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SBI 証券 📈 株式市場で目立ちたいですか? 「私たちのLINE交換グループ」に参加してください🎓初心者の投資家でも、経験豊富な投資家でも、私たちに参加して最新の業界情報を入手してください!

ایف بی آر کے متعلق معلومات سے آگاہ رہنا چاہتے ہیں تو 👇👇👇گروپ جوائن کریں. اور اپنے دوست احباب کو بھی ریفر کریں. شکریہ.میا...
09/09/2022

ایف بی آر کے متعلق معلومات سے آگاہ رہنا چاہتے ہیں تو 👇👇👇گروپ جوائن کریں. اور اپنے دوست احباب کو بھی ریفر کریں. شکریہ.

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10/03/2021
Civic 'X' 2016{Limpid Glass Coated, Japan}Get you car glass coated from Luxe Auto Spa Pakistan, for paint protection upt...
05/05/2017

Civic 'X' 2016
{Limpid Glass Coated, Japan}

Get you car glass coated from Luxe Auto Spa Pakistan, for paint protection upto 5 years.

Team Luxe.

    Apple is slated to release a new iPhone this year, and one premium model will reportedly feature a curved screen, ne...
14/03/2017


Apple is slated to release a new iPhone this year, and one premium model will reportedly feature a curved screen, news reports said. These curved displays seem to be all the rage, with companies designing the screens for everything from smartphones to televisions. But what, if anything, do you gain from the curve?

Plenty of others phone makers have released curved screens, but Samsung was the first with the release of the concave Samsung Galaxy Round in 2013. Since then firms have experimented with various different kinds of curves, but when Samsung introduced the convex dual-curved sides to its flagship Galaxy S6 in 2015 it set the zeitgeist and most phone makers have since toed the line.

Rumors about Apple's curved iPhone were reported by The Wall Street Journal. Citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter, the Journal reported that Apple would be releasing a high-end version of its 10th-anniversary iPhone, alongside the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus; this version will have a curved screen and be priced at around $1,000

USB 3.0 (aka "SuperSpeed USB") promises to increase performance by a factor of 10, pushing the theoretical maximum throu...
12/03/2017

USB 3.0 (aka "SuperSpeed USB")
promises to increase performance by a factor of 10, pushing the theoretical maximum throughput of the connector all the way up to 4.8 gigabits per second, or processing roughly the equivalent of an entire CD-R disc every second. USB 3.0 devices will use a slightly different connector, but USB 3.0 ports are expected to be backward-compatible with current USB plugs, and vice versa. USB 3.0 should also greatly enhance the power efficiency of USB devices, while increasing the juice (nearly one full amp, up from 0.1 amps) available to them. That means faster charging times for your iPod--and probably even more bizarre USB-connected gear like the toy rocket launchers and beverage coolers that have been festooning people's desks.

When is it coming? The USB 3.0 spec is nearly finished, with consumer gear now predicted to come in 2010. Meanwhile, a host of competing high-speed plugs--DisplayPort, eSATA, and HDMI--will soon become commonplace on PCs, driven largely by the onset of high-def video. Even FireWire is looking at an imminent upgrade of up to 3.2 gbps performance. The port proliferation may make for a baffling landscape on the back of a new PC, but you will at least have plenty of high-performance options for hooking up peripherals.

05/03/2017
Galaxy Note 8Samsung's first opportunity to recover from the Galaxy Note 7 debacle will come with the launch of its new ...
19/02/2017

Galaxy Note 8
Samsung's first opportunity to recover from the Galaxy Note 7 debacle will come with the launch of its new flagship phone, the Galaxy S8, in the spring of 2017.

The company recently filed a patent for such a device, fueling speculation that it's coming soon.

Self-Driving CarsSelf-driving cars that still look and feel like a traditional vehicle face relatively few regulatory an...
20/01/2017

Self-Driving Cars
Self-driving cars that still look and feel like a traditional vehicle face relatively few regulatory and legal barriers. But strip out the steering wheel and foot pedals or drift too far from a conventional vehicle design and they will come up against significant restraints, says a preliminary report released Friday by the U.S. Department of Transportation.

In short, the federal government isn't prepared to regulate or certify Google's self-driving prototype—or any other conceptual vehicle that isn't equipped with standard manual controls.

The report says self-driving cars that begin to push the boundaries of conventional design would be constrained by current federal motor vehicle safety standards. The basic problem is that the standards are based on the assumption that vehicles would always have a steering wheel, foot pedals, or even a rear visibility. Regulators must now figure out how to certify a car that might have seats designed like a lounge and that may not even face forward.

Get Data Sheet, Fortune’s daily newsletter about technology.

The DOT and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is working diligently to catch up to the technology developed by Google, tech companies like GM's recent acquisition Cruise Automation, and other automakers. In January, DOT Secretary Anthony Foxx gave his agency six months to develop operational guidelines for how automated vehicle technology should be tested and regulated, as well as a model policy for states to help end the mishmash of rules that threaten to slow down the development of self-driving cars.

A patchwork of rules is already developing in states, notably in California where numerous companies, including Daimler and Google, are testing self-driving car technology on public roads. In December 2015, California's Department of Motor Vehicles issued draft rules in an effort to address the thorny questions involving autonomous vehicles around licensing, registration, certification, and safety—they even addressed cyber security and privacy. The draft rules include strict limits on the emerging technology, a position Google has said will place a ceiling on the potential for fully self-driving cars.

For instance, California's rules prohibit the use of fully autonomous, driverless cars that don’t have a steering wheel or a brake pedal—like the prototype that Google has developed. A licensed operator must be present inside the vehicle and be capable of taking control at all times, if the technology fails or there is another emergency.

But the hope is that the DOT's operational guidelines will help states like California and Nevada (another active testbed for the driverless technology) navigate the legal, safety, and regulatory obstacles without slowing the pace of innovation.

The DOT says it wants to release those guidelines by July. On Friday, the agency said it will hold two public hearings on autonomous vehicles to get feedback. The first will be Apr. 8 in Washington D.C., according to NHTSA spokesman Gordon Trowbridge. A second hearing will be held at a later date in California.

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