{ "version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1", "title": "eay.cc", "description": "Weblog von Stefan Grund", "home_page_url": "https://eay.cc", "feed_url": "https://eay.cc/2013/in-australien-warnen-twitternde-haie-strandbesucher/feed/json", "icon": "https://eay.cc/apple-touch-icon.png", "favicon": "https://eay.cc/favicon.ico", "author": { "name": "Stefan Grund", "url": "https://stefangrund.de/", "avatar": "https://stefangrund.de/avatar.jpg" }, "items": [ { "id": "26668", "_type": "link", "url": "https://eay.cc/2013/in-australien-warnen-twitternde-haie-strandbesucher/", "title": "Twitternde Haie warnen Strandbesucher", "content_html": "
Gro\u00dfartiger Einsatz von Technologie und Twitter an den K\u00fcsten Australiens:
\n\n\n", "date_published": "2013-12-30T23:36:59+00:00", "date_modified": "2014-02-13T15:05:43+00:00", "author": { "name": "Stefan" }, "tags": [ "australien", "smart phones stupid people", "technologie", "tiere", "twitter" ], "_short_url": "https://eay.li/2b7", "external_url": "http://news.sky.com/story/1187066/australia-sharks-use-twitter-to-warn-swimmers" } ] }Scientists have attached transmitters to more than 320 sharks, including great whites, which monitor their movements up and down the coast. When a tagged shark swims within about a kilometre of a beach, it triggers an alert which is picked up by computer. That computer then instantly turns the shark’s signal into a short message on Surf Life Saving Western Australia’s Twitter feed.