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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Although there is an increasing interest in investigating problems with smartphone use, one graduate student says research into the phobia has been scarce.
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The U.S. Department of Energy released a report that argues wind energy can spread from 39 states to the rest of the nation by installing taller generators.
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Accela services now cover 60 percent of the U.S. population.
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The potential benefits of governments that are capable of continuous adaptation has never been greater.
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Under new legislation, GPS devices would be used for the first time in Family Court cases where there are orders of protection.
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The program allows potential customers to take an interactive virtual tour inside participating local businesses.
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The National Transportation Safety Board has been calling for "positive train control" for years, and federal law requires that it be installed by the end of this year.
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New devices let officers swipe a driver’s license and automatically populate a motorist’s details on a ticket instead of writing the information by hand.
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The move is part of a big effort by the company to re-brand Windows as a service instead of a product.
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The program is designed to prevent mobile devices from downloading text messages when held by drivers moving faster than a specified speed.
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Google brings its audacious moonshot philosophy for invention to government.
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A new portable patient health record service -- where patients buy a credit card-sized USB drive that can hold their records for a lifetime -- could revolutionize the industry.
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On May 20, Miami International Airport will launch a new secure identification option that uses fingerprints or iris scans.
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Sometimes the images captured by a camera or cellphone help justify an officer’s use of deadly force. This time, however, police officials didn't like what they saw.
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The House bill would allow public release of the footage only if a court decides the images are in the public interest.
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The test demonstrated the spacecraft’s ability to get away from trouble in a hurry, powered by engines within the capsule that shot the Dragon 5,000 feet from the launch pad in seconds.
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Designers attending the university's Wearable Technology Symposium will demonstrate how they're turning garment-tech fancies into realities.
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The SafeOCS program lets workers anonymously report problems to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement before they escalate.
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