Electronics

HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • Many Consumers Willing to Share IoT Data for Money: Survey

    Survey respondents were universally worried about potential security threats from smart homes, with 92% expressing some concern that their personal data could be hacked by cybercriminals.

  • Printing Electronics with a Pen

    Scientists in Germany have combined organic and inorganic electronic materials to develop a hybrid ink that allows them to write electronics on paper.

  • Hand Movement Restored to Paralyzed Man

    A paralyzed man regains hand movement through a chip implanted in his brain.

  • "Laser Tweezers" Used to Assemble Micro Components

    To assemble the microscopic components, the team utilized optical tweezers, the arms of which are made up of strongly focused light.

  • Graphene Could Take Microchips to Terahertz Speed

    Graphene microchip could transmit data 10 times faster.

  • Electronic Displays Developed for Consumer Packaging

    The goal is for the LED devices to be low cost and flexible enough to be used on all types of packaging.

  • Samsung Develops "Smart Windshield" for Motorcycles

    The windshield connects wirelessly with the rider's smartphone, displaying information and notifications.

  • 360-Degree Radar Helps People, Robots Work Together Safely

    IAF’s 360-degree radar can penetrate optically opaque material, which means it can identify an employee even if there are boxes, cardboard walls or other obstacles in the way.

  • Cheap, Portable Gravimeter Opens Up Industrial Applications

    The detector uses the same inexpensive, mass-producible micro-electromechanical systems employed in smartphones’ internal accelerometers.

  • Sensor-Outfitted UAV Allows Remote Methane Leak Detection

    The advanced capabilities provided by the small unmanned aerial system, particularly enhanced vertical access, could extend the use of such systems for detecting and locating gas sources.

  • Tamper-Proof Tracking Device for Fleet Vehicles

    Wireless GPS tracking device is said to be tamper-proof.

  • Webb Telescope Passes Cryo Tests, Now "Optically Complete"

    The testing is critical because at the instruments' final destination in space—one million miles from Earth—they will operate at minus-387 degrees Fahrenheit.

  • Wearable Patch Monitors Sweat, Treats Diabetes

    Precise measurements of sweat glucose concentrations are used to gauge blood glucose levels. If abnormally high levels are detected, a drug is released into the bloodstream via microneedles.

  • Advanced Mine Detection Technology Being Developed

    Because Colombia's many landmines were not industrially manufactured, but rather assembled from various everyday objects, they are almost impossible to detect via traditional methods.

  • Material Could Create Novel Electronics

    Princeton researchers are going down the rabbit hole with electrons that don’t behave as they should.

  • Next-Generation Non-Reciprocal Antenna Designed

    The research team’s design is an antenna that can break reciprocity, or the natural symmetry in radiation that characterizes conventional antennas.

  • Life Imitates Art: Nike Unveils Self-Tying Shoes

    Although the HyperAdapt 1.0 calls to mind the "power-lacing" shoes worn by Marty McFly in the Back to the Future movie series, Nike insists that the technology is no gimmick.

  • New Standard Aims to Foster Smarter Factories

    The AutomationML for OPC UA specification is intended to help manufacturers achieve interoperability.

  • DARPA, Lockheed Developing Ways to Keep Chips Cooler

    Lockheed Martin has demonstrated a microfluidic cooling approach that resulted in a fourfold reduction in thermal resistance and a corresponding sixfold increase in RF output power.

  • Flexible Skin Traps Radar Waves, Cloaks Objects

    By stretching and flexing the polymer meta-skin, it can be tuned to reduce the reflection of a wide range of radar frequencies.

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