Sony Ericsson MS500 Bluetooth Speaker
The low sound of your Mobile phone can be problematic when you are listening to it outdoors. Most of the Phones come with a bit weak built-in Speaker, which is great only indoors, but you can’t hear it loud enough outdoors and what if there is traffic noise to add to the annoyance? While this Sony Ericsson Blue tooth speaker can’t make the Mobile Phone loud enough to be heard even in traffic noise but it sure will make it louder and enhance the sound quality of the music played too. The Blue tooth Speaker has a range of 32 feet and can controlled from the speaker itself. So, you don’t need to take both the Cell Phones and the speaker with, just take the Speaker with you and control the Music using it, but as long as you stay in the range.
The designer of the MS500 Wireless Outdoor Speaker, Leonardo Salzedo said in a Press Release, “If I had to describe the MS500 speaker in three words, I would use the following; fun, compact and freedom.” The Speaker runs on AA batteries enough for a playback of up to 5 hours. There is no word about the price though and neither has Sony Ericsson said anything about the launch date.
First Eyeball Tattoo of The World
A Toronto man has been the first to get an eyeball tattoo. Basically, he has turned the whites of his eyes blue.
Corneal tattooing is usually used for patients that have had trauma to their eye, not for this, which is called body modification.
It took 40 injections of blue ink in order to complete this procedure. Pigment was injected under the top layer of the eye using a syringe. The syringe injected the ink into the eye. At first they had tried a traditional needle with ink on it, but when the ink didn’t hold, they switched to the syringe.
The man has reported that all is well so far, but it feels like he has something in his eye.
The Most Alien Looking Place on Earth
We covered some otherwordly places before (see, for example, Bolivian Salt Lake, or The Richat Structure), but this island simply blows away any notion about what is considered “normal” for a landscape on Earth.



31. May, 2009 




