NASA scientist and Advanced Propulsion Team Lead Harold White has the 
kind of job thousands dream of and few achieve — he’s in charge of the 
space agency’s efforts to determine if a faster-than-light warp drive is
 actually possible and, if it is, how we might create one. Now, in 
conjunction with artist Mark Rademaker, White has unveiled a new 
starship model that illustrates how our consideration of the concept has
 evolved over the decades.
 Despite a flood of Sunday morning hype, it’s questionable whether computers crossed an artificial intelligence threshold last weekend.
 However, the news about a chatbot with the personality of a 13-year-old
 Ukrainian boy passing the Turing test did get us thinking: Is tricking 
every third human in a text exchange really the best way to measure 
computer intelligence?
 The promise of virtual reality is true immersion—the idea that we’ll be
 able to step into a whole new digital world and feel like it’s actually
 real. This simply can’t be realized if we’re holding a game controller 
in our hands. Last year, a Canadian startup called Thalmic Labs showed 
off the Myo motion-sensing, muscle-reading armband, which gets us one 
step closer to the VR of our dreams—by freeing up our hands. Now the 
company has a final hardware design for the $149 Myo, and says that it 
will begin shipping in September.
Posted by
Raj
at
07:47
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Imagine
 owning an upmarket, 25-jewel, Swiss-movement mechanical watch. Now 
imagine one that that can display text messages, notify you of incoming 
calls and let you remotely control your smartphone or tablet. That may 
seem a bit farfetched, but Kairos Watches aims to combine a luxury 
mechanical watch with the functionality of a smartwatch in one seamless 
device.
Posted by
Raj
at
03:53
 Tired of dragging the mouse every time you want to perform even the 
most basic tasks on the computer? Here’s help. Did you know, for 
example, that you don’t need the mouse to select text, switch between 
programmes, or open and close browser windows?
Posted by
Raj
at
01:08
Research reveals a bright future for a new lighting technology

A flexible, lightweight panel made by GE provides diffuse light. The
 panel is made of organic light-emitting diodes, or OLEDs. This kind of 
lighting could be more efficient and versatile than old-style light 
bulbs.
Flick on a light at home and chances are a glass bulb or tube will 
start to glow. The two most common types of electric lights — 
incandescent and fluorescent — have worked pretty well for a long time. 
Make that too long: Both types are so last century.
Posted by
Raj
at
00:59
The team behind the Department of Energy’s solar program SunShot internally calls one of its projects “the Steve Jobs solicitation.” That’s the one officially named “Plug and Play Photovoltaics,” which is using $21 million to support projects that try to turn the process of installing solar panels on rooftops into an easy, simple and ultimately one-step product — a far cry from the current lengthy and relatively complicated process it is today.
 As talk heats up about the expected 3D head tracking of
 Amazon’s smartphone, don’t count Microsoft out of the handset gestures 
game. The company is working on a way to navigate around Windows 
Phone without touching the screen, using Kinect-like gestures to work 
with apps and games. A Monday morning report from The Verge suggests
 that Nokia’s successor to the Lumia 1020 (below), codenamed McLaren, 
will be the first Windows Phone with these features.
Posted by
Raj
at
02:54
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Google's
 Chromecast and Roku's Streaming Stick have both been around for a while
 now. When Roku was first released, more recently, it touted itself as 
having a huge number of channels, something Chromecast didn't. But 
gradually, Google has been catching up. Gizmag decided to compare the 
two.
Posted by
Raj
at
02:35
 Apple revealed a lot of news at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference this year, but it didn’t discuss or show off any iWatch. Still, a new report from Japanese newspaper the Nikkei says that
 an iWatch is indeed on its way, with a targeted ship date of October. 
The gadget will include a curved OLED screen and health tracking 
functions, and be powered by iOS 8, Nikkei reports.
Posted by
Raj
at
02:29
A new type of invisibility cloak that hides objects from light in 
diffusive media such as a cloudy liquid – rather than a clear medium 
such as air – has been unveiled by physicists in Germany. Based on the 
same physical principle used in cloaks that shield objects from heat, 
the device has been created by Robert Schittny and
 colleagues at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. Although 
applications of the device are limited, the researchers say that it 
could be used to create aesthetically pleasing yet burglar-proof glass.
