Siri helped save the boy’s mother 4-year-old Roman London found his mother in the morning, unconscious on the floor. The woman did not move, her eyes were closed, and the impression that she was not breathing. The boy kept his head, took the iPhone Mom, unlock it with the help of her limp fingers and called Siri. He asked the assistant to call rescuers. Recording with the dispatcher boy talks posted on its channel British Metropolitan Police Service. Roman clearly answered the questions the dispatcher, once again tried to shake and wake my mother, but it did not work: "She's dead, her eyes closed and she was not breathing.". Manager clarified the boy his address and sent an ambulance, which arrived at the scene within 13 minutes. The woman was taken to the hospital from which she was soon discharged and sent home to the children. Cause sudden faintness women media did not specify. It turned out that the novel was no one at home, but turned out to be the most proactive. He has a twin brother and one younger brother.
On Longing Piano Cover by Lego Mindstorms EV3 Piano playing Lego robot. Uses one main driving motor, and 3 motors to control positioning of: The single finger of the left hand on the first note, the two fingers of the right hand on the third note, and the third finger of the right hand on the 4th note (sometimes).
Cat whack-a-finger! Best way to wake a cat up! Be careful though as your fingers may suffer! Wiske loves this game.
Pre-Touch Sensing for Mobile Interaction New research uses a mobile phone’s ability to sense how you are gripping the device, as well as when and where the fingers are approaching it, to adapt interfaces on the fly. The research is outlined in the paper, "Pre-Touch Sensing for Mobile Interaction."
The Assassin’s Teapot This teapot comes from China, and it is a trick teapot! Inside there are two separate compartments, and depending where you place your fingers - either covering one hole or covering another hole - you can get the teapot to pour out of either internal compartment. Supposedly, back in the day, it was a way to get rid of an enemy, since you could pour out some tea for yourself and drink it quite safely (provided you had covered the correct hole) and you could then pour a drink for your enemy, and they would unknowingly get what was in the second compartment, maybe poison. Here Tim demonstrates pouring a cup of tea, and then adding milk, both from the same teapot. I suppose you could have tea or coffee, or whatever you like really.