This is a teat
My Personal Record
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Monday, June 18, 2012
VTT Pro for Multi-Apps
This App is upgrade for "Voice To Text for Multi-Apps", it adds two useful feature " Google Search" and " Google Map"
Feature:
- Multiple Languages Choosing
English: Australia, British, USA, Canada, New Zealand, IndiaChinese: Mandarin, Cantonese
French, Italian, Dutch, Russian, Spanish, Latin
Arabic: Egypt, Qatar,Saudi Arabia
Japanese, Korean
-Voice to Text, and text can be edited and sent by Multiple Apps
The Text can be edited by soft-keyboard and sent by Multiple Apps, such as "Text Message", "Email", "Gmail", "Facebook", "Twitter" and "WhatsApp" etc...
- Google Search
Voice input the "keyword" for search, you can use your native language.- Google Map
Voice input the "address" for search, you can use your native language.![]() |
Google Search Result |
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Google Search Demo |
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Google Search for "adele" |
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Google Search Result |
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Google map Demo |
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Google map Result |
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Use Google Search to find a restaurant |
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The Result |
Voice To Text for Multi-Apps
- Multiple Languages Choosing
English: Australia, British, USA, Canada, New Zealand, IndiaChinese: Mandarin, Cantonese
French, Italian, Dutch, Russian, Spanish, Latin
Arabic: Egypt, Qatar,Saudi Arabia
Japanese, Korean
-Voice to Text, and text can be edited and sent by Multiple Apps

Monday, June 11, 2012
Update for "Wired! The Dead Kindle is alive now".
On my previous blog, I mentioned one of my old kindle 3 is dead(frozen screen), then got recovery. Actually, it was good just for few days, then it was frozen again and refused to wake up anymore.
After a while, I figured it out it is the logic board problem, I bought some broken screen Kindle from ebay and changed the logic board, now it runs like new one.
After a while, I figured it out it is the logic board problem, I bought some broken screen Kindle from ebay and changed the logic board, now it runs like new one.
Broke logic board
Tear down the Kindle 3
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Rolling in the deep
adele @ npr
Marina @ French get talent
Marina @ French get talent
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
The hiding predator -- Wobbegong
Shark-eat-shark
The photo says it all: an alien-looking shark, adorned with mossy hairs and a flat face, with its mouth agape and a slender bamboo shark headfirst inside. Though not unusual for a shark to snack on another shark, it's not typical behavior — and it's certainly not common for humans to catch the action firsthand.
n fact, the researchers who came upon the shark-eat-shark scene on the fringes of Great Keppel Island on the southern Great Barrier Reef didn't realize at first what they were looking at.
"The white bamboo shark appeared first, and as we came closer, we suddenly realized that its head was not hidden under a ledge, as is usual, but in the mouth of the very well-camouflaged wobbegong," Daniela Ceccarelli of Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence (ARC) for Coral Reef Studies, told LiveScience, adding that "witnessing predation events like this is very rare."
Ceccarelli and David Williams, also of ARC, were conducting a fish census there on Aug. 1, 2011, when they spotted the sharks.
The predator was a four-foot wobbegong, a bottom-dewlling shark that uses its natural camouflage to blend into the seafoor and ambush prey.
The photo says it all: an alien-looking shark, adorned with mossy hairs and a flat face, with its mouth agape and a slender bamboo shark headfirst inside. Though not unusual for a shark to snack on another shark, it's not typical behavior — and it's certainly not common for humans to catch the action firsthand.
n fact, the researchers who came upon the shark-eat-shark scene on the fringes of Great Keppel Island on the southern Great Barrier Reef didn't realize at first what they were looking at.
"The white bamboo shark appeared first, and as we came closer, we suddenly realized that its head was not hidden under a ledge, as is usual, but in the mouth of the very well-camouflaged wobbegong," Daniela Ceccarelli of Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence (ARC) for Coral Reef Studies, told LiveScience, adding that "witnessing predation events like this is very rare."
Ceccarelli and David Williams, also of ARC, were conducting a fish census there on Aug. 1, 2011, when they spotted the sharks.
The predator was a four-foot wobbegong, a bottom-dewlling shark that uses its natural camouflage to blend into the seafoor and ambush prey.
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