USB inventor regrets making them so difficult to plug in correctly + While plugging plug a mouse, a phone, or a thumb drive into your computer, you try to stick the USB into its slot, only to find it stopping prematurely. You flip it around, but it still won't go in. So you flip it back to the original position and it slides in without a hitch. We've all been there, and the inventor of the USB sees our pain. Ajay Bhatt, the leader behind the IBM team that gave us the USB in the mid-'90s, revealed in an interview with NPR Friday that he is well aware of the annoyances the public has with USB, or Universal Serial Bus, but there's a reason it's designed the way it is. "The biggest annoyance is reversibility," Bhatt told NPR. He's got that right. "Of course it was not as easy as it should be" For outsiders, it seems like designing the USB so it can be reversible would be an easy fix to everyone's pro...
Sepotong daging yang masih ada sisa darahnya sedikit di masukkan ke dalam lemari pendingin (kulkas) sebelum di cuci terlebih dahulu. Pertanyaan : Apakah darah tersebut termasuk najis ma’fu ‘anhu ? Jawab : Darah tersebut tidak termasuk najis ma’fu ‘anhu , karena air yang ada dalam kulkas bukan air untuk memasak. Sedangkan yang di ma’fu hanya terbatas pada darah yang tercampur dengan air masakan. Tapi menurut sebagian pendapat darah sedikit pada daging tersebut di anggap suci. Ta’bir : I’anatut Tholibin juz I hal. 83. Mughnil Muhtaj juz I hal. 79. فى إعانة الطالبين 1/83 مانصه : دم حتى ما بقي على نحو عظم لكنه معفو عنه (قوله حتى ما بقي على نحو عظم) أى حتى الدم الباقى على نحو عظم فإنه نجس وقيل إنه طاهر وهو قضية كلام النووي وجرى عليه السبكي الى أن قال (قوله لكنه) أى ما بقي على نحو عظم وقوله معفو عنه أى فى الأكل وإن اختلط بماء الطبخ وغيره وكان واردا على الماء. وكذا ما فى مغنى المحتاج 1/79.
Apple now sells a smart bike helmet with an LED turn signal + Bike commuters do a lot to make drivers notice them. They slap reflectors on their clothes, install lights on their bikes, and put on neon yellow vests. Now they can use turn signals like a car. Apple started selling Lumos Matrix helmets in its stores and online Wednesday. They come in two colors — white and black — and retail for $249.95. The Lumos Matrix reimagines the function of helmets for today’s electric scooter and bike riders, co-founder and CEO Eu-wen Ding says. “Design is really about solving human problems, but no one is really looking at [the commuters’] problems,” Ding says. “What the traditional guys are trying to solve is, ‘How can we make this super lightweight? How can we make this super aerodynamic?' We are asking different questions: ‘How can we make a helmet that has a lot of lights, that can be seen from far away, and that driv...
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