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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It appears the earliest the police department could adopt a formal citywide body camera program would be in the 2016-17 fiscal year.
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Called the Cannibuster, it could be a significant roadside tool for law enforcement as more states allow medicinal and recreational use of marijuana.
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A hexacoptor drone will track heat spots with infrared cameras, and monitor wind and weather, among other things. All data will be used to predict how long the fire will continue to burn.
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The software's launch will be staggered, beginning in the summer with the PC and filling out over time as more devices come online.
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Working with Apple's HealthKit platform, one company is letting customers use fitness trackers to earn life insurance discounts.
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There is a growing public appetite for police to wear body cameras. But some big costs are throwing up roadblocks to wider adoption of the technology.
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Sacramento, Calif., entrepreneurs' 'New Wallet,' currently seeking funds on Kickstarter, combines one's wallet contents and phone into one device.
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According to federal law, people don't completely own much of their copyrighted property -- from DVDs and smartphones to tractors. But one lawmaker is working to change that.
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The Internet giant's announcement earlier this year that it's discontinuing the first version of its smartglasses means you're less likely to see technophiles wearing them out in public -- but that doesn't mean the technology is dead and gone.
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University projects could reap payoffs in the form of early-warning water-monitoring products, with potential applications from California to China.
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Located on University of Oklahoma's Research Campus, the lab offers students and faculty access to a full suite of advanced testing equipment.
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The global database, called Dfuze, stores millions of points of visual and textual data about every aspect of bombs, bomb-makers and the destruction they leave behind.
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The city plans to pay for the upgrades in the future and work with Gov. Larry Hogan on funding.
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Day two of the Smart City Startups 2015 Summit highlights insider advice on government procurement and how civic tech startups can attract investors.
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The small satellite, which is still in the first stage of development, will collect data on weather, radiation and other space conditions for use by university researchers.
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Entrepreneurs and innovators gathered at the 2015 Smartcity Startups Summit to showcase civic apps, prototypes and pioneering technology.
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Customers using the service will pay only for the amount of cellular data they use each month.
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Dubbed the "Airbnb for water," one startup is trying to make it easier for farmers to sell excess water to municipal, industrial, conservation or other agricultural users.
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