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Researchers
 at Stanford University have developed a new way to safely transfer 
energy to tiny medical devices implanted deep inside the human body. The
 advance could lead to the development of tiny "electroceutical" devices
 that can be implanted near nerve bundles, heart or brain tissue and 
stimulate them directly when needed, treating diseases using electronics
 rather than drugs.
Posted by
Raj
at
11:54
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Researchers
 at the Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO) have developed a 
lab-on-a-chip device that can detect protein cancer markers in a drop of
 blood, working as a very early cancer-detection system. The device can 
detect very low concentrations of markers and is reliable, cheap and 
portable, making it attractive for deployment in remote areas of the 
world.
Posted by
Raj
at
07:19
 When it comes to driver awareness, we all know how hard it can be to 
keep an eye on every pedestrian and moving vehicle in our vicinity, 
particularly when driving in a busy city area. Couple this with the 
upcoming Kids and Transportation Safety Act in the US that dictates that
 all cars built from May 2018 onwards must be fitted with rear view cameras as
 standard, and it becomes doubly important that on-board vehicle cameras
 are used to their best advantage. To help in this regard, Fujitsu 
Semiconductor Limited is set to introduce software that assists in 
detecting and identifying cars, people, and other moving objects and 
alerts the driver of their position and direction of travel.
Posted by
Raj
at
07:15
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 A
 new online tool aims to create a real-time emotional map of how people 
all over the world feel, from analyzing how cheerful or depressed 
different countries might be, to how budget cuts or other news might hit
 people emotionally. Called "We Feel," the tool analyzes 32,000 tweets a
 minute to monitor people's collective mood swings and how their 
emotions fluctuate over time globally.
Posted by
Raj
at
07:10
 Maybe
 they’re just small tweaks to make bigger smartphones or smaller 
tablets, but the rising popularity of phablets could lead to a faster 
global shift to more always-connected touchscreen computing devices.
 Do you have a stack of speakers or stereo system at home collecting 
dust due to their inability to wirelessly connect to your digital music 
collection? The folks at Motorola have decided it’s time to modernize 
your antiquated audio system with the release of a portable wireless 
adapter called Moto Stream, which brings wireless audio streaming 
capabilities to older units.
Posted by
Raj
at
07:16
 Facebook announced in a blog post on Thursday that
 it has upgraded the Apache HBase database with a new open source system
 called HydraBase. Facebook is an avid HBase shop, using it to store 
data for various services, including the company’s internal monitoring 
system, search indexing, streaming data analysis and data scraping. What
 makes HydraBase better than HBase is that it is supposedly a more 
reliable database that should minimize downtime when servers fail.
Posted by
Raj
at
06:30
 Have you ever wished you were an alien or a shark? Well, sorry, but 
you're never going to get to be one. The free Nito app, however, does 
let you appear as those characters or others, in recorded 15-second 
videos. It tracks your facial features and movements as you talk, and 
reproduces them in real time via an animated avatar of your choice.
Posted by
Raj
at
03:53
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Though smartwatches and Google Glass have
 made for some bold and interesting products, you could easily argue 
that the best wearables so far have been fitness trackers. But are these
 US$100+ accessories worth the price of admission?
 When it comes to virtual reality headsets, their remit so far has 
primarily been for use in gaming or for game-like experience, but soon 
you could be able to watch whole movies with one of these devices 
strapped to your head. This is thanks to a new 360-degree camera called 
the Panopticam developed by a team of British VR experts. 
Posted by
Raj
at
07:58
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Smartphones
 have come a long way in a few short years, but two things have remained
 constant; most sport a "slab of glass" form factor, and dropping one 
makes you wish you’d had it insured.
Posted by
Raj
at
07:55
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 A
 smart grid of solar roads could reduce pollution, improve the economy, 
and have the potential to produce three times the amount of power the US
 currently uses. 
Posted by
Raj
at
05:45
 While Sony’s flagship Z-line handsets
 are all about high-end specs and waterproofing, it’s taking a slightly 
different approach with the mid-range sector. With the new T3 
smartphone, Sony is providing one of the skinniest devices on the 
market, while still packing in some solid internals.
Posted by
Raj
at
03:45
 It used to be that the only way you could get a speeding ticket was if a
 police officer personally witnessed your overly-fast driving. Then 
photo radar came along. Well, when it comes to drunk driving, 
lasers could soon be the equivalent of photo radar. Polish researchers 
at the Military University of Technology in Warsaw have demonstrated how
 the high-intensity beams of light can be used to detect the presence of
 alcohol – even exhaled alcohol – in passing vehicles.
