laying under the full moon iphone case

SKU: EN-A10356

laying under the full moon iphone case

laying under the full moon iphone case

Jonathan Selbin of Lieff Cabraser, the law firm bringing the case, said the fact that the study was funded by the plaintiffs' is "meaningless."The case could head to court, where blood pressure will almost certainly be elevated. A study funded by a law firm suing the wearables maker raises questions about the accuracy of Fitbit technology. A study of Fitbit heart monitors has set pulses racing. The San Francisco wearables company on Monday defended the accuracy of its fitness trackers after a study conducted by researchers at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, found its PurePulse technology didn't correctly monitor heart rates. The study was commissioned by lawyers representing a group of customers who are suing Fitbit over the accuracy of its products.

Subscribe: CNET Update delivers the biggest tech news of the day, Follow Bridget Carey's reports for a breakdown of trends, hot devices, new apps and what's ahead, laying under the full moon iphone case Subscribe to the podcast via the links below, iTunes (HD) | iTunes (SD) | iTunes (HQ) | iTunes (MP3), RSS (HD) | RSS (SD) | RSS (HQ)| RSS (MP3), Download the audio version of today's episode, A Motorola video hints the classic Razr flip phone will be resurrected June 9, Meanwhile, Google launches a new app for experiments called Science Journal..

What was hot ten years ago in tech could be coming back into style. Lenovo, the new owner of Motorola, is getting the Internet worked-up over a possible return of the Razr flip phone on June 9. Update looks into the nostalgia of the hottest phone this century.. well, hottest before the iPhone came along. While the Razr may be old school, Google just wants you to get schooled with its new app called Science Journal. The Android app uses your phone's sensors to catalog all kinds of data and assist in creating experiments.

Though Two Big Ears is discontinuing its plug-ins for game creators (according to a transition FAQ), the company says it will work closely with Facebook's Oculus VR team to add its expertise to Oculus' software development kit, Two Big Ears also says its tools will still work to create VR content for non-Facebook, non-Oculus platforms: "We will continue to be platform and device agnostic."Facebook provided this statement on the acquisition: "Two Big Ears has revolutionized how humans hear sound with software, We're excited to welcome them to the Facebook team and give even more people access to their incredible work through our platform."While that doesn't fully explain why Facebook purchased Two Big Ears, the company may be laying under the full moon iphone case attempting to bring a 3D audio engine for the Oculus VR platform in house, In 2014, Oculus had to license a 3D audio engine from VisiSonics..

Disclosure: Sean's wife works for Facebook as a business-to-business video project coordinator. Facebook repackages the Scottish company's VR audio platform as "Facebook 360 Spatial Workstation" and makes it free. In VR, what you hear is almost as important as what you see. Perhaps that's why Facebook just bought Two Big Ears, an Edinburgh-based spacial audio company. Terms of the acquisition weren't disclosed. Two Big Ears specializes in a set of tools that lets virtual-reality content creators build a 3D sound stage, taking sound from a variety of sources and syncing it up with 360-degree video footage or computer-generated games. As part of the acquisition, Facebook is making Two Big Ears' spacial workstation for VR video completely free. It's being rebranded as "Facebook 360 Spatial Workstation."Be respectful, keep it civil and stay on topic. We delete comments that violate our policy, which we encourage you to read. Discussion threads can be closed at any time at our discretion.

 
 
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