Automation and Control

HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • Amid Data Use Controversy, Cambridge Analytica Shuts Down

    Steeped in a data-use controversy that will likely shape how personal data is used and gathered in the future, political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica announced that it will be closing its doors.

  • Hawaii Approves Bill Banning Over-the-Counter Sunscreens That Threaten Coral Reefs

    If signed, the ban will go into effect on January 1, 2021.

  • Facebook to Dip Its Toe into the Dating Pool

    Following months and months of bad news, Facebook is offering its over 200 million users who identify as “single” on their Facebook profiles some good news: it's launching a dating service.

  • Some Companies in China Monitor Workers' Emotions with AI

    Worker safety is often a concern for employers, particularly for those in high-stress professions such as construction and transportation, for instance. One solution that helps to keep workers safe and subsequently helps to keep costs related to accidents and mishaps down is being employed by a number of companies in China.

  • Singapore Airport Uses Facial Recognition to Locate Missing Passengers

    For travelers flying into and out of Singapore’s Cahngi Airport, there is no need to worry about getting lost in the endless sea of terminals and subsequently missing or delaying a flight thanks to facial recognition software being tested at that facility.

  • A Successful Cybersecurity Team is Generally Antisocial: Study

    According to a recent study, teamwork is not a critical ingredient when it comes to employing the most successful and efficient cybersecurity teams.

  • Team from Japan Invents "Wood Alcohol"

    A team of researchers from Japan’s Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute has developed a method for producing alcohol from wood.

  • Watch: BrainGuide System Developed as an Automated Neurosurgical Planning Tool

    Rice University students have developed a technique to simplify the placement of electrodes in the brains of patients with epilepsy.

  • Skull-drilling Robot Developed by PhD Student to Cut Operation Times

    As part of surgeries for treating illnesses such as cancer and infection, surgeons often spend long hours fixed to the same spot drilling a patient’s skull.

  • Eager for Autonomous Driving Technology to Emerge, Driver Takes Matters into His Own Hands

    No longer able to contain his excitement for the advent of autonomous driving, one U.K. driver demonstrated his eagerness for the technology using his own automobile.

  • Is Siri Experiencing a 'Salty' Language Glitch?

    In recent days, iPhone users have discovered a possible glitch in Siri’s programming that allows the virtual assistant to use “salty” language.

  • Industry’s First Steeply Dipping Coal Solution Released by RPMGlobal

    The mine scheduling solution is specifically tailored for the complex scheduling issues unique to steeply dipping coal mine geology.

  • Suspected Serial Killer Captured with Help from Technology

    The arrest this week of a man wanted in connection with the murders and rapes of several victims in the 1970s and 1980s was, in large part, thanks to technology.

  • Robots Capable of Conducting Job Interviews: The Future of HR?

    Imagine having a life-changing job interview conducted...by a robot. Thanks to Russian startup Stafory, that vision is one step closer to reality with the design of its robot Vera.

  • Companies in the UK Sign Pledge to Cut Plastic Pollution

    In a bid to reduce plastic pollution, over 40 companies in the U.K. have signed a pact promising to do so over the course of the next seven years.

  • Alexa Will Soon Help Teach Kids to be Polite

    Concerned that barking demands at Alexa without an accompanying "please" or "thank you" is sending the wrong message to children, small users will soon be encouraged to be polite in their exchanges with the device thanks to a new feature.

  • Electronic Hotel Door Locks Vulnerable to Hacking, According to Research

    Electronic door locks in some of the most well-known hotel chains around the world are vulnerable to hacking, according to research from the Finnish cybersecurity and privacy company F-Secure.

  • Streets of Sydney are Paved in Old Printer Toner

    Old printer toner is getting a second life as road asphalt in Sydney, Australia, thanks to a collaboration between Australian company Downer and the Close the Loop organization.

  • Giant Device Will Help Clean Up Plastic in the Ocean

    A long-awaited system of tubes designed to help rid the ocean of plastic waste will make its debut this week as it is installed in the Pacific Ocean.

  • Study: Record Concentration of Microplastics Found in Arctic

    According to a new report, record levels of microplastics have been found in floating sea ice in the Arctic.

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