#woobo
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stabknives · 4 days ago
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Also Trevor is so self aware it's wild. The scene where he falls over the fence and has a little freak out (as Trevor often does) only to be like FUCK!!! I AM SUCH AN ASSHOLE!!! I forgive you forever Franklin. Is so. Wow.
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jkriordanverse · 3 months ago
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Gem wt happened to u r theme???
what no im not gem im luna im old look hahahah oop woobo aj ajs i blush at everything my lovely smug guy says
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miiilowo · 2 years ago
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speepus splorkus!?
ah, the wonga bungo gablooga!!
beepob flangus nougat woobo nart
u know?
Yeah for sure
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adorableamyslifestory · 3 years ago
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출력하는 능력
그림을 잘 그린다는건, 머리에 있는 걸 손으로 출력하는 능력이 뛰어난 것이다. 
내 생각은 아티스트는 65% 출력도(싱크로율), 10%센스, 25%가 창의성으로 이루어 진 것 이다.
그렇기에 그림을 잘그릴려면 우선 출력이 되어야 한다. 악기도 비슷하다. 아무리 센스랑 창의력이 된다고 해도 세상 밖으로 나오지 못하면 말장 도루묵이다. 그래서 그림천재나 악기천재들은 어느정도 노력을 한 사람들이다. 그래서 아무리 미술적 혹은 음악적 재능이 있을지라도, 어렸을때 학원을 가지 않던, 어느 정도 기초 기술을 배우지 않은 이들은 쇼팽과 같은 재능이 있었어도 발굴되지 못하고 그렇게 썩히는 것이다.
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(사진출처:https://app.wombo.art/)
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miraenda · 4 years ago
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Clicbot fits right in with this zany bunch! #clicbot #jibolives #crazybots #vectorrobot #woobo #alexa #echospot #jiboandfriends #bacrobot #keyitech (at Old Sixth Ward, Houston) https://www.instagram.com/p/CFTAkr1nb4x/?igshid=1rfv69bojx83o
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movietvtechgeeks · 6 years ago
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Latest story from https://movietvtechgeeks.com/ces-2019-tech-gadgets-to-heighten-parental-anxiety/
CES 2019: Tech gadgets to heighten parental anxiety
Parents have enough to fear with newborn babies and their children's safety and the 2019 CES show will only enhance those fears with gadgets sure to keep them spying on their kids round the clock.
#CES, #ChildMonitoring, #ChildTech, #Cozmo, #Miku, #Owlet, #PregnancyTech, #Woobo
Movie TV Tech Geeks News
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wheres-julek · 4 years ago
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theres two drawings are like months apart but imma post them together anyway becasue theyre valid at the emotion im vibing with right now :~}  i got a well-elegant original freddie mercury hoodie this christmas from my parents and oh boy my mental state went woobo doo back on track with my passion, so anyway have this 
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moreinterestinginterests · 5 years ago
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"Rusko - Woo Boost (Flosstradamus Bootleg)" by Flosstradamus
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mixel-arts · 6 years ago
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I love this scene so much. What name should give these couples have? Woodbo? Boody? Woobo? Let me know.
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jamesgeiiger · 6 years ago
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CES 2019: ‘Family tech’ gadgets appeal to parental anxiety
LAS VEGAS — Every year, the CES gadget show brings more devices promising to make life a little bit easier for harried parents.
Sure, the kids might love them too: who wouldn’t want a computerized Harry Potter wand that also teaches coding? The Las Vegas show’s growing “family tech” sector encompasses products that range from artificially intelligent toys and baby monitors to internet-connected breast pumps.
Their common thread is an appeal to parental anxiety about raising smart kids, occupying their time, tracking their whereabouts and making sure they’re healthy and safe.
Some also come with subtle trade-offs. “Technology makes us forget what we know about life,” said psychologist Sherry Turkle, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who studies people’s relationships with machines. She’s particularly concerned about robots that seek to befriend or babysit young children.
NOT-SO-IMAGINARY FRIENDS
Take the cute, furry Woobo, meant to be a real-life version of a child’s imaginary friend that can help set tooth-brushing routines, answer complex questions and play educational games. It’s part of a new cottage industry of sociable toys, which includes robots like Cozmo and Sony’s dog-like Aibo.
