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Nada tan inocente como un niño que le pide a su padre que mire debajo de la cama después de arroparlo y antes de irse de su habitación…
O no.
Sin sangre, sin ruidos a volumen brutal, Tuck me in transmite miedito de una manera bastante inquietante.
No creo que sea necesario, pero en La voz del muro tienen una versión subtitulada.
(Vía Bob).
Un grupo de drones provistos de cámaras y controlados remotamente en primera persona, a través de la cámara del dron, echando una carrera a través de un bosque a velocidades de hasta 50 km/h. Bastante respetable teniendo en cuenta sobre todo que vuelan bajo, entre árboles y siguiendo una ruta delimitada.
Vía PetaPixel.
There's a growing trend of social media being used in the aftermath of natural disasters for information sharing—but Facebook is now working to formalize it. It's launched a service which allows people to register themselves as safe when large-scale disasters occur.
Facebook is introducing a new Safety Check feature designed to help friends and family members check on loved ones during natural disasters. The tool works by triggering a push notification on devices that are near an affected area. Facebook determines location from cities listed in profiles, last location from the Nearby Friends feature, or the city you’re connecting and using the internet from. If a Facebook user is safe they simply hit the ‘I’m safe’ button and a notification and News Feed story will be generated automatically.
The Safety Check tool also combines all check-ins into a bookmark feature, allowing Facebook users to check an area to make sure friends are safe. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg introduced the feature in Japan...
Afghanistan veteran Sam Arnold uploaded this spine-chilling video of a US Marine getting a direct headshot from a Taliban sniper—only to be saved by his kevlar helmet. It's incredible to watch, especially the face of relief and disbelief of the impact victim. That was a really close call.