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Obv the site is back up and upgraded, obv there's some things that need to be fixed, however I've been at it all day so I'll come back to it tomorrow. Feel free to add to the list here.
" I wish to God that someone would be able to block out the voices in my head for five minutes, the voices that scream, over and over again: "Why do they come to me to die?"
There's a defib app being developed at the Young Scientists, I think (I don't know how successful YS projects generally are).
So someone collapses with a cardiac arrest, just slap an iPhone on them and shock them back to life.
That's interesting. I wouldn't have thought an iphone would have the necessary juice for that. Current defibrillators give a pretty hefty jolt - high voltage and current in a short pulse.
Here's the story; it seems the defib hooks up to the iPhone, which is different, and possibly not all that necessary as anything other than your bogstandard defib has an ECG screen which relays the key data anyway. Plus, of course, you'd have to be able to read and understand the data.
So in conclusion, I'm not actually sure what it is exactly.
Here's the story; it seems the defib hooks up to the iPhone, which is different, and possibly not all that necessary as anything other than your bogstandard defib has an ECG screen which relays the key data anyway. Plus, of course, you'd have to be able to read and understand the data.
So in conclusion, I'm not actually sure what it is exactly.
That sounds rather more like the Young Scientists I know.
A game designed by a 14-year-old boy has topped the iTunes worldwide free app charts, ahead of the likes of Facebook and Skype.
Robert Nay, from Utah in the USA, created Bubble Ball, a "physics puzzle game" for Apple devices.
He learned how to code the game from a library book, after a friend's dad suggested he try to make an app.
Bubble Ball The game is based around trying to get a bubble into a goal
On Wednesday (19 January), Bubble Ball had been downloaded two million times, according to Robert's figures.
It was also ahead of the free version of hit game Angry Birds.
"I think it's pretty cool because I never thought my game would do that well," Robert told ABC News.
"My friend's dad suggested I try making an iPhone app and I thought, 'Why not, that'd be pretty cool,' so I checked out a book from the library.
"When I saw that it was number one for the free apps, I was astonished."
He also says he plans to make more games, but his next project is "a secret".
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