Archive for the ‘mobile phones’ category: Page 204
Jun 30, 2016
Some Samsung phones have a ‘beauty mode’ that ‘fixes’ your face in selfies
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: mobile phones
If you take a selfie with a Samsung phone, you’ll notice your face looks a little different.
Jun 29, 2016
Will quantum computing be BlackBerry’s Waterloo?
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, internet, mobile phones, quantum physics, security
Definitely could see QC being Blackberry’s achilles heal.
WATERLOO — Advances in quantum computing could present a huge challenge to BlackBerry’s biggest competitive advantage — its vaunted security software that has never been hacked.
This seldom talked-about subject was raised recently by John Thompson, the associate vice-president for research at the University of Waterloo. Thompson was listening to a presentation by Mike Wilson, a senior vice-president and chief evangelist for BlackBerry, at a medical technology conference in Kitchener about a month ago.
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Jun 29, 2016
Now you can use your phone just by moving your eyes
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: mobile phones
Jun 29, 2016
Smart Dust Is Coming: New Camera Is the Size of a Grain of Salt
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: 3D printing, computing, mobile phones
Miniaturization is one of the most world-shaking trends of the last several decades. Computer chips now have features measured in billionths of a meter. Sensors that once weighed kilograms fit inside your smartphone. But it doesn’t end there.
Researchers are aiming to take sensors smaller—much smaller.
In a new University of Stuttgart paper published in Nature Photonics, scientists describe tiny 3D printed lenses and show how they can take super sharp images. Each lens is 120 millionths of a meter in diameter—roughly the size of a grain of table salt—and because they’re 3D printed in one piece, complexity is no barrier. Any lens configuration that can be designed on a computer can be printed and used.
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Jun 28, 2016
DARPA approaches industry for new battlefield network algorithms and network protocols
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, information science, military, mobile phones
Very nice.
ARLINGTON, Va., 27 June 2016. U.S. military researchers are asking industry for new algorithms and protocols for large, mission-aware, computer, communications, and battlefield network systems that physically are dispersed over large forward-deployed areas.
Officials of the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in Arlington, Va., issued a broad agency announcement on Friday (DARPA-BAA-16–41) for the Dispersed Computing project, which seeks to boost application and network performance of dispersed computing architectures by orders of magnitude with new algorithms and protocol stacks.
Jun 23, 2016
3D-printed phones herald world of instant electronic everything
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: 3D printing, mobile phones
Circuits can now be 3D-printed directly into electronic devices – meaning factories could spit out new gadgets almost as quickly as we can think them up.
Jun 21, 2016
Voice: How To Architect A Cognitive Future For Business
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: biotech/medical, business, computing, education, finance, mobile phones, neuroscience, robotics/AI
Whether referred to as AI, machine learning, or cognitive systems, such as IBM Watson, a growing cadre of business leaders is embracing this opportunity head on.
That’s because their consumers are using cognitive applications on a daily basis — through their phones, in their cars, with their doctors, banks, schools, and more. All of this consumer engagement is creating 2.5 quintillion bytes of data every day. And thanks to IT infrastructures designed for cognitive workloads — that can understand, reason, and learn from all this data — organizations and entire industries are transforming and reaping the benefits.
What’s important to remember is that this sci-fi-turned-reality-show of cognitive computing cannot happen without the underlying systems on which the APIs, software, and services run. For this very reason, today’s leading CIOs are thinking differently about their IT infrastructure.
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Jun 17, 2016
Could an implant have saved the life of the toddler attacked by an alligator?
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: biotech/medical, business, computing, geopolitics, mobile phones, transhumanism, transportation, wearables
A new article considering chip implants:
Among other tragedies in Florida recently gripping America’s attention, a 2-year-old boy was snatched away from its parents by an alligator at Walt Disney World on Wednesday. I have a similar-aged toddler myself, and I followed this heartbreaking story closely. Unfortunately, it ended as horribly as it began, with the recovery of a dead child.
My presidential campaign with the Transhumanist Party is based on advocating for radical science and technology to make the world a better place for humans. As a result, for nearly two years I have been advocating for using chip implants in people to help keep them safer. Chip implants are often just the size of a grain of rice and can be injected by a needle in a nearly pain-free 60-second procedure. The implants can do a multiple array of things depending on the type. And much of the technology has been used in pets for over a decade, so it’s already been shown to be relatively safe.
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