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Android Home Gaming Console GameStick, A Kickstarter-Funded OUYA Competitor, Gets Its Release Delayed Til June

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GameStick

GameStick, a would-be OUYA competitor that we wrote about back in January when it launched its Kickstarter campaign, has been delayed. The device achieved backing on Kickstarter in February and originally planned to start shipping in March, with “fulfilment to customer” pegged for April. But the launch has now been delayed until June — with the project creators saying it’s been a victim ”of the success we have created”.

Close to $650,000 was pledged via Kickstarter by almost 5,700 backers — more than 6x more money than the GameStick’s creators original goal of $100,000. When funding hit $560,000 they added a stretch goal introducing one more console colour to the mix, and giving backers the option to vote on a fourth colour choice via Facebook.

In an actualizar to backers, the GameStick creators pointed to greater than expected production volumes as the reason for the three month delay, along with switching from air freight to sea shipping to keep costs down. ”The main production run has gone from a few thousand units to tens of thousands of units. This has meant that we have had to change production methods and move to high-volume tooling,” the message said.

The first backers are not expected to receive their GameSticks until the last week in June.

Initially we had hoped to deliver GameStick to you at the end of April. We now expect to complete mechanical tooling about 4 weeks later at the end of May. Then the units are assembled, tested and assuming there are no issues, packed prior to shipping to each territory. We expect to ship around the 10th June. The volumes are now too large for us to be able to afford to air-freight them, which was our plan, so now we are going to have to use sea freight to deliver them. That’s going to take around 2 weeks. Then we have fulfillment in territory – which we estimate will take between 1 y 5 days depending on where you are located. This means we think the likely date of arrival of your hand crafted GameStick will be at the last week of June.

The GameStick is so named for its USB stick design, which means the console is even smaller than the cube-shaped OUYA. The GameStick controller has a space to fit the console inside for safe keeping when it’s being carried in a bag or pocket.

As for internal hardware, the GameStick has a dual-core Cortex A9 chip clocked at 1.5GHz, along with a dual-core Mali 400 GPU at 400MHz, plus 1GB of memory and 8GB of flash storage. It uses Bluetooth 4.0 and 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi for connectivity and runs Android Jelly Bean. Gamepads, mice and keyboards can be hooked up to it — with support for up to four controllers at once.


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In Venezuela Barrio, Recycling a Broken McDonalds Playground into an Urban Farm

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How can architects help address challenges like violence, vulnerability, livelihood, and health? The question inspires Rogue Architecture, a studio and website based in the U.K., to study participatory design interventions around the world, and sometimes participate in the interventions themselves—like this one, which helped start an urban agriculture project in a Caracas, Venezuela barrio.

When the designers first began working with the community, they learned that there wasn't any history of agriculture in the community. Locals spent a large amount of their income at the supermarket, and because of the barrio's location on unusually steep land, there were open spaces available for potential gardening. But it wasn't as simple as just beginning to plant: because of high levels of violence, it wasn't always safe to be in the open areas, and because no one there had gardened before, education needed to happen first.

The designers decided to work with a school they'd been introduced to in the community, build a small garden there, and hope that it would catalyze more projects. McDonalds had donated a broken jungle gym to the school, and parts that couldn't be played on turned out to be perfect to recycle into planters. Larger pipes became composting containers, and were filled with biodegradable waste from the playground. The different colors of the jungle gym's tubes became a color code to help assign classes or students to take care of particular plants.

This is the sort of small intervention that could help have bigger benefits. The designers say:

It is hoped that this project not only provides a sustainable source of food, but also impacts the general standard of food consumed within the barrio. This was not a highly designed and planned intervention, it was simply making use of the scarce resources available and trying to produce something meaningful for the children that could impact their everyday lives.

This post is part of the GOOD community's 50 Building Blocks of Citizenship—weekly steps to being an active, engaged global citizen. This week: Learn About Your Town's Sister Cities. Follow along and join the conversation at good.is/citizenship and on Twitter at #goodcitizen.

Photos courtesy of Natalya Critchley and Rogue Architecture



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Knight Foundation-Backed Mobile Sensor Startup Behavio Shuts Down As Founders Join Google

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The team behind the Knight Foundation-backed mobile sensor startup Behavio today announced that it is joining Google. We have learned that this is not an acquisition or an acqui-hire, however.

The company, which was founded by a group of MIT Media Lab alums, was working on Funf, an open-source “extensible sensing and data processing framework for mobile devices.”

