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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The trend toward industry standards is leading customers away from proprietary servers.
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The "personal locator beacons" will be used by rescue agencies to pinpoint the location of lost or injured people in remote areas.
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A special City Council meeting to examine the SimHouston contract didn't happen, but the actions of the company behind SimHouston is raising eyebrows.
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Temporarily knocked out of the top spot by the merger of Hewlett-Packard and Compaq, Dell used a strong third quarter to rebound.
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The move might spur the use of digital signatures by both the public and private sectors.
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The Web site now accepts electronic checks and will add a suite of child-support services in November.
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Open-source software labeled "problematic" and a threat to security.
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As the telecom world continues its meltdown, some say the U.S. government should let failing companies die to make way for new contenders.
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More than 100 million voters across Brazil used new electronic voting machines, and no widespread problems were reported.
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Another guerrilla IT ad campaign runs afoul of local officials. Last year, IBM angered officials in four cities by spray-painting Linux ads on streets and sidewalks.
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UPDATE: Special meeting called off due to lack of quorum.
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Fingerprint data is matched with video clips to provide multimedia dossiers stored in a central database.
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Though the decision is scheduled to come out today, the case may not be ultimately resolved for another two years.
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The company said it will build a lab to develop technologies to defend against viruses and other electronic attacks, but some say there are other ways to create better security.
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Georgia was the state with the biggest debut of touch-screen voting machines -- 19,000 were deployed.
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The library will test methods of storing digital media in a variety of formats, and other universities will be able to adapt the program to their needs.
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Though elections appear to be going well, states and counties are still watching to make sure voting goes well.
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Though a variety of problems with touch-screen machines delayed voting in some areas, equally frustrating problems with older machines did the same in other areas.
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