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the sensor bracelets is being tested at the university of sydney in australia. it's designed to detect the slightest movements of attendance which controlled the hands. these subtle movements are then transmitted via bluetooth to a program. if you thought you were copied, follow like that and move your fingers a little bit. you will see tiny, why, abrasions happening in your wrist. and this, that's how our body moves our fingers. so all a sensor actually pick up those wiper ations. ah, and be use machine learning any i to make sense of those why braces to figure out which finger is moving and how much due to a medical condition. ariana shaw has limited mobility in his left hand. he's testing the sensor bracelet by playing simple computer games. his movements are interpreted into the game. it's a lot less movement that you need to use it than i 1st though i use hopefully can make me a bit more functional with my left hand. like especially for all computers with perspective like studying and using it all day. darn many projects around the world focused on the sense
the sensor bracelets is being tested at the university of sydney in australia. it's designed to detect the slightest movements of attendance which controlled the hands. these subtle movements are then transmitted via bluetooth to a program. if you thought you were copied, follow like that and move your fingers a little bit. you will see tiny, why, abrasions happening in your wrist. and this, that's how our body moves our fingers. so all a sensor actually pick up those wiper ations. ah, and be...
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the sensor bracelet is being tested at the university of sydney and australia is designed to detect the slightest movements of the attendance which controlled the hands. the subtle movements then transmitted via bluetooth to a program. if you taught you a copy tunnel like that and move your fingers a little bit, you will see tiny, why abrasions happening in your east and this that's how our body moves so fingers . so our sensor actually pick up those library, sions. and we use machine learning any i to make sense of those why abrasion to figure out which finger is moving and how much due to a medical condition area and sha has limited mobility. in his left hand. he's testing the sensor bracelets by playing simple computer games. this movements are interpreted into the game. it's a lot less moving than that. you need to use it. and i 1st, i said we can make me of it more functional with my left hand. i especially for computers perspective like studying and using it all day. darn many projects around the world focused on the sense of touch at the university of bristol, in the u. k. resear
the sensor bracelet is being tested at the university of sydney and australia is designed to detect the slightest movements of the attendance which controlled the hands. the subtle movements then transmitted via bluetooth to a program. if you taught you a copy tunnel like that and move your fingers a little bit, you will see tiny, why abrasions happening in your east and this that's how our body moves so fingers . so our sensor actually pick up those library, sions. and we use machine learning...
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Oct 22, 2022
10/22
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australia they have found an unexpected replacement in the experimental greenhouses of the university of sydneyadrocopters of hotels that fly from one inflorescence to another. unlike bees, bumblebees, drones do not land on flowers. for this they are too large and heavy pollination is carried out by remote pollen, they carry a strong air flow from the propellers and this method turned out to be 50% more efficient than naturally and much less time consuming than the traditional processing of each flower by hand with a brush. well, then we have a unique botanical garden, which has no equal in russia, it is located in adygea and collected by ruslan khupov, how it all fits in the former parental garden. and why ruslan created a unique place not in the neighboring metropolis but in a small village where he was born and raised. now we learn the spanish columnar form. this is a fir tree, lyuchya. variety bludrinkit, and spruce eastern operation. lis e, cypress leyland guldrider. coniferous home ruslan khupov's love for 70, as a former parental garden. it grows 860 varieties of thorny plants. this is t
australia they have found an unexpected replacement in the experimental greenhouses of the university of sydneyadrocopters of hotels that fly from one inflorescence to another. unlike bees, bumblebees, drones do not land on flowers. for this they are too large and heavy pollination is carried out by remote pollen, they carry a strong air flow from the propellers and this method turned out to be 50% more efficient than naturally and much less time consuming than the traditional processing of...
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Oct 17, 2022
10/22
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KTVU
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a trial is currently underway at the university of western sydney to test how efficient drones are aterts say. honeybees help pollinate australian food crops worth close to $3.7 billion every year, but struggle in in closed environments like class houses. pollination is a key management tool that farmers that under protected cropping have to manage and this research is trying to allow them to do that more effectively more efficiently and reduce their input costs. the trial is also looking at blow flies and native stainless bees as potential pollination alternatives. alright quick glance back at the temperatures we had today is a cool weekend for sure. temperatures were down in the sixties. very cool today slow burn off and then would have burned off the fog in the city. just boom. it went away. everything went clear very quickly, but it took a while for that to happen. most of the day was cool temperatures like these temperatures tomorrow. gonna be warmer than these? we're going to warm up a few degrees, not seeing much fog out there now, but the fog well, reform tonight. as you know
a trial is currently underway at the university of western sydney to test how efficient drones are aterts say. honeybees help pollinate australian food crops worth close to $3.7 billion every year, but struggle in in closed environments like class houses. pollination is a key management tool that farmers that under protected cropping have to manage and this research is trying to allow them to do that more effectively more efficiently and reduce their input costs. the trial is also looking at...
