces. But scientists in France have developed a way to reconstruct images from light passing through such surfaces by deciphering just how the material makes the light scatter. In the short term the research will help improve the strength of telecommunications signals and fiber optics cables, but years from now the technology could supplement or even replace traditional ultrasounds for baby imaging and X-rays for weapons detection at airports."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Tagi: fiber optics cables, light scatter, x rays, dco, x ray, deciphering, ultrasounds, visible light, surfaces, airports, signals, images