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Google joins the VR war, invests in light field cinematic reality company Magic Leap
2014-10-14 15:17:59| Extremetech
Google is getting into virtual reality. It was only a matter of time: With Google still looking for The Next Big Thing -- and Facebook's acquisition of Oculus VR, Sony's Project Morpheus, and many other companies and startups taking a fresh look at VR over the last couple of years -- it was forced to finally wade in. The target of Google's affection is a startup called Magic Leap, a secretive company that is developing some kind of 'cinematic reality' headset, which uses a 'digital light field' to project ultra-realistic images into your eyeballs.
Tags: company
google
war
field
Keurig Green Mountain, Inc. and W.B. Mason Bring Magic to Keurig...
2014-10-06 14:57:14| Beverages - Topix.net
WATERBURY, Vt. & BROCKTON, Mass.-- -- Keurig Green Mountain, Inc., , a leader in specialty coffee, coffee makers, teas and other beverages with its innovative brewing technology and W.B. Mason Co., Inc., the largest privately owned office products dealer in the United States, announced a multi-year agreement to offer W.B. Mason's SHAZAMa coffee in K-CupA packs for the KeurigA hot brewing system in away from home channels.
Dell OEM: The Magic Is in the Mystery
2014-10-06 14:00:00| TechNewsWorld
I had a chance last week to talk with the most secretive group inside Dell. They are kind of like the Q Division in the James Bond movies. These folks are pretty much unique in the industry, in that they build PCs and servers that are highly customized for firms that then place them into unusual solutions. This is the kind of machine that might go into a unique military vehicle.
The bargain buy of the Patinack Farm dispersal sale at the Magic Millions
2014-10-02 14:14:12| IT Services - Topix.net
Renae Gapes, along with husband Craig and three friends, paid $10,000 for this three-year-old Casino Prince filly.
EM De-Embedding Magic Part 3: What Could Possibly Go Wrong?
2014-09-03 19:43:32| rfglobalnet Downloads
In Part 1, I described the EM analysis port calibration algorithm that I developed almost 30 years ago and has been in use in Sonnet ever since. At first glance, it might seem like the technique can be applied only to “lonely” ports — ports that have no interaction or coupling with any other nearby ports. In Part 2, I showed how the algorithm can be easily extended to calibrate and de-embed as many tightly coupled ports as needed. Yes, a couple equations are needed, but once you get familiar with them, the process is really easy to do. Everything works so well, one might think that nothing could possibly go wrong. Of course not. No matter what, something can go wrong. In fact, that is what we as engineers find most interesting. This information is useful to anyone who uses EM analysis data that has been de-embedded. Failure is our enemy, and we must know our enemy well if we are to succeed.
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