The project, the Behavio team writes in an announcement on its website, will continue and be maintained by the Behavio team. In the coming days, sin embargo, Behavio will shut down its closed alpha program, and the team says it is “looking forward to working on exciting things within Google.”

The general idea behind Behavio – which was built on top of the Funf project – was to develop apps that would detect social and behavioral trends in communities. “When you leave the house, the three things you usually take with you are your keys, your wallet, and your phone,” Behavio co-founder Nadav Aharony told Nieman Journalism Lab’s Andrew Phelps when the project received its Knight Foundation grant in 2012. Because your smartphone is basically a “sensing and processing machine,” the team wanted to look into how it could use all of this metadata about you and your location to create “meaningful stories.”

Besides getting the prestigious Knight Foundation grant, Behavio also won the 2012 SXSW Accelerator competition.

Here is how our own Greg Ferenstein described what Behavio was planning to do with its $355,000 Knight Foundation grant:

Instead of intentional online connections, [...] Behavio, looks at how peoples’ location, network of phone contacts, physical proximity, and movement throughout the day can help us predict range of behaviors — anything from fitness to app downloads to mass protests.

The entire big-data mobile smorgasbord is based on an open source project [Aharony] helped built at the MIT Media Lab, Funf, a public database of android-friendly software for turning cell phone toting-humans into willing lab rats of social experimentation.

This definitely sounds like a technology Google would be interested in for both Android and the Google Glass project.

Here is the full announcement from Behavio:

The Behavio Team is Now Part of Google!

We are very excited to announce that the Behavio team is now a part of Google! At Behavio, we have always been passionate about helping people better understand the world around them. We believe that our digital experiences should be better connected with the way we experience the world, and we couldn’t be happier to be able to continue building out our vision within Google.

We would like to thank all of you who have followed and supported us and our work over the past few years — from academia, through our open source project, and into our work at Behavio. Además, we would like to express our appreciation to the Knight Foundation as well as the organizers and judges of the SXSW Accelerator, who believed in our vision and in us, and gave us the push that started the wild and amazing ride of the past year. Finalmente, thanks to all of you who have given us your advice, your support and, most valuably, your time.

In the comings days we will be shutting down our closed alpha program. Going forward, we will continue to maintain the Funf open source project, and look forward to working on exciting things within Google.

-The Behavio Team


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Backed Or Whacked: Get Together With The Band

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Editor’s note: Ross Rubin is principal analyst at Reticle Research and blogs at Techspressive. Each column will look at crowdfunded products that have either met or missed their funding goals. Follow him on Twitter @rossrubin.

Last week, Backed or Whacked look at a trio of wristbands that can hold a buck, make a bun and prevent a burn all without any assistance from a successful mobile app platform. But as a host of digital fitness products has shown, the usually limited interfaces of fashion accessories can be boosted by pairing them with smartphones.

Whacked: Embrace+. The Embrace+ could be described as a smartwatch for people who would rather rave all night than know what time it is. The transparent band, to be available in three shapes, has embedded LEDs that illuminate in different colors depending on the kind of notification being received.

Con 13 different services and alerts intended to be supported out of the gate, there’s a good chance that those with an active social (networking) life will find their wrists becoming a rainbow of a light show throughout the day. And if the unlimited colors aren’t enough for you, the band also offers options for the number and duration of blinks, light brightness and speed interval and whether to include a subtle vibration.

The Embrace+ campaign attracted interest, with nearly 1,500 backers ponying up nearly $84,000, but that represented less than half of its ambitious $220,000 goal. Almost immediately after it ended, the team vowed a relaunch at a new web address, but so far clicking it turns up a generic web-hosting admin page.

Whacked: WeLoxx. Those who have pursued the quantified self only to discover there is too much of their self to quantify for their liking have access to a whole battle of the bands to help them with calorie expenditure. These include offerings from Jawbone and Nike with more on the way from Fitbit and Samsung. But at CES, much attention was lauded on a connected utensil called the HAPIfork that keeps track of how often you shovel food into your mouth, coaching you to eat more slowly.

That’s the basic idea of the WeLoxx, which moves the sensor from the fork to the wrist and thus enables it to work with spoons, chopsticks or your grubby bare hands. The project, originating in Bern, Switzerland, proposed two different models for the WeLoxx — a more watch-like design, the WeLoxx 300, and band-like design, the WeLoxx 900. Both featured an array of traffic lights to signal how fast you’re eating. For the near term, aunque, we won’t be loxxing, as the campaign collected only $584 from six backers en route to missing its $80,000 goal.

Whacked: LinkMe. The LinkMe is a paradox. On one hand, or perhaps wrist, notification bands are supposed to be unobtrusive. The Embrace+’s light show may even be pushing it, but at least only you know how to decode its glowing rainbow.

