Wireless TV is fast becoming an issue of debate. Many consider the technology as groundbreaking, many see it as a chance to get away from the monopoly of the cable networks while others simply see it as just another high-tech thing that is drowning the modern world. Imagine no need for wires and cables and anywhere in the house the TV can access basically any channel.
For those who cannot seem to understand the concept of wireless TV, liken it to the old style communication system. In the past, in order to get a phone call, you needed a landline which depends on the transmitters. When technology modernized communication, there was the cordless telephone which used an antenna to receive the signal. Then the mobile phone came into being no need for cables, but there were still antennae. Then the latest technology improved it, no visible antenna.
This is the same with wireless TV. The old style was the antenna outside the home, usually installed at the apex of the roof of the house, and then there were the cables. But then computer technology intervened and the internet came into being. In the past the PCs needed to be hooked up to the cable or Ethernet to receive the signals until eventually there was no need of the cables, WiFi was invented. The WiFi just needed a transmitter and a receiver (the modern antenna) and the internet was accessible from anywhere and everywhere by anyone.
Veinlite is highly regarded in the industry as the leader in transilluminator technology for Vein Imaging. The side-transillumination method is where a bright ring of light is placed on the skin and focused under the skin to form a virtual light source below the skin. This virtual light source is like having a bright light bulb under the skin that moves with the Veinlite. Therefore, uniform transillumination of the skin is made possible almost anywhere on the skin. An opening in the Veinlite devices provides access to the vein while imaging it for faster and accurate vein access. The unique design of the Veinlite devices blocks the vein and stretches the skin for easier access.
The innovative Veinlite products using Transilluminator Technology for Vein Imaging and Venous Access include the following:
Veinlite PEDI is the smallest pocket Veinlite for vein imaging and access in babies, newborns and neonates. An innovative snap-on adapter converts this to a through the body transilluminator for finding veins in neonate limbs. It has 12 dual color LEDs and uses a disposable lithium battery.
Callaway Golf began to deliver measurable distance gains with its new, aggressive iron sets, the Callaway X Hot irons.
“The X Hot Irons are meticulously built each in terms of physical characteristics and club configuration to extend ball speed and promote overall distance improvement,” same Callaways Senior vp, analysis and Development Alan Hocknell. “And in doing thus, i feel we’ve got raised the bar and created the quality in distance for the irons class.”
In each of the new sets of irons, Callaway incorporated a Deep Undercut Cavity style and its powerful Speed Frame Face Technology to strike a balance of high ball speed and nice feel. The deep undercut style allowed Callaway to exactly position the middle of Gravity and move the most well liked and most compliant a part of the face lower, wherever a lot of golfers create contact with the ball.
Clayton Christensen wrote a book in 1997 that created an earthquake in the global business world. His book, The Innovator’s Dilemma describes “disruptive technology” in the marketplace that creates a firestorm of innovation so quickly, that renders known, present technologies is obsolete. It’s the process of a product or service that takes root in simple applications at the bottom of the market and through relentless movement upward, suddenly displaces established competitors.
Examples of disruptive technology is described in these terms to these products: vinyl records were suddenly replaced by 8 track tapes that were replaced by cassettes that were replaced by cd’s that were replaced by iPods. What happened to the Walkman? Look at MP3 players and the iPod. What happened to 35mm film? Look at digital cameras. Kodak thought digital photography was a passing fad but when digital hit the marketplace and stayed and grew, it displaced 35mm film developing with instant photos through digital technology.
How does disruptive technology affect human resources staffing?
The history of lighting is fascinating and includes philosophy, art, sciences and religion. Through an extensive timeline, we know that until early man discovered the element of fire quite by accident. He lived in darkness for half of his life. Lightning probably struck a nearby tree and set it on fire, revealing a source of light in addition to the sun and the moon.
But with fire, man could control it and generate heat for warmth and provide energy for cooking. This new source of light gave man a whole new definition of power and control moving him to the top of the food chain.
By bundling sticks together, fire became a torch to transport and light a path to other places. Later, man learned that grease and oil served as fuels for his fire and he could create holders for the fuel. He fashioned an animal horn, a shell, or a rock into a vessel for his fuel and fire. Then, man discovered how a wick added another measure of control, which eventually led to the invention of the candle.