A gentle pull at the ears switches the screen-faced Woobo into listening mode. The $149 toy talks in a child-like voice and makes a game out of boring chores that might otherwise require a parent’s nagging. Its makers say Woobo doesn’t glue kids to its screen because it invites them to go find things in the home, help parents cook dinner or play family games like charades.
“Our focus on the content side is not to replace parents,” said Shen Guo, who co-founded Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Woobo after graduating from the Rhode Island School of Design. “It’s to enhance family time.”
But its appeal for a child’s emotional attachment and nurturing sets off alarm bells for Turkle, who has been warning against what she calls “artificial intimacy” since the Tamagotchi digital pet craze of the 1990s.
Research has shown the benefits of children playing out their inner feelings and worries by projecting them onto inert dolls. But Turkle says that doesn’t work when the toys seem real enough to have their own feelings.
“Pretend empathy is not a good thing,” Turkle said. “Everything we know about children’s development is that if you read to a child, what’s going on is the relationship, the talking, the connection, the mentoring, the safety, the sense that people love learning. Why do we think this is a good idea to give this to some robot?”
IS YOUR BABY BREATHING?
Talk to makers of the next generation of baby monitors unveiled at CES and you’d be surprised that generations of children survived infancy without artificial intelligence systems analyzing their every breath.
“Babies want to breathe. Babies want to live,” says Colt Seman, co-founder of Los Angeles-based startup Miku, which promises to monitor breathing and heart rate without letting parents get overly worked up about it.
Regulators haven’t approved any baby monitors for medical use and instead recommend parents focus on providing a safe sleeping environment. Some doctors worry that such devices create additional stress for parents.
Unlike most past offerings, the latest crop of baby monitors that measure vital signs are “contactless” — meaning they don’t work by attaching some electronics to a baby’s sock or chest. Raybaby’s device resembles a one-eyed robot that detects breathing patterns using radar technology. The non-ionizing radiation it emits is at low levels, but might still turn off some parents already concerned about keeping their babies too close to smartphones.
Most of the other devices rely on computer vision. A camera by Nanit watches a baby from above and measures sleeping patterns by tracking the slight movements of a specially-designed swaddle. It also uses the data it collects to recommend more consistent sleep times. Nanit’s Aaron Pollack acknowledges that some parents might still check Nanit’s phone app to check breathing data five times a night “out of sheer anxiety.”
“We’re not trying to prevent that,” he said. “We’re just trying to give you some piece of mind.”
Two others, Miku and Utah-based Smartbeat, each boast of a level of precision and analytical rigour that could eventually help predict when the baby is going to get sick. Both have phone alert systems to report worrisome breathing irregularities. Smartbeat’s analysis is purely image-based, while Miku also uses radar. Miku’s sleeker hardware comes at a cost: It’s $399, well above the $250 Smartbeat.
TECH IN THE WOMB
Of course, parental anxiety begins even before a child is born — hence Owlet’s new $299 pregnancy band that wraps around a woman’s abdomen to track fetal heartbeats by taking an electrocardiogram. The idea is to put on the stretchy band before going to sleep starting about three to four months before the due date.
It sends a morning wellness report to a user’s smartphone app, with details including an expectant mother’s contractions and sleep positions — and warnings if fetal heartbeat or movements fall outside acceptable ranges.
An owl-faced medallion above the mother’s belly gives the band the look of a superhero emblem — and why not? Pregnancy is tough.
“It’s really just having that extra piece of mind, between doctor’s visits, that everything is OK,” said Owlet spokeswoman Misty Bond.