In contrast, the LineMe wraps an LED billboard around that hand-joining joint. The advantage is that the band can display specific messages instead of just notification lights, possibly saving you more trips back to the 5″ LTE-packing behemoth weighing down your pocket. On the other hand, it could enable anyone close enough to your resting arm to read the digital sweet nothing intended just for snookums. The creators, New Yorkers Matt and Colin, would counter that you can set up a system of abstract characters to get back to the Embrace+ level of abstraction.

The LinkMe would last about two weeks on a charge and, like the Nike FuelBand, the LinkMe can default to a time readout when nothing private is being broadcasted to it. One month in, the campaign has raised only about $13,000 of its $100,000 goal.


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The Bootlegger Modular Pack On Kickstarter Is Three Very Different Backpacks In One

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San Francisco-based Boreas Gear, Inc. is funding its latest product through Kickstarter, in an attempt to build a modular pack system that provides three bags in one. If you’re a bag enthusiast like myself (that might not be a real thing but I still have tons of them) then you’ll appreciate the idea of a simple system that makes it easy to covert a single frame into a daypack, waterproof bag and simple hydration/light carry bag quickly and easily.

The SF-based team founded Boreas Gear in 2010, with the intent of designing packs centered around versatility and good design. Founder and Creative Director Tae Kim has a design background and grew up in Alaska, where he spent plenty of time in the great outdoors. The bootlegger is designed to be the perfect companion for a whole host of outdoor activities.

Besides offering the three different pack configurations, it also boasts something called “Super-Tramp Suspension” which uses pull-straps to shift the weight carried in the pack either closer to or farther away from the back, making it possible to adjust it perfectly for either hiking or biking on the fly. If you’ve owned a specialized biking pack, then you know that the added breathing room can really come in handy, especially on longer rides.

The Super-Tramp Suspension system can then be used interchangeably with three pack tops, including the Torpedo, the Hopper and the Scrimshaw. The Torpedo is a lightweight hydration pack, which can be outfitted with a water bladder to keep you from getting thirsty on long rides or trail runs without adding too much weight. The Hopper is a daypack that has plenty of room for a lunch and gear for a full day on the mountain and the Scrimshaw is a completely submersible waterproof bag, perfect for rain, snow, or use in watersports like canoeing or kayaking.

The system is designed to be used either with any individual bag or with all three, and the project has already blown past its $10,000 funding goal. Boreas Gear has been designing and manufacturing packs for years now, so there’s relatively little risk in terms of the company delivering on its planned July ship date. Pledges for bags start at $65 for the frame + a single pack and range up depending on what options you’re interested in.


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Google’s One Today App Aims To Make Charitable Donations A More Social, And Frequent, Experience

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Today, Google quietly ushered in a new application built on top of its nonprofit arm, Google.org. The app is called One Today, and it’s currently invite only for Android users at this time. The aim is to get people to donate $1 to different organizations, while getting the complete information about how your donation will be used up front. This is a huge stumbling block for nonprofits usually, as people are afraid that their money won’t actually get spent on making a real difference. One Today aims to change that.

Además, One Today has a social component to it, letting you set a cap to how much money you’ll match if your friends donate to a cause. By using Google Wallet, you can simply pay off your “donation balance” once all of your friends have used up your cap. It’s a pretty interesting way of crowdsourcing donations. When I talk to people about giving money to causes, the first problem they have is that they can’t find one that they’re passionate about. By allowing you to put the choice of who to donate in your friends’ hands, this problem simply goes away and there’s no excuse not to give. You don’t have to involve others though, as you can participate by yourself or interact with the app’s community.

Actualmente, the landing page allows you to request an invite, even though the app itself is available for download on Google Play. If you open the app, you’re shown the invite screen yet again and there’s no word on when One Today will start opening itself up to users and donations.

Some other interesting aspects of the app are that it’s populated only with nonprofits that Google.org is currently working with, so you know that they’re pre-screened. Other sites, such as Causes, are filled up with organizations that have little or no information about itself or what is done with the money that they’re raising. That’s clearly not the case with this app, according to the programs that will be pre-populated:

Organizations can also register to be included.

From the looks of the app screenshots, One Today seems extremely polished and well thought out. This is an app that Google hopes you use daily:

The reason for putting this together is addressed in the app’s FAQ:

Google has a long-standing commitment to supporting nonprofits and to do doing good. One Today makes fundraising easy for nonprofits, it also makes giving simple and fun for users.

