The World Of Babies is launched fully today and is the brainchild of full time mum Tanya. Being a mum she knows what women go through during and after pregnancy and she found the on-line shopping experience to be poor and uninformative at best. So, she decided to change things and came up with http://www.theworldofbabies.co.uk
Tanya noticed that there were plenty of sites out there selling products and services for pregnant women and mothers with babies in the past but very few sites that were offering any information of tips and advice on what to buy and what not to buy. So she came up with her answer to that The World Of Babies.
"The World Of Babies approaches the on-line experience from a different angle" says Tanya, it is her belief that her site has a responsibility to her customers to keep them informed about their journey through pregnancy and beyond. This is done by ensuring that the web site is full of up to date content relating to pregnancy and babies. This information is provided by many sources both professional and via other mothers. This information is presented in the form of articles on the website or links to professional web pages where help and advice can be sort. "It has taken weeks of web searching to get this information together" Tanya explains, its difficult to sort the out what is useful and what is not useful at times. But Tanya has gathered together a whole host of information to help mums and mums to be.
She goes on to explain that there are now a range of video "how To" guides to help the bump to baby experience. Items such as "how to change a baby's nappy", a easy subject you might think, but if you have never done it before then is could be quite daunting to say the least. The quality video guides will guide the visitors through many such subjects making their life easier in what is rather a busy time.
"On the site is a range of buying guides which can be useful if you are for instance, buying some new nursery furniture sets (http://www.theworldofbabies.co.uk/compare_nursery-furnit ...) for example. If its your first time then knowing what to buy and what to look for can be very useful", Tanya explains. We try our best to cover all angles so that our customer are as informed on the subject as we could possibly make them. this library is added to on a regular basis to ensure that it stays fresh and up to date at all time.
They also have a section that offers links to other site that Tanya has found useful in the past, sites like the NHS help line and the Citizens Advice Bureau are all there offering up to date professional advice.
Tanya has also just launched a sister site http://www.bumpandbaby.info this site runs in conjunction with The World Of Babies and serves as a blog site for anything bump and baby related. This blog site is very active with articles from professionals and mums and mums to be added value to it. She sees this site as a forum for anything bump and baby related, a place where people can share their experiences so that others may learn from them.
The site also sells a wide range or products and services that are related to pregnancy and beyond. Its sells a range of stylish Maternity Clothes (http://www.theworldofbabies.co.uk/compare_maternity.html) from a range of top UK retailers such as Mothercare and Crave Maternity to name a few. Tanya explains that the store offers the products from many retailers thus ensuring that her customers get the best possible deals at all times as the visitors can choose which retailer to buy from. The product range is constantly updated as are the prices, this enables the store to offer real value for money to her customers.
Tayna believes that her store is a one stop shop for all bump and baby related products and information and is excited by what the future holds as she continues to find new sources of information and products to offer.
Baby Car Phones
Blog About Cars, Baby and Cell Phones
Jumat, 23 Maret 2012
Sony debuted Xperia neo L MT25i, announcing four Android smartphones in China
What the Sony mobile division will be after the departure from Ericsson? It will remain at the same level both in hardware and design, or even better. After its tour in the US and Taiwan, Sony now brings its four new Xperia series smartphone in China, including three handsets that showed up at Taiwan new product conference, such as Xperia P LT22i, Xperia U ST25i, Xperia Sola MT27i, and there is also Xperia new L MT25i, which shows up at the first time and thus the phone that attracts most attention at this conference.
We are quite familiar with Xperia P LT22i and Xperia U ST25I, which got unveiled at MWC this year, construction the Xperia NXT series with Xperia S LT26i(http://www.tvc-mall.com/mg/Brand/sony/Sony_Xperia_S_LT26 ...), which has already rolled out in the market. Xperia U features a 3.5-inch display with a resolution of 854*480, 1GHz dual-core processor, a 5MP primary camera, running Android Gingerbread. The battery inside is claimed to last 472 hours of standby time. Xperia P, resembling Xperia S much in appearance, has a 4-inch display, which sports WhiteMagi technology and will have double brightness in the Sun. Powered by a dual-core prcocessor, Xperia P has an 8MP camera and also runs Android 2.3.
Xperia Sola is noted for its Floating Touch technology and inherits the similar design of NXT series with the absence of transparent band. It sports a 3.7-inch display with a resolution of 854*480, 1GHz STE-U8500 dual-core processor, 512MB of RAM, a 5MP camera and of course Android 2.3.