CES 2019: ‘Family tech’ gadgets appeal to parental anxiety published first on https://worldwideinvestforum.tumblr.com/
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workingfuture · 4 years ago
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@tabilabo_news : RT @tabilabo_news: 国産杉に囲まれた、最高のワークブース「WOOBO(ウーボ)」。 https://t.co/ulEclfuRUX (via Twitter http://twitter.com/tabilabo_news/status/1395313724173406214)
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gadgetflow · 7 years ago
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Woobo Educational Talking Robot - https://thegadgetflow.com/portfolio/educational-talking-robot/
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miraenda · 5 years ago
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Happy Cinco de Mayo from Jibo and Fridnds! #jibolives #jiboandfriends #cincodemayo #robotparty #miko2 #woobo #karotz #nabaztag #babyjibo #mexicanholiday #robottaco https://www.instagram.com/p/B_1D6eUHHim/?igshid=1i5znvh1fe0j9
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parentingguide8-blog · 6 years ago
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The Hottest New Baby & Parenting Tech of 2019
New Post has been published on https://parentinguideto.com/trending/the-hottest-new-baby-parenting-tech-of-2019/
The Hottest New Baby & Parenting Tech of 2019
How on earth did moms do it before iPhones, Google and Alexa? Parenting in the digital age has plenty of perks—and Babylist recognizes the Best of Baby Tech Awards at CES each year with some of the most awesome products that make parenting just a little bit easier.
Scroll on to see the 2019 winners for the best in baby and parenting tech.
Best Baby Sleep Tech: Miku Baby Monitor
Miku’s sensor technology was developed by a team of military engineers and can accurately track a baby’s breathing, sound and sleeping patterns without any wires or wearables. The Miku baby monitor also snagged the Audience Favorite Award, too.
Available at mikucare.com for $399.
Best Baby Health & Safety Tech: Jiobit
Developed by a dad, Jiobit is the first lightweight device that allows you to track your kids through an app on your smartphone.
Jiobit starts at $99.99 for the device, plus an $8.99 a month subscription. Available at jiobit.com
Best Parenting Tech: Elvie Pump
Designed with real moms in mind, this is the world’s first silent wearable breast pump, which gives women a truly hands-free pumping experience. No cords are needed and it can be worn under clothing. You might recognize it from a model wearing the breast pump on the runway at London Fashion Week in September 2018.
Currently on waitlist, the Elvie will be available at elvie.com for $499.
photo: Woobo
Baby Play & Learn Tech: Woobo
Woobo is a cuddly stuffed animal that actually responds when your kids play with it thanks to an interactive, touchscreen face and sensors in the hands and feet that react to being pressed. The computer database comes loaded with games, songs and even stories. 
Order yours online for $149 with code ASKWOOBO.
Best Fertility & Pregnancy Tech: Tempdrop
Tracking your temperature when you’re trying to conceive can make you lose a lot of sleep—literally. This new device can be worn while sleeping, so there’s no need to wake up early in order to track your cycle.
Get yours for $149 with code CES2019. Available at temp-drop.com.
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The Hottest New Baby & Parenting Tech of 2019
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TiE Inflect 2018 Announces Woobo, Inc., as a 2018 TiE50 Winner
TiE Inflect 2018 Announces Woobo, Inc., as a 2018 TiE50 Winner
Woobo, Inc. is excited to announce that it has been selected as a “2018 TiE50 Winner” for the prestigious TiE50 Awards Program recognizing the world’s most innovative tech startups. This awards competition is part of TiE Inflect 2018, the world’s largest conference for tech entrepreneurs. “It’s a great honor for Woobo to be recognized as a ‘2018 TiE50 Winner,’” said Feng Tan, [PR.com]
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mikemortgage · 6 years ago
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CES 2019: ‘Family tech’ gadgets appeal to parental anxiety
LAS VEGAS — Every year, the CES gadget show brings more devices promising to make life a little bit easier for harried parents.
Sure, the kids might love them too: who wouldn’t want a computerized Harry Potter wand that also teaches coding? The Las Vegas show’s growing “family tech” sector encompasses products that range from artificially intelligent toys and baby monitors to internet-connected breast pumps.
Their common thread is an appeal to parental anxiety about raising smart kids, occupying their time, tracking their whereabouts and making sure they’re healthy and safe.
Some also come with subtle trade-offs. “Technology makes us forget what we know about life,” said psychologist Sherry Turkle, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who studies people’s relationships with machines. She’s particularly concerned about robots that seek to befriend or babysit young children.