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Oct 10, 2022
10/22
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ALJAZ
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north korea specialist and a visiting fellow at the australian national university college of asia on the pacific. he's in sydney and he's joining us live, welcome to al jazeera. why would tactical weapons be a priority for north korea? now? all on the korean peninsula has been at war welsh for the last 70 plus years since north korea tried to unify the peninsula by force and found itself under count per tech, arm bolt. and back then even the soviet union or china would not even think about sharing nuclear technology with the chemo regime. but the these days, the indigenous nuclear technology, which kim john owen, has inherited from his father and grandfather became the trump card for the gym survival and look at what is happening in ukraine are looking at what moscow is facing the world is this. north korea has shifted quickly, shifted it flats from strategic or long range, missiles and the weapons of mass destruction, which potentially made target the far away countries who is something more nearby threads, wave tactical weapons. theresa, how we go back to north korea in actually developing these tactical gear
north korea specialist and a visiting fellow at the australian national university college of asia on the pacific. he's in sydney and he's joining us live, welcome to al jazeera. why would tactical weapons be a priority for north korea? now? all on the korean peninsula has been at war welsh for the last 70 plus years since north korea tried to unify the peninsula by force and found itself under count per tech, arm bolt. and back then even the soviet union or china would not even think about...
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university of london. thank you very much. mourners have gathered some of the 20 year anniversary of indonesia, bali bombings, australia's prime minister attended memorial in sydney, where dozens of australians who lost their lives in the attack were remembered. hundreds also gathered on the indonesian resort island of bali to pay tribute to the victims was exactly 20 years ago that 2 bombs detonated into packed bars of the district of kuta, killing 202 people. now the bali attacks were widely blamed on g ma is la, that's a south east asian islamist group with ties to arcada. in the wake of the attacks indonesia launched a major counter terrorism and d. radicalization drive our team, follow one convicted terrorist who joined a div radicalization program and came out the other side living a farmer's life something handles hernando could never have imagined possible. the 38 year old is raising some 4000 quills at this farm in pecosy west java. it's a complete turnaround from his previous life. like all workers at this farm. fernando used to be part of a terrorist network. and isaac fighter, who was involved in several t her attacks in, in, in asia. he was arrested
university of london. thank you very much. mourners have gathered some of the 20 year anniversary of indonesia, bali bombings, australia's prime minister attended memorial in sydney, where dozens of australians who lost their lives in the attack were remembered. hundreds also gathered on the indonesian resort island of bali to pay tribute to the victims was exactly 20 years ago that 2 bombs detonated into packed bars of the district of kuta, killing 202 people. now the bali attacks were widely...
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Oct 4, 2022
10/22
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BBCNEWS
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university in sydney. thank you very much forjoining us on the programme. do we have any sense ofn this breach, we _ were impacted this time? sure. in this breach, we are _ were impacted this time? sure. in this breach, we are looking i in this breach, we are looking at about 300,000 records. 0ut at about 300,000 records. out of the customers, it was about 30,000 of them. 50 of the customers, it was about 30,000 of them.— of the customers, it was about 30,000 of them. so what do we know exactly _ 30,000 of them. so what do we know exactly about _ 30,000 of them. so what do we know exactly about who - 30,000 of them. so what do we know exactly about who is - know exactly about who is responsible?— know exactly about who is responsible? sure, well, we don't really _ responsible? sure, well, we don't really know— responsible? sure, well, we don't really know who - responsible? sure, well, we don't really know who it - responsible? sure, well, we don't really know who it is l don't really know who it is exactly. it's a bit more of an established hacker who did this on this occasion. t
university in sydney. thank you very much forjoining us on the programme. do we have any sense ofn this breach, we _ were impacted this time? sure. in this breach, we are _ were impacted this time? sure. in this breach, we are looking i in this breach, we are looking at about 300,000 records. 0ut at about 300,000 records. out of the customers, it was about 30,000 of them. 50 of the customers, it was about 30,000 of them.— of the customers, it was about 30,000 of them. so what do we know...