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Nike SB welcomes a new collection of sneakers as March 2011 kicks in. Much like we’ve seen in months past, the lineup highlights several new colorways in key models from the SB roster, including new renditions of the Dunk Mid, Zoom Stefan Janoski, Blazer SB, Blazer Low SB, Zoom Paul Rodriguez 4 and Zoom Paul Rodriguez 2.5. All can be found through Nike SB retailers across the nation beginning today. – hypebeast

Aleandre Farto’s explosive etching technique involves precision detonation of plaster and brick to make enormous, smoky murals. This video, with music by Orelha Negra, demonstrates the technique.

BoingBoing

03.02.2011

Maybach Exelero


You can buy cut-rate bootlegs of Mad Men and Chanel handbags all over the world. But if you want a fake Ferrari, you need to go to a garage on the outskirts of Bangkok. That’s where Chris Pongpitaya and his 10-man crew use scavenged and scratch-built parts to piece together ersatz Porsches, Maseratis, and other dream machines for enthusiasts whose budgets are too small to match their egos. “When you look at the car, there’s nothing different,” Pongpitaya says. “But when you test-drive it, you may notice.”

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Scientists have developed the nuclear magnetic resonance scanner which uses antibodies and magnetic particles to identify cancerous cells. So far, the results have been impressively accurate at 96 per cent.

The usual method of diagnosing cancer only has an 84 per cent accuracy rate, which is mindbogglingly scary. Those poor people who get misdiagnosed—either with positive or negative readings! No-one can imagine the pain they must go through.

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Continuing on with the lifestyle releases as part of the recent acquisition of the French Football Federation as a Nike-sponsored team, Nike Sportswear release a new Dunk pack. The Dunk Low 08 “FFF” features in three colors with tonal uppers and gum-colored outsoles. Look for the pack globally through various Nike Sportswear retailers.

-hypebeast

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Devices that pick up brain waves and translate them into mechanical action are being developed to control prosthetic limbs, robots and video games. Soon you’ll be able to control your television and phone. But now comes the BrainDriver, a car that is driven entirely by your thoughts.

It’s a new application of the brain-computer interface to allow human drivers to control their car without a steering wheel. Researchers, led by led by Raul Rojas, a professor of artificial intelligence at the Freie Universitat Berlin, use an “Emotiv neroheadset” to record brain activity in the driver. The neuroheadset is a electroencephalography, or EEG, originally developed for video games by San Francisco-based company Emotiv.

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Apple and other digital retailers are planning to offer 24-bit audio to consumers. It should be an easy sell; recording studios use 24-bit, it’s how the music was mixed, and it’s how the consumers should hear it. Right? Wrong.

24-bit audio might be the staple of recording studios, but there’s a reason it should stay there. 24-bit has a really low “noise floor” — that hum you hear if you turn a silent amplifier up really high. With 16-bit, the noise floor is slightly higher. While that might be a problem in a studio where you’re boosting sounds to be clear and loud, it’s irrelevant to the end listener who is given the fully mastered and noise-free version already. Even CDs are 16-bit, and the sonic quality of a CD is an accepted definition of consumer-worthy HD quality.

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