Commodities

Frugal tech: The start-ups working on cheap innovation

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Earth   来源:Economy  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Parallel imports are not banned under international law and are allowed by some countries for certain goods, including Japan and the United Kingdom.

Parallel imports are not banned under international law and are allowed by some countries for certain goods, including Japan and the United Kingdom.

saying the Israeli military had forcibly co-opted one of the health centres at the UNRWA-run Arroub camp near Jerusalem as an interrogation and detention site.The attacks on healthcare facilities were part of a wider campaign to damage civilian infrastructure in the West Bank, the Forensic Architecture report said, using armoured bulldozers, controlled demolitions and air attacks.

Frugal tech: The start-ups working on cheap innovation

Researchers said they verified more than 200 examples of Israeli soldiers deliberately destroying buildings and street networks in all four of the refugee camps with armoured bulldozers reducing civilian roads to barely passable piles of exposed earth and rubble.Civilian property, including parked vehicles, food carts and agricultural buildings, such as greenhouses, were also destroyed during Israeli military operations, they said.Described as a ‘deeply saturated teal’ colour, humans can only see it with the help of laser technology.

Frugal tech: The start-ups working on cheap innovation

A team of scientists claims to have discovered a new colour that humans cannot see without the help of technology.The researchers based in the United States said they were able to “experience” the colour, which they named “olo”, by firing laser pulses into their eyes using a device named after the Wizard of Oz.

Frugal tech: The start-ups working on cheap innovation

Olo cannot be seen with the naked eye, but the five people who have seen it describe it as being similar to teal.

What has the study found?At the heart of any place is its people. This section gathers faces and figures of children, elders, farmers and merchants, capturing a moment in each of their lives.

Traditional dress, expressions and gestures reflect a culture rich in diversity. Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Bedouins appear side by side, revealing a land defined not by division, but by coexistence.Individual portraits

Each face carries its own story of life, labour, joy, or longing.Drag the slider or click on an image to see it in more detail.

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