But yes, Google does collect a 1.9 percent credit card fee, but that’s not much considering that it takes care of the processing and donation routing for you. These donations are also tax deductible, of course.

The idea of accepting one dollar at a time is easy enough for anyone to chew on, and get into the rhythm of daily giving, which could be a more rewarding experience than giving a lump sum to just one charity every year, for example. As you donate more, the app will start recommending other organizations that might interest you, which is a Google Play app-like purchasing experience. When you tap “give,” it’s actually a pledge, and you’ll be notified to settle your balance once you’ve pledged to a few organizations.

With this approach, micro-donations could actually catch on and raise more money for these nonprofits than ever. In many situations, it’s not the actual amount that you donate, it’s the awareness that your social actions bring. One Today is an amplification tool, and it will be interesting to see how the project evolves once it opens to the masses.


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Amazing portraits of strangers by Francois Brunelle

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0 bf9e4 e57290b6 orig Amazing portraits of strangers by Francois Brunelle

Amazing portraits of strangers who look the double of each other, but not really twins.
Francois Brunelle finds his models while traveling and then brings two complete strangers together for a photo shoot. “I found my first subjects simply through people I knew who looked alike. Then as the media covered my project, more people came forward to take part,” he adds.

Couples of different ages and even sexes pose as if for their family portraits, and one would hardly think they could be coming from completely different parts of the globe. Curious world we live in!

0 bf9e5 1b470d57 orig Amazing portraits of strangers by Francois Brunelle

0 bf9ec bc3a637a orig Amazing portraits of strangers by Francois Brunelle

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Rhapsody Wasn’t Happy, So Open Source Music Service Napster.fm Changes Its Name To Peer.fm

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Last week, we told you about an open source alternative to music services such as Rdio and Spotify, called Napster.fm. The name alone got our attention, and after using it, there were a few features that were reminiscent of its predecessor, which made it even cooler.

Today, the service is changing its name to Peer.fm to steer clear of legal issues, desde Best Buy acquired the service and brand y shipped it over to Rhapsody in 2011, or whatever is left of it. Other than that, its been business as usual for its creator, Ryan Lester.

Lester tell us that he’s had nearly 100k visitors to the site, with over 59,000 users actually trying out its features. Right now, nearly 1,500 users are registered and getting all of the benefits that come with that, including its social functionality that allows you to share tracks and playlists with friends.

Most of the traffic is coming from outside of the United States, 64%, with areas of the world that don’t have access to Spotify bringing the heaviest users.

We chatted with Lester about his project, which is noteworthy for its open source nature, alone. He told us that he’d love to make the service available to mobile users, but is focusing on translating the service for as many languages as possible:

TC: What has been the most used feature on the service thus far?

Ryan Lester: Bien, not surprisingly, just playing music. It’s looking like the more social-oriented features are starting to pick up some steam, but just the core music-playing functionality easily tops the rest in usage.

TC: There are a lot of music services out there, why did people gravitate to yours?

Ryan Lester: I think there are a few important reasons for this:

1. It’s definitely something cool and new that people into music will want to try at least once, and being open source earns a certain level of cachet and goodwill.

2. Despite still being in Beta, the quality of the software is definitely in the same league as that of its major competitors (e.g. Spotify, Google Music); on top of that, it adds a few unique features of its own like syncing music between users in real-time.

3. Napster had a cool social element which hadn’t really been precisely replicated by newer services until Peer.fm showed up. En una nota relacionada, I’m sure quite a few people use it out of nostalgia for the old Napster days.

4. In most of the world, there aren’t a ton of other options (just take a look at Spotify’s geographic availability sometime).

5. Being completely free definitely doesn’t hurt .

TC: Are others asking to join and help you build out the open source project?

Ryan Lester: Not a whole lot, but I have gotten a few code contributions for some minor display issues that would probably have taken me a couple weeks to get to myself, and some offers to contribute to artwork and/or private testing in the future when necessary (which is really awesome to have willing volunteers for).

Other than that, I’ve mainly had people email/text me about how psyched they are to have something like this released as open source.

TC: What features are you working on next?

Ryan Lester: Top of my list in the short-term: language localisation for non-English speakers; this is way too important to ignore with 64% of my traffic originating from outside the US.

Outside of that, the major features at the top of my queue are multiple playlist support (as opposed to having only one massive library) and the ability to import music collections from other sources (especially iTunes).

More long-term, I’ll be looking to extend Peer.fm support for mobile devices, but I really couldn’t give any kind of time estimate on that at the moment.
———

By being open source, Lester can keep building out the features that the community wants, as well as allow others to jump into the code themselves. In the same way that WordPress got traction from developers who had a pure love for publishing, Peer.fm could attract a similar following and involvement for music.

