Networking and Computing

HEADLINES ARCHIVE

  • Apple Watch Data Used as Evidence in Australian Murder Trial

    Data gathered from an Apple Watch has been presented as evidence in a recent murder trial in Australia.

  • Researchers Develop Evidence-collecting App

    Considering the weight put on eyewitness testimony in investigations and trials and how inaccurate and vulnerable to distortion eyewitness memory can be, eyewitness memory experts have developed a smartphone app that allows victims and witnesses alike to provide detailed accounts of an event moments after it has happened.

  • Novelty Robot Concierge Expected to Improve Along with AI

    Considered Italy’s first robot concierge, the humanoid, which can answer questions in English, German and Italian, will now be used year-round at a hotel in Lake Garda where it will help alleviate desk traffic by offering answers to simple, repetitive questions.

  • More and More U.S. Schools Allowing Cell Phones in Classrooms

    While cell phones are largely absent from most U.S. classrooms, data shows that the devices are becoming more acceptable in such settings thanks to parents’ insistence that the devices be kept with the students for tracking purposes.

  • Watch: Wearable Medical Electronics, Cyber Defense Tool, Protecting Coral Reefs

    In today's news highlights, wearable medical electronics, cyber defense tools and protecting coral reefs.

  • New Service Follows Users Across Multiple Devices

    Amid the recent controversy over Facebook sharing the data of its users with a political consulting firm to influence elections, software company Adobe announced that it has organized an initiative to help companies create personalized experiences for its customers across all devices.

  • Going Vegan May Solve Issue of Hunger in the U.S., According to Researchers

    The US Department of Agriculture estimates that millions of people in the United States are at risk of going hungry. Recent research suggests a potential solution: adopting a vegan diet. Turning to a vegan diet might solve other problems too.

  • 10 Big Data Sites Free to Use and Peruse

    For those who are geared toward science and engineering, here’s a brief list of data sources easily accessed from a smartphone, computer or tablet.

  • Artificial Meteor Showers Will Soon be for Sale

    Consumers will soon be able to purchase an artificial meteor shower thanks to a private Japanese-based space company.

  • Pothole Detection Using Embedded Self-powered Wireless Sensors

    Reporting potholes on roadways to the proper authorities may no longer be the responsibility of drivers if a joint project involving University at Buffalo computer scientists and researchers from China's Chang'an University comes to pass.

  • Apple Proposes New Emojis for Disabled People

    Acknowledging that people with disabilities are underrepresented in the emoji universe, Apple is proposing a handful of new emojis that will "speak to the life experiences of those with disabilities."

  • Watch: Tapping 5G Tech to Monitor Air Quality Makes MegaSense

    Data from sensors are combined with available air pollution maps and prediction models via the 5G network to generate real-time trends.

  • Law Enforcement Uses Fingerprints of Dead People to Unlock iPhones

    Ever wonder how law enforcement gains access to the contents of a victim’s fingerprint-protected iPhone once that person is deceased?

  • Achieving a Good Night's Sleep with Technology

    Technology, like mobile devices and other small screens, has earned a reputation for interfering with and disrupting sleep, leading experts to recommend turning the devices off an hour before going to bed. Yet, there are a number of technological solutions for achieving a restful night of sleep despite the attached stigma, according to expert Cary Brown, a researcher in the University of Alberta’s Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine.

  • Technology Changing the Face of Gift-giving

    Online gift giving has given rise to more gift giving, according to a study conducted by René Kizilcec, Cornell University assistant professor of information science.

  • ISRO Explores Using Igloo-like Shelters on the Moon

    The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) — India’s space agency — is exploring options for erecting structures on the moon to safely house astronauts.

  • Lufthansa Prepares to Launch Biometric Boarding Passes in the US

    The program, which was successfully trialed in Los Angeles, will use a special camera to photograph travelers’ faces instead of requiring a boarding pass or barcode from travelers’ phones and will upload those images to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

  • New Robot Can Crawl Through Pipes and Detect Uranium Levels

    These robots will be implemented at the U.S. Department of Energy’s former uranium enrichment plant in Piketon, Ohio and they will identify uranium deposits on pipe walls.

  • Gatwick Airport Preps for Trial of Driverless Buses

    Plan’s for the world’s first autonomous shuttle service will get underway this summer at Gatwick Airport (Britain’s second largest airport after Heathrow).

  • US Children Drawing Female Scientists More Than Ever Before

    Conducting “Draw-A-Scientist” studies since the 1960s, researchers from Northwestern University reveal that children in the U.S. are now drawing female scientists more than ever before.

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