Nhna Flappy Bird Creator: I Pulled the Game Because It Was Too Addictive
Three Egyptian students sought along with eight others who failed to show up for
stanley cup an exchange program in Montana were taken into custody on Wednesday, authorities said.Eslam Ibrahim Mohamed El-Dessouki, 21, was taken into custody in Minnesota on what was termed an administrative immigration violation as an out-of-status student, according to the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.Two other students, whose names were not yet released, turned themselves into authorities in New Jersey. The FBI remains extremely interested in interviewing, the other missing Egyptian students, s
stanley thermos aid Paul McCabe, a spokesman for the FBI in Minneapolis.The missing students pose no terrorism threat, the agency said. Authorities began searching for the 11 Egyptian students after they arrived in the United States last month, but failed to show up for an exchange program at Montana State University.The Egyptian men were among a group of 17 students who arrived in New York from Cairo on July 29 with valid visas, according to U.S. authorities and university officials.The other six arrived as planned at the Montana school.Montana State repeatedly tried to contact the missing students, including via e-mail, a school official said earlier this week. When th
stanley website at failed, the school notified Homeland Security officials and registered the Egyptians as no-shows in the system developed after the Sept. 11 attacks to track foreign students. The students were participating in an exchange pro Gpwi Student-Designed Space Colonies
When your microwave is sitting there glowing and spinning inside, do you ever wonder where all those stray ra
stanley cup becher ys of energy go Turns out they usually just slip out the door, into thin air. But a Japanese scientists has found away to harness that power and use it to juice your other appliances. Yoshihiro Kawahara, an electronics engineer at the University of Tokyo, has been studying energy leakage from conventional microwave ovens and recently concluded that about 1 milliwatt of power is available in front of the appliance. It useable energy too. Kawahara and his team designed a little power harvester that about the size of a quarter and attached a c
stanley vaso entimeter-long microwave antennae on it. The energy accumulated over a two-minute run of the microwave oven was enough to operate some low
stanley thermosflasche -power kitchen tools for a few minutes, Kawahara wrote in a paper about his findings. What cool about this finding is that the power harvesters are small enough to insert into pretty much any kitchen appliance. With so much buzz building around the world of wireless power, it not unreasonable to think that some gadget companies might try to make use of the microwave stray energy. You might never have to plug in a toaster ever again. [New Scientist] Image via Shutterstock CancerkitchensMicrowaves