Don’t be fooled though, the service isn’t paying for the music its streaming, and neither are the users, which will definitely make it a target for shutdown. The open source nature of it means that it can be re-opened in minutes, aunque. As we reported before, the way that the music is pulled in is due to “minor inefficiencies in YouTube’s piracy-detection system,” which haven’t seem to have been closed up yet. If that were to happen, then the project could be in jeopardy.

Sin embargo, I honestly believe that at some point, there will be an open source alternative to iTunes and Spotify, something that indie musicians can get behind and have a part in building. Once it attracts a few larger artists, then it could be a force to be reckoned with.

Could Peer.fm be lo? It’s the only reason that I heard the name “Rhapsody” in the past three years, so that counts for something, right?


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Plicopá Contest

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Do you want to customize your own Plicopá for free through our App?
So don’t miss this opportunity!

only the TOP 9 people who bring MORE DONORS (and donations!)
through its unique code* will receive this coupom (if the project is funded!)

Follow the instructions in the image bellow and GOOD LUCK!!!

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* IndieGoGo provides this ranking only for campaign’s creators!
The result will be published on our website on the May, 10th! Questions? contact us carla@plicopa.com or see indiegogo instructions

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DYT friends! Win Fantastic & Beautiful The Bricks UI Pack by Designmodo!
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How a Failed Super-Blimp Project Led to an Indoor Tropical Island Paradise in the Middle of Germany

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The sky was the limit for Cargolifter AG, the German company that designed a gigantic heavy lift airship in the 1990s called the CL 160. The super-blimp was meant to carry 160 metric tons over a distance of up to 10,000 kilometers, all without the need for airports; in a natural disaster, it could carry … Seguir leyendo How a Failed Super-Blimp Project Led to an Indoor Tropical Island Paradise in the Middle of Germany

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DARPA is Funding a Project to Disable In-Flight Aircraft with Swarms of “Gremlins”

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Gremlins are mythical imps that destroy airplanes. During World War II, Royal Air Force pilots blamed the creatures for their frequent on-board mechanical woes. Author and RAF ace Roald Dahl later spun Gremlins into a successful children’s book, painting them as 1940s eco-terrorists who sabotaged aircraft in retaliation for the airplane factory having destroyed their … Seguir leyendo DARPA is Funding a Project to Disable In-Flight Aircraft with Swarms of “Gremlins”

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Winner of Honda’s Global Design Project is a Car/Motorcycle Mash-Up

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Each year Honda holds an internal design competition, pitting their various design studios against each other to create blue-sky concepts. The winner of this year’s Honda Global Design Project is Project 2&4, created by two Honda teams that were apparently allowed to collaborate: Their Asaka-based motorcycle design studio and their Wako-based automobile design studio. La … Seguir leyendo Winner of Honda’s Global Design Project is a Car/Motorcycle Mash-Up

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Trippy art project has you exploring fractals in virtual reality

Chinese Fun Project by Stefano Cerio


ESPN shut downs Bill Simmons passion project Grantland

The first Jaguar Project 7 is the new kid in Harry’s Garage

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Filed under: Videos, Jaguar, Convertible, Performance Harry Metcalfe explains why his Jaguar Project 7 is a very special roadster in the latest video from Harry’s Garage. Continue reading The first Jaguar Project 7 is the new kid in Harry’s Garage The first Jaguar Project 7 is the new kid in Harry’s Garage originally appeared on … Seguir leyendo The first Jaguar Project 7 is the new kid in Harry’s Garage

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This Fascinating Photo Project Shows How Much Family Means To Every Single One Of Us

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Family is the most precious thing people have. Michele Crowe, an American photographer, shows in her photo project just how different and varied families across the globe can be. At the same time, aunque, families are very much alike in the love that is shared within them. Here’s a look at families from all over … Seguir leyendo This Fascinating Photo Project Shows How Much Family Means To Every Single One Of Us

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Detailed photos of Y Project Autumn (Fall) / Winter 2016 men’s

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Posted in Fashion / Moda imágenes / Paris fashion week / Runway & fashion show pictures We all know that it’s the finer details that count, and that’s why we captured a detailed look at Y Project’s autumn (fall) / winter 2016 runway show at Paris fashion week (PFW). El artículo continúa. To read it in … Seguir leyendo Detailed photos of Y Project Autumn (Fall) / Winter 2016 men’s

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Volvo research project teaches drones to tag team garbage pick-up

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