2012年9月11日星期二

Connect to a Great Cause with MAXX HD Sunglasses

MAXX HD Sunglasses is pleased to announce they are joining the fight to end breast cancer forever, through sales of their line of pink High-Definition sunglasses. Show your support and make a connection to this great cause by purchasing a pair of their pink high definition sunglasses during the MAXX HD 2012 SHADES OF PINK promotion.As part of the MAXX HD 2012 SHADES OF PINK sales promotion, MAXX HD Sunglasses will donate to Susan G. Komen for the Cure $5.00 in connection with each pair of MAXX HD Pink Shades sold. The SHADES OF PINK promotion, offered for a limited time only, will include the Maxx HD Pink Designer Shades, Pink MAXX 4 and Pink Storm sunglasses. The offer will be available from September 10, 2012 through the end of Breast Cancer Awareness month in Oct. 2012.
Our pink shades are not only stylish and affordable, but they make it easy for customers to draw attention to breast cancer, by increasing awareness and raising funds for critical research, stated Chana Kolman, MAXX HD Public Relations Director.First lady wears festive custom-made dress by designer Tracy Reese.The MAXX HD 2012 SHADES OF PINK promotion fosters favorable impressions and the amazing HD lens keeps our patrons coming back year after year.
Clarke says that sports glasses, because they tend to be large, offer the best option. Recon Instruments already offers ski goggles which have a built-in video projector like Google Glass, but those too are limited to a non-central point.In the TTP prototype, the present projector technology offers VGA, or 640x480 pixel, resolution. "We can get a video attachment in a few weeks," he told the Guardian.The team has also devised a passive system by which the user can control the device, or an attached computer, just by moving their eyes to the left or right. Rather than using eye-tracking systems, which demand a camera watching the pupils and which Clarke says are "relatively computationally expensive", it uses passive electrodes mounted on the glasses that monitor activity in the muscles at the side of the temple - which produce particular signals that are indicative of eye movement.
He thinks that head-mounted displays could have been commonplace now, but that in the 1990s companies making displays decided not to focus on miniaturisation, and instead aimed for bigger products, principally seen in large screen TVs. "Sony and Sharp bet that people would want smaller displays. That turned out to be the wrong bet then. If things had gone differently then we would already have very high-quality tiny displays today."

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