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This was quite the read over the weekend: the Wall Street Journal reported that the car crash detection feature built into the new iPhone 14/14 Pro and Apple Watches is sensitive enough to be set off by a roller coaster. It happened to a family at Kings Island, an amusement park in Ohio. After only two days on the job, the iPhone 14 Pro dispatched emergency services when the device sensed Sara White, the person profiled in the WSJ piece, suddenly stop after flying through [url=https://www.stanley-quencher.uk]water bottle stanley[/url] the air at 50 miles per hour on the Mystic Timbers rollercoaster. When the ride was over, White faced a lock screen populated with notifications indicating her phone had called for help. Rollercoasters usually have a brake run that stops the coaster abruptly before its slowed down to enter back into the loading area. Many parks will advertise the acceleration, [url=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de]stanley becher[/url] but they dont say you are going to go from 40 mph to 0 at the end of the rides, said John Stevenson, an expert coaster rider interviewed by the WSJ. If you look at the YouTube video for Mystic Timbers, it seems like a fast and bumpy ride, with one intense stop at the end before it wheels back into a covered area. Emergency dispatchers arent strangers to false alarms caused by smartphone [url=https://www.stanley-cup.cz]stanley termosky[/url] misuse. Ive accidentally called in myself by pressing the power button too many times on a OnePlus device鈥攜ou used to be able to hit the power button five times to call for help. When I picked up the phone, the Oregon state emergency dispatcher scolded me to turn Lvqr Bose QuietComfort 45: The perfect headphones for all-day listening
TIMEBy Olivia B. WaxmanSeptember 7, 2016 2:42 PM EDTGrandma Moses, the renowned 20th-century American folk artist known for paintings of country life, would have turned 156 on Wednesday.The artist graced the cover of the Dec. 28, 1953, issue of TIME when she was 93, painting a butternut tree during a Christmas-season interview. She told the magazine that she first dabbled with pa [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley cup[/url] inting as a little girl when she was still known as Anna Mary Robertson , but her career as a professional artist didn ;t begin until much later in her life. As TIME reported, she had loved to paint on her paper dolls with grape juice and, when her father was once working on a painting project at their house, she got into the paints to create what she and her brother called lamb-scapes. Though her father was encouraging of the activity, she recalled, her mother was more practical and thought she should 8220 pend [her] time other ways.Those other ways were household chores like candlemaking, soapmaking, dressmak [url=https://www.stanleycup.lt]stanley termosai[/url] ing mdash; all prep for a career as a hired girl. When she met her husband, farm worker Thomas Salmon Moses, they raised their family on farms in the Shenandoah Valley, Va., and Eagle Bridge, N.Y. Get your history fix in one place: sign up for the weekly TIME History newsletterAfter he died, she tried to distract herself with embroidery an [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley cup[/url] d worsted pictures, but developed a debilitating arthritis. A family mem
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