I need to translate this articles to arabic please . - منتديات الجلفة لكل الجزائريين و العرب

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I need to translate this articles to arabic please .

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قديم 2013-10-04, 14:58   رقم المشاركة : 1
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Hot News1 لم يتم ترشيح اجابة مفضلة I need to translate this articles to arabic please .

please i need the translations to arabic for this articles it's for my brother to his high school magazine :
Girl makes her own prosthetic leg out of Lego
If you have access to the internet, you’ve most likely seen a plethora of impressive Lego projects — such as a life-sized X-Wing composed of five million Lego bricks, or a minimalistic-but-instantly-identifiable model of Stephen Hawking. However, you likely have never seen someone walking around in public using a Lego construction as a limb replacement. Furthermore, you likely have never seen someone build that Lego prosthetic, then attach it to themselves. Christina Stephens has a prosthetic leg, and a coworker in the research lab where she works joked that she probably couldn’t build a prosthetic out of Lego and wear it around. Well, Stephens took it as a challenge, and built her own prosthetic leg out of Lego and wore it around.
The video shows Christina building the actual prosthetic leg out of a box filled with Lego parts, then attaching each layer to her leg. Eventually, she attaches the Lego foot to the new, colorful prosthetic, stands up, and the Lego construction doesn’t immediately crumble like you may have imagined it would.
We’ve learned that a single Lego brick can take a lot of punishment: it takes a Lego tower 2.17 miles high in order to crush one brick. Furthermore, the average Lego brick can be used 31,112 times before it becomes unusable, where “using” means attached to and detached from another brick. So, the weight of a single human likely wouldn’t instantly destroy a well-made prosthetic Lego leg, which is essentially just a small Lego tower that is much shorter than 2.17 miles high.
Stephens does experience problems, however — almost instantly — but they don’t have to do with the integrity of the bricks. The ankle portion of the leg isn’t equipped to handle the stress of walking angles, and the bricks become detached more than once, leaving the foot separate of the leg.
A Lego prosthetic limb isn’t exactly practical, but if given the right Lego pieces, one could conceivably make a limb that is able to bend in the appropriate areas.


Google’s Flutter acquisition could bring air gestures to Gmail
Would you rather reach out and touch your screen or wave your hand in front of you in order to get to your next email? It’s entirely possible that Google will soon offer you that choice now that the company has acquired the gesture engineers at Flutter.
Many different companies are currently looking at perceptual computing for the next phase of human-computer interaction. The idea that you will be able to comfortably use your eyes to scroll a page on your phone or your hands to launch specific applications aren’t new concepts by any stretch, but they are certainly in need of some real polish. Interesting concepts like the Leap Motion and connecting a Kinect to your PC allow you to peer into this world and see what it could be like, but none of it is really ready for full time use.
Flutter is an application that takes your webcam and turns it into a gesture sensor, where you hold up your hand in a specific gesture and you can launch and navigate specific apps. That company was just bought by Google, and it’s not hard to guess why.
Flutter
Simultaneously the greatest (and least used) tool in Gmail’s services are the keyboard shortcuts. Google even sells special stickers that you can put on your keyboard to help teach users how to take advantage of the keyboard functions, but very few users actually know they exist. Google has proven with Chrome OS that the company has the tools necessary to control the webcam through HTML5, so it would be a small leap to see either browser-wide or application specific Flutter-style gestures inside Google’s products thanks to this acquisition. Gesturing between emails or even scrolling throughout Chrome with your webcam would be a powerful, cross-platform way to excite Google’s users and even gain new ones.
Flutter is still going to be available to use in its current form for now, according to the CEO in his acquisition announcement, and their engineers will be working with Google to build all new products as well. It’s entirely possible we’ll see enhanced gesture control in Google’s other properties soon, like Android. The web, specifically Chrome and Gmail, seem like low hanging fruit for a tool that is already proven to work on the desktop. Whether you’re a fan of gesture controls or not, it will be interesting to see where this goes.










 


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