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Updated 2024-11-25 11:15
5 Major Hospital Hacks: Horror Stories from the Cybersecurity Frontlines
Security experts say hospitals aren't adequately protected from constant cyber attacks
UK's National Graphene Institute in Revolt After Foreign Tech Grab
Researchers at the UK's NGI won't work at the new facilty for fear that their research will be pilfered
Cooperative Route Planning Could Make Driving Slightly Less Terrible For Everyone
If some drivers are willing to take a few extra minutes getting where they need to go, most drivers will save time on their commutes
CeBIT 2016: Wingtra Wants To Be Your Hybrid Drone
Vertical take off and landing comes to fixed-wing UAVs
AlphaGo Wins Final Game In Match Against Champion Go Player
The AI owes its success to self-training deep neural networks, which can, in principle, be applied to other domains. Like your job.
GM Starts Catching Up in Self-Driving Car Tech with $1 Billion Acquisition of Cruise Automation
It spent a fortune, but that doesn't mean there's a tech bubble brewing
Fitbit for Addicts Could Predict Relapse
Wrist biosensors accurately detect drug use, and someday could anticipate when a relapse will occur
Zeptojoule Nanomagnetic Switch Measures Fundamental Limit of Computing
A basic limit has been measured for a real-world bit; now how to reach it?
Chemoelectronics: Nanoparticle Diodes and Devices That Work When Wet
Gold nanoparticles are chemically modified to form flexible devices for wearables
A Blog Is Born: The Human OS
Spectrum's new biomedical engineering blog will chronicle bold attempts to understand and debug the human body
Latest from SXSW: Why the Tricorder XPrize Is Behind Schedule
The futuristic diagnostic device from Star Trek still belongs to the future
Latest from SXSW: Why the Tricorder XPrize Is Behind Schedule
The futuristic diagnostic device from Star Trek still belongs to the future
Latest From SXSW: Big Pharma’s Big Bet on Electroceuticals
Implanted electrical devices may be better medicine than pills and drugs, says GSK bigwig
Latest From SXSW: Big Pharma's Big Bet on Electroceuticals
Implanted electrical devices may be better medicine than pills and drugs, says GSK bigwig
Reconfigurable Nanopatterning Techinque Promises New Generation of Metamaterials
Technique promises metamaterials that have both finely tuned magnetic properties and reconfigurable device architectures
Silicon Valley Mourns Amiga and Lynx co-creator Dave Needle
Fans of the Amiga computer turned to social media to react to the death of Dave Needle, one of its creators
Optimus Ride Wants Autonomous Ride-Sharing Without Human Drivers in the Way
An MIT spinout is developing self-driving cars for use in autonomous-only urban zones
Video Friday: Walking the XDog, Muscle-Powered BioBots, and Rollin’ Justin Will Clean Your Kitchen
Your weekly selection of awesome robot videos
Darpa Invites Techies to Turn Off-the-Shelf Products Into Weapons in New ‘Improv’ Challenge
The agency invites both professionals and hobbyists to submit their most dangerous ideas
Infrastructure Engineers Prepare for Tsunami of Data from Virtual Reality, IoT
Sony hopes to catch the wave with its optical jukebox for data storage
Researchers Seek Source of Frequency Fluctuations in Nanoresonators
New technique serves as a call to arms for identifying source of frequency jitters in nanoresonators
Little Robotic Leg Investigates Enormous Dinosaur Locomotion
Dreadnoughtus schrani was one of the largest animals ever to exist, and 3D-printed legs are figuring out how it walked
ARPA-E Funding Personal Climate Control Systems with Robots, Foot Coolers, and More
Why heat or cool a whole building when you could heat or cool individual people instead?
Will The Hyperloop Arise—In Slovakia?
The Slovak Republic will "explore" building a superfast vac-train from Bratislava to Vienna and Budapest
What the IBM Layoffs Look Like
Some sources see moves to offshore U.S. jobs to India and elsewhere
AlphaGo Wins Game One Against World Go Champion
Google's AI makes history by beating Korea's Lee Sedol, the best Go player in the world
New Measurement Technique Tests Nanomaterials During Production
Nanomanufacturers now have a tool for testing electrical properties of materials in roll-to-roll processing
Scientists Flip Switch on Genes With a Magnet
The technique could offer a non-invasive alternative to optogenetics.
Why You Want Your Drone to Have Emotions
Emotional behaviors can make your drone seem like it's an adventurer, anti-social, or maybe just exhausted
Data in the Cloud Could Have Kept MH370 in Sight
It's been two years since Malaysia Air vanished without trace, and now we have a trace. With the right system, we could have tracked its every move
NASA to Test Upgraded Earth Models for Solar Storm Threat
NASA aims to improve space weather forecasting by better simulating solar storm effects on the Earth's geomagnetic field
75% of U.S. Drivers Fear Self-Driving Cars, But It's an Easy Fear to Get Over
AAA survey finds that both the old and young are wary of self-driving cars, but they also want some of the benefits
Video Friday: Robot Scorpion, Jibo A Capella, and Anti-Drone Bazooka
Your weekly selection of awesome robot videos
Graphene and Quantum Dots Turn a Mobile Device Into a Heart-Rate Monitor
A transparent and flexible photodetector made from graphene and quantum dots demonstrates its capabilities
Biodegradable Power Generators Could Power Medical Implants
Whole medical implants could dissolve in the body
How to Pinpoint Radioactive Releases: Put the Genie Back in the Bottle
Will computer modeling and meteorological data allow high-accuracy location of nuclear leaks?
Gold Nanosponges and a Thousand LEDs Make Efficient, Adaptive Headlights
Fraunhofer's headlights use an array of individually addressable LEDs to efficiently illuminate only the parts of the road you care about
Forty Years Later, Turing Prize Winners Devoted to Digital Privacy and Nuclear Activism
Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman remain dedicated to sticky issues at the intersection of technology and society
Is Silicon Valley Now Starter-ville instead of Stay-town?
For engineers, Silicon Valley is turning into a starter community—a good place to kick off a career, but not a place to put down roots
Nervana Systems Puts Deep Learning AI in the Cloud
A tech startup aims to spread the wealth of deep learning AI to many industries
Monkeys Navigate a Wheelchair With Their Thoughts
A wireless brain-machine interface allows primates to guide a wheelchair to a reward using their mind
Scanning Probe Thermometry: A New Tool That Can Take the Temperature of Nanoelectronics
IBM researchers solve the problem of measuring temperature locally on the nanoscale
Reports Coming in of Big IBM Layoffs Underway in the U.S.
Today, 2 March, appears to be the day IBM watchers have been warning about
Kids Love MIT's Latest Squishable Social Robot (Mostly)
Tega uses cuteness and artificial intelligence to teach Spanish to preschoolers
Study Finds No Gender Gap in Tech Salaries
Even though cash is a bigger motivator for men than for women, they’re getting equal pay for equal positions, education, and experience, says tech job search firm Dice
New 2-D Material Hits the Goldilocks "Just Right" Button
Novel material provides both stability and ease in functionalizing into a semiconductor
Google Self-Driving Car May Have Caused an Accident
It was just a little fender-bender, but still it's for the record books
Two of Google's Most Famous Dogs Really Don't Get Along
Boston Dynamics' dog Spot meets Andy Rubin's dog Alex
New Adesto RRAM Memory Takes 25 Years to Drain a Battery
The company pitches a family of RRAM chips at the low-power gadget market
The End of the Smartphone?
It’s time to start thinking about what’s next
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