Showing posts with label what to do. Show all posts
Showing posts with label what to do. Show all posts

Tuesday, 13 August 2013


Hmm, Today we (mom, dad, younger sister and me) shifted to our new home in Islamabad, its on rent, so we had a lot of luggage, it was really really huge, we hired 2 trucks yet we took a lot of stuff in our car. When we shifted we took the luggage off the truck and kept it in home... After that a 4 HOURS hard work was required to set and arrange that stuff!!!, and get the home ready to live in, its now my first night in my new home's room... I arranged my room really well, its a little bigger than the old house, but unfortunately our internet (wireless wingle) is really slow here :(... I am looking forward to get a connection of land-line internet, that would be much better. The first time I bought the car in our home, which was pretty difficult due to narrow gate, you may be astonished that I'm only 13 and driving, but in our country Pakistan, everything is possible... I bought the car from just 1 mm distance on both sides of gate... well, this experience of shifting was really awesome. Did you ever shift to a new home?.. share your experience with me. (comment)

Posted on 09:34 by Unknown

Saturday, 10 August 2013

3d printed are here fake years printed by amazing printer

It's way too late for Vincent van Gogh, but cutting off your ear is a much less impressive gesture now you can get a new one printed.
This week, researchers at Hangzhou Dianzi University in China unveiled their Regenovo 3D printer. Unlike more familiar 3D printers, which work with plastic or metal dust, Regenovo prints living tissue – such as these little ears.
The Hangzhou team aren't the only ones 3D-printing spare parts for people. Earlier this year, a team at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, also demonstrated an ear printer, and Organovo in San Diego, California, are on the way to building fresh human livers.
Meanwhile a team at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, UK, has turned human embryonic stem cells into 3D-printer ink. Things are more advanced when it comes to making new bones, as a woman with a 3D-printed titanium jawbone could tell you.

Posted on 05:33 by Unknown