Wonderbra Decoder App Lets You Peek Through the Garments of Lingerie Models

It seems like catalogs that work with X-ray type apps are starting to become a thing. Moosejaw started it all a couple of months ago with their winter catalog. IKEA followed suit with an X-ray app of their own, and now Wonderbra is getting on the bandwagon with an app of their own.

wonderbra decoder

The app is called the ‘Wonderbra Decoder,’ and like the others, users simply have to hover it over the designated area on the image or in the video (and over the model) to start undressing her. In this case, the model happens to be 21-year-old Slovakian fashion model Adriana Cernanova, who sports Wonderbra’s newest lingerie offerings this season.

The app is available for free for and Android smartphones and for iOS (but not in the U.S. App Store). I have a feeling women won’t be the only ones who will be using this app…

[via PSFK via Gizmodo]


iPhone 5 chemical study shows a green Apple, leaves room for improvement

iPhone 5 chemical study shows a green Apple, leaves room for more improvement

Eventually, that shiny new iPhone 5 will have to meet its untimely end, whether it’s in a landfill or (preferably) a recycling company’s machinery. When it does, you’ll at least be glad to know that Apple has kept the toxin levels down. HealthyStuff and iFixit have dissected the extra skinny smartphone and put it in the same “low concern” category for potential harm that’s normally occupied by phones wearing their green credentials on their sleeves. Lest anyone rush to tell Greenpeace about the feat, just remember that there’s a difference between proficiency at excising dangerous chemicals and getting rid of them completely: HealthyStuff still found small traces of bromine, chlorine, lead and mercury in the iPhone 5’s construction, which could pose risks if the handset is ever broken apart or melted for scrap. Some concern also exists that the x-ray fluorescence spectrometer doesn’t reveal the full extent of any toxic materials. Whether or not these remain sore points for you, the new iPhone is at least easier on the eco-friendly conscience than most of its peers.

Continue reading iPhone 5 chemical study shows a green Apple, leaves room for improvement

Filed under: , ,

iPhone 5 chemical study shows a green Apple, leaves room for improvement originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Oct 2012 17:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceiFixit  | Email this | Comments

IKEA Brings X-Ray Vision to its Catalogs

This isn’t the first time a company has tried incorporating technology into catalogs. Remember how Moosejaw released an app with their catalog that let shoppers (and the occasional pervert) see through the models’ clothing.

Now IKEA is doing the same thing, minus the sexy models, replaced with lots of hard-to-assemble home furnishings.

ikea xray catalog
As if there weren’t enough IKEA junkies already.

IKEA makes use of Augmented Reality to the fullest though, from allowing customers to see through cabinets and dresses to displaying additional furniture configurations to make the buying process easier.

Here’s a clip that shows off how it works:

You can download the IKEA catalog app here, and order the printed catalog here.

[via Pop Up City]


Amazon outs X-ray for Textbooks, ‘smart glossary’ for all of your learning needs

Amazon outs Xray for Textbooks, 'smart glossary' for all your learning needs

Ever wanted Amazon’s X-ray for books to play nice with those school publications as well? If so, you’re in the luck. The outfit announced today that X-ray for Textbooks will provide a library of terms to lend a hand with your studies alongside a similar function for movies that’s powered by IMDB. Of course, the helpful tech will land with the trio of new slates that were also unveiled at the event.

Filed under: ,

Amazon outs X-ray for Textbooks, ‘smart glossary’ for all of your learning needs originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 14:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Amazon’s X-Ray for Movies Knows What You’re Watching—And Who’s In It [Kindle]

So this feels like the future: Amazon’s X-Ray for Movies can tell what flick you’re watching on your Kindle Fire HD, and gives you every piece of information you could ever want about it every time you pause. Pretty incredible stuff. More »

Amazon announces X-Ray for Movies, a Kindle feature that uses IMDB to name the actors for you

Amazon announces XRay for movies, a Kindle feature that names the actors for you

Amazon is on a roll at its Kindle press event today, unveiling tons of new hardware, but it’s also got some software tricks up its sleeve too: the company just announced X-Ray for Movies, a feature that uses the Internet Movie Database (IMDB) to name the actors for you. As you might know, Amazon already offers X-Ray for books, but this is the first time you can use the feature to get more information about films. To active X-Ray, just pause whatever you’re watching and you’ll see things like actor bios, a cast list and links to other titles (which you can purchase, natch). All told, not exactly a novel idea, but for Amazon, at least, it’s a logical extension for X-Ray. Look for it on the new Kindle Fire HD or the smaller $159 Fire that was also announced earlier.

