The Truth About the Physics of 'Angry Birds'

Angry BirdsWe all know that 'Angry Birds' is one of the most addictive games ever created, but does this physics puzzler actually obey the laws of physics? Wired's Rhett Allain had to find out, and used some fancy video-tracking software and lots of geeky math skills to reveal the truth. He also discovered that, in the real world, those red angry birds would be over two-feet tall. Terrifying.

Tags: AngryBirds, apps, gaming, ios, physics, top, videogames

Right then.... so now I have an excuse to be playing angry birds in my physics lessons! Yay!

Exploring Search with Prospector

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I cannot wait to see the outcome of these prototypes that we are soon going to be seeing... oh... wait.... let me explain....

Mozilla Prospector is all about experimenting with search in the browser.... some of these experiments will come in the form of no-restart addons!

For more information visit the Mozilla Labs Blog

Firefox 4 Beta for Android and Maemo is Now Available

The first Firefox 4 beta for mobile is now available to download and test. It’s built on the same technology platform as Firefox for the desktop and optimized for browsing on a mobile phone. Firefox beta for mobile comes with many of your favorite Firefox desktop features like Firefox Sync, Add-ons and the Awesome Bar.

A major focus of this release is to increase performance and responsiveness. Two of the big architecture changes are Electrolysis and Layers. Our alpha contained Electrolysis which allowed the browser interface to run in a separate process from the one rendering Web content, resulting in a much more responsive browser. This beta brings the Layers pieces which improve overall performance and in graphics areas such as scrolling, zooming and animations. For more technical details, see Mozilla mobile engineer Matt Brubeck’s blog.

Firefox 4 Beta includes Firefox Sync to create a seamless Web browsing experience between desktop and mobile. With Firefox Sync, you can take your browsing history, bookmarks, tabs, passwords and form-fill data with you anywhere so you never have to retype passwords or long URLs again. Your Firefox data is completely encrypted end-to-end between your computers so that only you have access to it. (For those using Firefox Sync, be sure you’re up to date.)

This release delivers a rich set of features, including pinch-to-zoom, which is now supported on multitouch-capable devices, and the Awesome Screen, which instantly gives you access to your recent history, bookmarks and tabs just by tapping in the Awesome Bar. See the release notes for a full list of features included in this release.

Firefox 4 Beta for mobile is significant step forward in sharing a personalized, seamless and encrypted Web experience across devices. Developers have the power to use the latest Web technologies like HTML5, CSS and JavaScript to to build fast, powerful and beautiful mobile apps and add-ons that can reach millions of devices. We are excited to see the innovative and valuable mobile add-ons that developers will build for Firefox.

Our

Meet the Firefox mobile team and watch the demo:

Mozilla need your help testing this beta to build the best Firefox mobile browser. Get involved with this beta release and Go Mobile.

For more information, please visit:

Awesome Drop

So just a few moments ago I finally got round to reading my big ol' nasty lot of feeds that trudge through my aggregater daily to find something amazing. That something is called Awesome Drop.

Just open up the Awesome Drop app on your phone and enter the PIN it gives you in Awesome Drop's web interface, accessible from any browser. The HTML5-powered webapp will then give you a window to which you can drag and drop any files you want, and they'll automatically appear on your phone, ready for use. Check out the video for a demonstration.

This works wonderfully, and I cannot wait to take a look at the source code that drives it. I just have to know how it works!

For those of you who don't have an android phone I really do feel for you. There is always dropbox I suppose, and I will continue to use dropbox as it is very good for times when I am not at my computer, but for the quick transfer... I don't want to hunt for my transfer cable, mount the device, and all that cafuffle.

[via Lifehacker]