If you are slightly disappointed with the said three devices running only Android 2.3, then certainly you will be satisfied with the Android 40-running Xperia new L MT25I. As the first Android ICS-based smartphone of Sony, Xperia neo L, an obvious successor of Xperia neo MT15i, aims at middle to low-end market and comes with a 4-inch touchscreen, a 1GHz processor and a 5MP camera. To meet the demand of Chinese users, these phones have been preloaded with many local apps. All these four handset will hit China in Q2, and there is no word on whether the Xperia neo L will be available in the rest of the world.
We are quite familiar with Xperia P LT22i and Xperia U ST25I, which got unveiled at MWC this year, construction the Xperia NXT series with Xperia S LT26i(http://www.tvc-mall.com/mg/Brand/sony/Sony_Xperia_S_LT26 ...), which has already rolled out in the market. Xperia U features a 3.5-inch display with a resolution of 854*480, 1GHz dual-core processor, a 5MP primary camera, running Android Gingerbread. The battery inside is claimed to last 472 hours of standby time. Xperia P, resembling Xperia S much in appearance, has a 4-inch display, which sports WhiteMagi technology and will have double brightness in the Sun. Powered by a dual-core prcocessor, Xperia P has an 8MP camera and also runs Android 2.3.
Xperia Sola is noted for its Floating Touch technology and inherits the similar design of NXT series with the absence of transparent band. It sports a 3.7-inch display with a resolution of 854*480, 1GHz STE-U8500 dual-core processor, 512MB of RAM, a 5MP camera and of course Android 2.3.
If you are slightly disappointed with the said three devices running only Android 2.3, then certainly you will be satisfied with the Android 40-running Xperia new L MT25I. As the first Android ICS-based smartphone of Sony, Xperia neo L, an obvious successor of Xperia neo MT15i, aims at middle to low-end market and comes with a 4-inch touchscreen, a 1GHz processor and a 5MP camera. To meet the demand of Chinese users, these phones have been preloaded with many local apps. All these four handset will hit China in Q2, and there is no word on whether the Xperia neo L will be available in the rest of the world.
Baby, You Can’t Drive My Car: VERMONT TECH Grad on Google Team Developing Robotic Car
Jeremy Spencer, who earned a degree in mechanical engineering from Vermont Tech in 2006, has been hired as a Google field engineer responsible for testing robotic, self-driving automobiles.
For Spencer, an officer in the Vermont National Guard, the road to Google was more of a rollercoaster ride than a Sunday drive. While a student at Vermont Tech, Spencer was called to serve in Iraq in 2004. He returned to Vermont Tech the following year, only to be called up again, this time to help with Hurricane Katrina relief. After finally earning his associate’s degree, Spencer enrolled in the industrial engineering program at East Carolina University — he graduated in 2008, and was again called to duty in 2010, this time in Afghanistan.
“In 2011, I decided to take some time to travel, so I headed across country to California,”
said the Fayston, Vermont native. “A friend of a friend introduced me to a program manager at Google who was hiring test drivers for cars using artificial intelligence software.” Spencer so impressed the program manager that he was hired on the spot.
Now, Spencer spends his days in the passenger seat of a Toyota Prius that drives itself. According to a New York Times article about the project, “robot drivers react faster than humans, have 360-degree perception and do not get distracted, sleepy or intoxicated ….”
“Driving is far more complex than most of people realize,” says Spencer. “When we are driving down the road, we make hundreds of unconscious decisions. My job is to act as the rationale, average driver, giving feedback about the car’s behavior, how it takes turns, how it accelerates and brakes. The engineers and programmers are geniuses at taking the feedback and writing it into programs that guide the cars.”
For Spencer, an officer in the Vermont National Guard, the road to Google was more of a rollercoaster ride than a Sunday drive. While a student at Vermont Tech, Spencer was called to serve in Iraq in 2004. He returned to Vermont Tech the following year, only to be called up again, this time to help with Hurricane Katrina relief. After finally earning his associate’s degree, Spencer enrolled in the industrial engineering program at East Carolina University — he graduated in 2008, and was again called to duty in 2010, this time in Afghanistan.
“In 2011, I decided to take some time to travel, so I headed across country to California,”
Now, Spencer spends his days in the passenger seat of a Toyota Prius that drives itself. According to a New York Times article about the project, “robot drivers react faster than humans, have 360-degree perception and do not get distracted, sleepy or intoxicated ….”
“Driving is far more complex than most of people realize,” says Spencer. “When we are driving down the road, we make hundreds of unconscious decisions. My job is to act as the rationale, average driver, giving feedback about the car’s behavior, how it takes turns, how it accelerates and brakes. The engineers and programmers are geniuses at taking the feedback and writing it into programs that guide the cars.”
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