An electronic cigarette doesn't rely on this process of combustion. Instead, it heats a nicotine liquid and converts the liquid to a vapor, or mist, that the user inhales. Depending on the e-cigarette, the user may simply inhale from the cartridge to begin the vaporization process, though some devices have a manual switch that activates the vaporizer inside. The charged battery is connected to the vaporization chamber, a hollow tube that contains electronic controls and an atomizer -- the component that creates the vapor. Before the user activates the device, he or she attaches a cartridge containing nicotine liquid to the vaporization chamber. The tip of the cartridge serves as the e-cigarette's mouthpiece. E-cigarette users inhale the way they would with a regular cigarette. This inhalation activates the atomizer to heat the liquid in the cartridge and convert the liquid to a vapor. Inhaling this vapor through the mouthpiece delivers nicotine to the lungs, and the user exhales vapor that looks much like a cloud of cigarette smoke.|Crooks have found all kinds of ways to launder money with crowdfunding scams. It's a good time to be a crook. If you want to steal hundreds, thousands or even millions of dollars, you don't have to snatch an old lady's purse on the street or stick up a bank. Today's tech-savvy criminal can skim credit card numbers from gas pumps or send phishing emails posing as a bank to steal account numbers. All from the comfort of their computer. One of the latest cybercrime trends, according to a report from the United States Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), is the use of crowdfunding websites like Kickstarter, Indiegogo and GoFundMe to drain stolen credit cards, launder money and even fund terrorists. Some so-called “scampaigns” start out legit, but then go south quickly. The Federal Trade Commission recently went after a guy who raised $122,000 on Kickstarter to fund a new board game, but ended up canceling the project and using the cash to move and start a new business.
Lots of sites that publish regular information have their own RSS feeds, like Marshall Brain's BrainStuff weblog. The trouble with living in the Information Age is paradoxical: There's too much information. It's everywhere. How are you supposed to keep track of all the news, sports, weather and blogs you follow? Better yet, how are you going to do that and find time for work, school and family? If you're addicted to the constant flow of data that we know as the Internet, you're not going to be able to manage it without some help. One way to keep track of it all has grown very popular since its introduction in 1997: RSS. Short for Really Simple Syndication (at least now -- more on that later), RSS is a way to subscribe to a source of information, such as a Web site, and get brief updates delivered to you. When you subscribe, you'll get a feed -- often a series of headlines and brief summaries -- of all the articles published on that particular Web page.
How much radiation do these machines produce? Is it enough to increase cancer rates in the general population? And can TSA agents see intimate details we'd rather they didn't? The European Union has addressed these questions decisively: It bans any body scanners that use X-ray technology. That ban complies with a law in several European countries that says people shouldn't be exposed to X-rays except for medical reasons. In the U.S., the TSA and the vendors that manufacture the scanners - such as Rapiscan for backscatter and L-3 Communications for millimeter wave -- continue to assure the public about the safety of the devices. And they've taken steps to protect passenger privacy by installing software that either creates generic outlines of people or blurs certain regions of the image. Still, many people remain skeptical that airport scanners, in any shape or form, are completely safe. And many more feel a bit lost trying to understand how the machines work and how they're different.|Videos have become a major source for generating traffic and also revenue. As technology is increasing video editing is igniting pace like a jet. With this, we can say the preferences of the audience has also changed. Earlier, the usage of the template was popular with bright color fusion, but with video editing, camera motion does wonders. Here are some of the video editing trends you must know. In the aspect of video making, on-the-go editing is becoming highly popular. This is not about editing on the set at the back of a scene, it's about mobile devices that can help you edit videos while you are on the wheels. Moreover, for video editing house in Kolkata or other urban cities, for whom social media pages have to be updated every minute, the mobile editing option is a blessing in disguise. These are some sort of pre-built video elements which is easy to download, use and then import for using in either clients or own projects.
Acoustic levitation allows small objects, like droplets of liquid, to float. Unless you travel into the vacuum of space, sound is all around you every day. But most of the time, you probably don't think of it as a physical presence. You hear sounds; you don't touch them. The only exceptions may be loud nightclubs, cars with window-rattling speakers and ultrasound machines that pulverize kidney stones. But even then, you most likely don't think of what you feel as sound itself, but as the vibrations that sound creates in other objects. The idea that something so intangible can lift objects can seem unbelievable, but it's a real phenomenon. Acoustic levitation takes advantage of the properties of sound to cause solids, liquids and heavy gases to float. The process can take place in normal or reduced gravity. In other words, sound can levitate objects on Earth or in gas-filled enclosures in space.
Sometimes it seems we're starting to use a more simple -- albeit flawed -- way to distinguish among acts that result in multiple people dead. If someone used a bomb, it's terrorism. A gun? Mass murder. Of course, that's not an effective methodology, nor is it a fair assessment to mete out punishment. As we'll see, the definition of terrorism has evolved to describe the motivations behind the act, not the actor. On the other hand, according to the FBI, a mass murderer kills four or more people during the same incident, without a significant time lapse in between. That sounds straightforward enough, right? Mass murderers will kill indiscriminately for no political/religious/ideological purpose, and terrorists might take the same actions, but with the intent of saying that they are a protest of intimidation of a government or people. Except, of course, many mass murderers really do think their actions are a protest or do intend to terrorize a population. So let's dive in more and explore some incidents where the definitions are harder to establish. So it appears that terrorism and mass murder are sometimes distinguished with an "I know it when I see it" assessment. And when we see the weapon being used, the public often has an easier time deciding who's a terrorist and who's a rogue: Guns are for mass murderers. Bombs -- or "weapons of mass destruction," as the pressure-cooker weapons constructed in Boston are referred to in the charges filed against the suspect -- are the domain of terrorists. That's the idea that floats around the general population, anyway. As we saw, the U.S.
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Russia trade bill that passed the House last week stalls in the Senate with quarrel over sanctions
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