Posted by
Raj
at
03:42
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 With
 the world seemingly transferring everything online to apps and cloud 
services, we're losing touch with how our actions trigger reactions. 
Bttn, a physical button that can be used in any way its owner sees fit, 
is an attempt to bring back a tactile element to the way we connect with
 everyone and everything around us.
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Researchers
 working at TU Delft's Kavli Institute of Nanoscience in the Netherlands
 claim to have successfully transferred data via teleportation. By 
exploiting the quantum phenomenon known as particle entanglement,
 the team says it transferred information across a 3 m (10 ft) distance,
 without the information actually traveling through the intervening 
space.
Posted by
Raj
at
09:11
The trouble with existing 3D imaging technology is that – at the 
consumer level, at least – it tends to struggle with distances beyond a 
few feet. Put even a third of the width of a basketball court between 
yourself and a Microsoft Kinect sensor, for instance, and it won't pick 
up your movements at all. Researchers at the University of California, 
Berkeley, claim to have developed a Lidar (light radar)-based system 
that can remotely sense objects across distances as long as 30 feet (10 
m), which could have widespread benefits in fields as diverse as 
entertainment, transportation, robotics, and mobile phones.
Posted by
Raj
at
07:56
  At its WWDC developer event yesterday, Apple surprised all of the developers in the audience by launching a new programming language called Swift. This new language seems to be poised to replace Objective-C as the main programming language on Apple’s platforms.
Posted by
Raj
at
01:51
Posted by
Raj
at
01:39
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Scientists
 at the Fudan University in Shanghai, China, have developed a 
high-performance Li-ion battery made of carbon nanotube fiber yarns. 
Roughly one 1 mm in diameter, the fiber shaped lithium-ion batteries are
 reported lightweight enough to create weavable and wearable textile 
batteries that could power various devices. The researchers say that the
 yarn is capable of delivering nearly 71 mAh/g of power, and can also be
 woven into existing textiles to create novel electronic fabrics.
 At the Code Conference in California this week, Intel revealed that its 3D-printed Jimmy Research Robot, which debuted at Maker Faire NYC last year,
 will be available through its 21st Century Robot Project later this 
year. Users will be able to download the files required for printing.
Posted by
Raj
at
08:32
 Artificially replicating the biological process of photosynthesis is a 
goal being sought on many fronts, and it promises to one day improve 
light-to-energy efficiencies of solar collection well beyond what's 
possible with photovoltaic cells. One of the first steps on the road to 
achieving this objective is to imitate the mechanisms at work in the 
transfer of energy from reception through to output.
Posted by
Raj
at
08:18
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 MacBooks can
 make for great notebook PCs, but their speedy solid-state drives don't 
give you much storage bang for your buck. So why not do something with 
that SD card slot, and give yourself some extra (semi-permanent) 
storage? That's the thinking behind Transcend's JetDrive Lite. 
 The privacy of the data that we put online has been a hot topic over 
the last year. In order to protect against unwanted snooping, a group of
 scientists has created a new secure email service. ProtonMail provides 
end-to-end encryption, meaning that even the company itself can't even 
see the content of your messages.
Posted by
Raj
at
07:39
 In a small lab, near a lake at the edge of West Berkeley, sits the 
prototype of what could revolutionize battery power as we know it. The 
secret to this power? Algae.
Posted by
Raj
at
07:34
 Using Bluetooth to send ads between nearby devices sounds both boring 
and annoying. But that’s exactly what Apple’s iBeacon does — and Apple’s
 not in the boring-and-annoying business.
 Google
 has revealed its first self-driving car prototype, which as you guessed
 requires no driver. The prototype accommodates for two passengers and 
is missing quite a few of the features you'd expect to see in a standard
 car. With no need for a steering wheel, mirrors or braking and 
accelerating pedals, the car comes fully equipped with special software 
and sensors that feed information into an onboard computer, which then 
drives the car.
Posted by
Raj
at
08:35
At Google, artificial intelligence isn’t just a means of building cars that drive on their own, smartphone services that respond to the spoken word, and online search engines that instantly recognize digital images. It’s also a way of improving the efficiency of the massive data centers that underpin the company’s entire online empire.
Posted by
Raj
at
08:24
Augmented reality company Metaio is developing "Thermal Touch," a technology that combines infrared and visible light cameras to detect the heat signature from your fingers and turn any object into a touchscreen. The technology could be embedded in the smartphones and wearable devices of the future to offer new ways of interacting with our environment.