NOT-SO-IMAGINARY FRIENDS
Take the cute, furry Woobo, meant to be a real-life version of a child’s imaginary friend that can help set tooth-brushing routines, answer complex questions and play educational games. It’s part of a new cottage industry of sociable toys, which includes robots like Cozmo and Sony’s dog-like Aibo.
A gentle pull at the ears switches the screen-faced Woobo into listening mode. The $149 toy talks in a child-like voice and makes a game out of boring chores that might otherwise require a parent’s nagging. Its makers say Woobo doesn’t glue kids to its screen because it invites them to go find things in the home, help parents cook dinner or play family games like charades.
“Our focus on the content side is not to replace parents,” said Shen Guo, who co-founded Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Woobo after graduating from the Rhode Island School of Design. “It’s to enhance family time.”
But its appeal for a child’s emotional attachment and nurturing sets off alarm bells for Turkle, who has been warning against what she calls “artificial intimacy” since the Tamagotchi digital pet craze of the 1990s.
Research has shown the benefits of children playing out their inner feelings and worries by projecting them onto inert dolls. But Turkle says that doesn’t work when the toys seem real enough to have their own feelings.
“Pretend empathy is not a good thing,” Turkle said. “Everything we know about children’s development is that if you read to a child, what’s going on is the relationship, the talking, the connection, the mentoring, the safety, the sense that people love learning. Why do we think this is a good idea to give this to some robot?”
IS YOUR BABY BREATHING?
Talk to makers of the next generation of baby monitors unveiled at CES and you’d be surprised that generations of children survived infancy without artificial intelligence systems analyzing their every breath.
“Babies want to breathe. Babies want to live,” says Colt Seman, co-founder of Los Angeles-based startup Miku, which promises to monitor breathing and heart rate without letting parents get overly worked up about it.
Regulators haven’t approved any baby monitors for medical use and instead recommend parents focus on providing a safe sleeping environment. Some doctors worry that such devices create additional stress for parents.
Unlike most past offerings, the latest crop of baby monitors that measure vital signs are “contactless” — meaning they don’t work by attaching some electronics to a baby’s sock or chest. Raybaby’s device resembles a one-eyed robot that detects breathing patterns using radar technology. The non-ionizing radiation it emits is at low levels, but might still turn off some parents already concerned about keeping their babies too close to smartphones.
Most of the other devices rely on computer vision. A camera by Nanit watches a baby from above and measures sleeping patterns by tracking the slight movements of a specially-designed swaddle. It also uses the data it collects to recommend more consistent sleep times. Nanit’s Aaron Pollack acknowledges that some parents might still check Nanit’s phone app to check breathing data five times a night “out of sheer anxiety.”
“We’re not trying to prevent that,” he said. “We’re just trying to give you some piece of mind.”
Two others, Miku and Utah-based Smartbeat, each boast of a level of precision and analytical rigour that could eventually help predict when the baby is going to get sick. Both have phone alert systems to report worrisome breathing irregularities. Smartbeat’s analysis is purely image-based, while Miku also uses radar. Miku’s sleeker hardware comes at a cost: It’s $399, well above the $250 Smartbeat.
TECH IN THE WOMB
Of course, parental anxiety begins even before a child is born — hence Owlet’s new $299 pregnancy band that wraps around a woman’s abdomen to track fetal heartbeats by taking an electrocardiogram. The idea is to put on the stretchy band before going to sleep starting about three to four months before the due date.
It sends a morning wellness report to a user’s smartphone app, with details including an expectant mother’s contractions and sleep positions — and warnings if fetal heartbeat or movements fall outside acceptable ranges.
An owl-faced medallion above the mother’s belly gives the band the look of a superhero emblem — and why not? Pregnancy is tough.
“It’s really just having that extra piece of mind, between doctor’s visits, that everything is OK,” said Owlet spokeswoman Misty Bond.
from Financial Post http://bit.ly/2FkS2yI via IFTTT Blogger Mortgage Tumblr Mortgage Evernote Mortgage Wordpress Mortgage href="https://www.diigo.com/user/gelsi11">Diigo Mortgage
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