Emerging Tech
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California-based company Coco Robotics announced a pilot program in the Heights neighborhood last week, nearly a year after Uber Eats teamed with Avride for downtown robot delivery service.
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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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Gartner is forecasting almost 30 percent growth through 2020 for Internet of Things semiconductor revenue, thanks to autonomous vehicles, smartwatches and smart TVs.
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The long-awaited watch was unveiled with great fanfare in September, but Apple has taken its time bringing the gadget to market.
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As schools send home devices with students, districts are dealing with more than just loading apps and training teachers. They’re also grappling with an inevitable question: Who pays when they break?
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The state is now home to groundbreaking research that allows scientists to dissect the power of hurricanes.
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Just what happens to the data spewed out by all these interlinked machines is a deep concern shared by many security researchers, legal authorities, government officials and consumer advocates.
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The whole point of technology is to make life a little easier and a little more enjoyable, but many are finding that isn't always the case when it comes to cramming more high-tech content in cars.
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New products for Android-lovers take wearables to the next level.
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New energy-efficient LED bulbs look like classic incandescents. Plus, the KNFB Reader app turns printed materials into audio for the blind and use this device to protect your Wi-Fi network's privacy.
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Similar to a pregnancy test, the device gives simple feedback on a small film.
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Early voters across the state this week have complained that when they tried to cast ballots for Republicans, the machine instead displayed that they had chosen a Democratic candidate.
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Jim Collins, a professor of biomedical engineering at Harvard’s Wyss Institute, said he and his team created the test in 12 hours, using just $20 of materials.
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Controlling the rapidly evolving artificial intelligence of "killer drones" could well become one of the key disarmament questions of our time.
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New free apps are available to Windows Phone and Android users.
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Two previous attempts — by Google and a partnership of AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile called Soft Card — haven’t pushed consumers to pay for things with their Android phones. Now it’s Apple’s turn.
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Finding a cheap, reliable way to store electricity generated by renewables is the hope of many researchers, government officials and power producers.
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One-third of surveyed consumers who bought such a device more than a year prior said they use the device infrequently or no longer at all.
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Itasca, Ill.-based Knowles Corp. has developed a new breed of microphone that would allow a consumer to, say, flip a slide on a presentation or share information between a smartphone and another device with a simple hand gesture.
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Creators of the new system say they've developed a method that allows seismic sensors to transmit information for analysis in real time, simplifying the process of data collection.
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