Watson, IBM's supercomputer made famous three years ago for beating the very best human opponents at a game of Jeopardy,
 now comes with an impressive new feature. When asked to discuss any 
topic, it can autonomously scan its knowledge database for relevant 
content, "understand" the data, and argue both for and against that 
topic.
Posted by
Raj
at
03:32
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Butterfleye
 is a wireless home surveillance camera that’s joining the growing ranks
 of intelligent, smartphone connected webcam systems designed to keep 
watch while you’re out and about. In addition to allowing you to check 
in on a live video feed whenever you like via iPhone, this smart camera 
comes equipped with a thermal sensor, motion detector, and facial 
recognition technology.
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 Japanese
 company Power Japan Plus has announced the development and planned 
mass-production of "Ryden," a disruptive carbon battery that can be 
charged 20 times faster than an ordinary lithium-ion cell. The battery, 
which is cheap to manufacture, safe, and environmentally friendly, could
 be ideal to improve the range and charging times of electric cars.
 Researchers from the Center for Research and Advanced Studies 
(CINVESTAV) in Mexico have developed a pair of glasses that use a 
combination of ultrasound, GPS, stereoscopic vision and artificial 
intelligence to help the visually impaired to navigate their 
environment. The device, perhaps the most sophisticated of its kind, is 
slated to reach mass production early next year and will likely cost up 
to US$1,500.
 Google is working with Wi-Fi equipment maker Ruckus Wireless to
 build a large-scale Wi-Fi network in the cloud off of which any 
business could hang its wireless routers, according to a source familiar
 with the project who asked not to be named.
Posted by
Raj
at
00:54
 The 3D format has had something of a renaissance in recent years, but 
the technology still has some way to go before the potential of 
"real-life" multiperspective 3D can be realized. The Camera Culture 
group at the MIT Media Lab is developing a new 3D video projection 
system that doesn't require glasses and provides different users 
different perspective angles of the same object. The team sees it not as
 a final answer, but as a transitional system that sits between current 
technologies and true holographic video.
 By David Szondy
 The chemical tree got a bit of a shake this week with scientists at IBM
 announcing the discovery of the first new class of polymer materials in
 decades. Discovered using a combination of lab experiments and computer
 modelling, the new plastics have properties that could potentially have
 a huge impact in manufacturing, transportation, aerospace, and micro 
electronics.
                                                                                                                         
                                      
 By Lakshmi Sandhana
 
Getting
 a needle into a patient's vein can sometimes be a complicated process, 
especially if the veins aren't visible. Vein-spotting spectacles that 
see through a patient's skin could help avoid the damage caused by 
repeated needle pricks, and that's exactly what researchers at the 
University Teknologi Petronas (UTP), Malaysia, are developing. Their 
Smart Veins Locator is a wearable head-mounted display that allows 
nurses to see the patient's veins in real-time, by overlaying a map of 
their veins on top of their skin.
By Dario Borghino
Taking inspiration from the defense mechanism of the bombardier beetle, researchers at ETH Zurich have developed a film that, when damaged, instantly releases a hot foam to discourage malicious actions. The technology could be used as a simple, yet elegant and reliable way of discouraging theft and vandalism on ATM machines.
Taking inspiration from the defense mechanism of the bombardier beetle, researchers at ETH Zurich have developed a film that, when damaged, instantly releases a hot foam to discourage malicious actions. The technology could be used as a simple, yet elegant and reliable way of discouraging theft and vandalism on ATM machines.
Think about it like this: In the Book of Genesis, God is the ultimate 
programmer, creating all of existence in a monster six-day hackathon.
Or, if you don’t like Biblical metaphors, you can think about it in simpler terms. Robert Moses
 was a programmer, shaping and re-shaping the layout of New York City 
for more than 50 years. Drug developers are programmers, twiddling 
enzymes to cure what ails us. Even pickup artists and conmen are 
programmers, running social scripts on people to elicit certain 
emotional results.
- 
  Bitcoin may be the future of digital money, but it has a big problem here in the United States: why use it to buy anything when millions of merchants already accept debit and credit cards?Today, if you want to buy a bottle of lemonade with bitcoins, you need to scan a QR code with your phone or email a long bitcoin address to the seller. For most people, buying with bitcoins just isn’t as easy as Visa or MasterCard.
 
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