Emerging Tech
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As Hollywood imagines our future, are brain and human microchip implants nearing a “ChatGPT moment” in 2026? Medical progress collides with privacy fears and state bans.
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The Kansas City Council is beginning to rethink the city’s approach to future data center construction while striving to learn more about the booming industry’s impact locally.
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Cybersecurity experts say AI and automation are changing how much impact manipulated data can have on government technology systems.
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The devices re-route electricity when there is a problem, and minimize how many customers are affected by a power outage.
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The county has elected to begin use of electronic poll books instead of the large, paper rosters.
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The teams must land on the moon, travel 500 meters across its surface, and send high-definition video and images back to Earth by the end of 2017 to win.
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The price tag will not be cheap.
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Pittsburgh Company Commits to Identifying, Fixing Bugs and Weaknesses in Autonomous Vehicle SoftwareIt only takes only one bug or bad line of code in autonomous vehicle software to potentially make the entire system go haywire.
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A new report examines the data center market and what can be expected for this year.
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What will ballots look like for future voters, and how will contractors create what’s being referred to as a new “voting experience”?
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Representatives from state and local governments convened to discuss tech trends they are preparing for in 2017, and some of the difficulties they face.
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This is expected to be on full display at this week's North American International Auto Show.
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Plus, a new tech tool to help the colorblind see contrast in different colors and an outdoor vacuum aims to clean the air.
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FirstNet and public safety officials take a look at how broadband can power a public safety transformation.
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Some of the same technologies used in Japan will be put to work in Colorado to make highways smarter and safer.
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Port of Entry computer outage left travelers at the mercy of long lines and manual intake procedures Jan. 2.
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According to a 2016 Center for Digital Government (CDG) survey, 37 percent of the 178 government IT officials surveyed admitted their printers were more vulnerable than other endpoints on the network.
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A prototype of the system sits in an engineering lab at Rice University, and bidding is open for manufacturers who want to produce it wholesale.
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While the data from the previous year represents a look back at major trends of the year, it also paints a picture of where public-sector IT teams will be focused in the future.
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The appraisal district's board requested the audit after a series of software snafus were blamed for leaving millions of dollars of property off the books in 2015.
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