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Unless you ;re a home theater idiot-savant, you probably forget what HDMI port your Xbox or Blu-ray player is connected to, requiring you to randomly cycle through inputs. A task that now a lot easier with Ins
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taPrevue live video thumbnail previews. The idea is so genius you ;ll wonder why TV manufacturers didn ;t implement input switching like this in the first place, instead of a vague on-screen text menu listing HDMI 1, HDMI 2, etc. The hardware that makes this possible was created by a company called Silicon Image, and Onkyo will be the first to implement SI InstaPrevue feature into its 2012 home theater receiver line up. Using a multiple picture-in-picture approach, a small video preview for ever
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y device that connected to the receiver is displayed down the right hand side of the TV. Unfortunately if your equipment isn ;t already powered up you ;ll just see a column of black squares which is just as useless. So maybe they ;ll implement a feat
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ure where you can assign a default thumbnail, like a freeze frame of the Xbox startup screen. Even with this limitation, though, the solution is still a marked improvement over what we ;re currently stuck with. [Silicon Image via Onkyo] home theaterReceivers Dilf Nobody Writes Anything Anymore, Says Study
Physics is defined by its symmetries, from thermodynamics laws like the conservation of mass and energy, to the principle that the universe is basically the same all over. Symmetry can also suggest some truly bizarre ideas. One of those ideas is time crystals. The definition of a crystal is simple enough it any solid whos
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e constituent parts are arranged in an
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orderly, repeating pattern extending out in all three spatial dimensions. Although crystals themselves are defined by their symmetrical arrangement, they actually rep
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resent a form of what known as spontaneous symmetry breaking in closed systems. The idea here is that if you have a bunch of free atoms whizzing around, the overall system can display symmetry. But if those atoms suddenly come together to form a crystal, the overall symmetry of the system has been reduced onto one particular subgroup, namely the crystal. The overall spatial symmetry has been been broken, but the periodicity that defines the crystal structure means it hasn ;t been entirely lost. While that may be a bit theoretical, it all fairly straightforward. The intriguing question is one that is often asked of physical phenomena if this process exists in the three spatial dimensions, could it also occur in the dimension of time as well That the question currently being investigated by MIT physicist Frank Wilczek, who won the 2004 Nobel Prize along with David Gross and H. David Politzer for