Filed under:

Amazon announces X-Ray for Movies, a Kindle feature that uses IMDB to name the actors for you originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Sep 2012 14:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Why Is There a Goddess’ Egg Floating In Space? [Space]

This image reminds me of an ovum—a female egg. But it’s not inside anything on Earth. It’s floating in the vastness of space about 9,000 light years from here, in the constellation of Cassiopeia. It’s the Tycho supernova remnant. More »

Diamond hones DOE X-ray laser howitzer to razor-sharp precision

DNP EMBARGOAug12Diamond hones DOE Xray laser howitzer to razorsharp precision

The US Department of Energy’s SLAC accelerator lab already has a pretty useful X-ray laser — the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). But, recent modifications to the device have scientists drooling over its new found potential. Using a thin wafer of diamond, the Stanford-run lab filtered the beam to a lone frequency, then amplified it in a process called “self-seeding.” That’s given the world’s most powerful X-ray laser even more punch by tossing out unneeded wavelengths which were reducing its intensity. The tweaks allow scientists across many fields to finesse and image matter at the atomic level, giving them more power to study and change it. According to the lab, researchers who came to observe the experiment from other X-ray laser facilities “were grinning from ear to ear” at the possibility of integrating the tech into their own labs. The SLAC team claims they could still add 10 times more punch to the LCLS with further optimization, putting the laser in a class by itself — X-ray-wise, anyway.

Continue reading Diamond hones DOE X-ray laser howitzer to razor-sharp precision

Filed under:

Diamond hones DOE X-ray laser howitzer to razor-sharp precision originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Aug 2012 13:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Panasonic preps SD cards that survive heat, water and X-rays, will probably outlast you

Panasonic preps SD cards that survive heat, water and Xrays, will probably outlast you

Much ado has been made of weather-resistant cameras, but it’s all a moot point if the memory card dies, isn’t it? Panasonic wants that level of survivability in its SDHC and SDXC cards, and its new UHS-I-level SDAB and SDUB lines are tested for the kind of abuse that could see the camera give up the ghost first. The cards can take the kinds of punishment that we often associate with rugged gear, such as temperatures from -13F to 185F, immersion in 3.3 feet of water for half an hour and the usual steep drops. It’s beyond this that the resistance levels become truly exotic: the cards are also built to survive zaps of electricity, proximity to magnets and exposure to X-rays. If it all becomes too much to bear, the design will even fuse on the inside to prevent fire burning the card from within. Those who like what they see will only have to decide whether or not they want the SDAB range’s 95MB/s read speeds and 80MB/s writes or are willing to settle for the SDUB line’s respective 90MB/s and 45MB/s transfers. We have yet to see if or when the SD cards cross the Pacific after their September 8th launch in Japan, although we hope so — with that kind of extra-tough design, our photos are more likely to endure than we will.

Filed under: ,

Panasonic preps SD cards that survive heat, water and X-rays, will probably outlast you originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 05:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Akihabara News  |  sourcePanasonic  | Email this | Comments

Visualized: Samsung Galaxy S III blasted with X-ray, doesn’t gain superpowers

Visualized Samsung Galaxy S III goes through Xray, doesn't gain superpowers

Tearing down a gadget normally presents a Catch-22 of having to destroy what you love to see how it works. As it turns out, there’s a clever way around that clause: when you have access to digital mammography X-ray machines beyond the hospital, like reader Alex does, you can get a peek at a Galaxy S III’s insides without having to dissect that Hyperglazed beauty layer by layer. The resulting scan stresses just how tightly packed Samsung’s Android flagship is when it’s all put together, but it also carries a slightly ethereal, Ghost of Smartphones Present aura, doesn’t it? While we doubt that Charles Dickens would ever have imagined this kind of spirit, you can gaze upon a much larger, even more detailed version of the supernatural Samsung after the break.

Continue reading Visualized: Samsung Galaxy S III blasted with X-ray, doesn’t gain superpowers

Filed under:

Visualized: Samsung Galaxy S III blasted with X-ray, doesn’t gain superpowers originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 21 Jul 2012 12:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments