Emerging Tech
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Entities including an uncrewed aviation company are exploring use cases. Organizers indicate the city’s proximity to training and National Guard drone operations make it a good fit.
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A state lawmaker wants to put at least a three-year pause on development of data centers, which have been topics of heated debate recently in several communities across Oklahoma.
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The bill would prevent “economic prejudice” by prohibiting surveillance pricing in grocery stores, banning surge pricing on essential goods and pausing the rollout of electronic shelf labels.
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GPS bracelets can pinpoint a child's location to within a few feet.
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The company said its new product will help commanders keep track of personnel responding to an emergency situation.
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Many firms are hoping to cash in on homeland security.
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The Deepcomp 1800 will be able to perform 1 trillion floating-point operations per second.
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Big changes to elections in the state could cause problems for voters, something officials are taking measures to prevent.
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The houses feature a refrigerator with a built-in camera that sends pictures of the fridge's contents to a cell phone and a bathroom mirror that can help with hair and skin health.
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Though Florida's problems with new voting technology are well documented, researchers say the technology did work well in preventing under votes and over votes.
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A range of hardware and software is being developed that could keep the elderly out of nursing homes, though privacy concerns have some people doubting.
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A range of products hawked at a trade fair for homeland-security products.
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Cost is one factor, as is the demise of Napster, which spurred demand for high-speed connectivity.
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Prototype eyeglasses project images from PCs, DVD players into lenses that have optical technology embedded into them.
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The two contracts allowing use of the Integrated Assessment System are valued at a total of $1.8 million.
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Broadband transmission speeds capable using the electrical signals carried by human bodies.
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Though software and hardware could dramatically speed the workings of West Coast ports, the technology is causing a bitter fight between workers and shipping companies.
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Carnegie Mellon University will develop hardware and software tools to fight electronic attacks.
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The next revolution in computing will be wearable computers, experts predict.
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Wary of students' file-sharing habits that choke college networks, IT administrators find software to slow file sharing during the day.
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A special meeting has been called next week, at which Houston's City Council will discuss what course of action to take on the SimHouston contract.
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