Wednesday, March 23, 2016

MIT: Red lights could someday be a thing of the past

Apple's Liam is a robot that takes apart your iPhone for recycling

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Computerworld Emerging Technologies

Mar 23, 2016
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MIT: Red lights could someday be a thing of the past

A new MIT study based on mathematical modeling demonstrates that wirelessly connected vehicles would not need traffic signals or stop signs to navigate roadways. Read More

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Your Must-Read Stories

Apple's Liam is a robot that takes apart your iPhone for recycling
Networked streetlamps are lighting the way to smarter cities
How smartphones helped NASA to build tiny satellites you can hold in your hand
In this online demo, IBM's Watson will tell you what's in your photos
Shapeshifting robots using a new material could be on horizon
Sales of wearables to jump, as Android starts to catch up to Apple
All cars will have automatic braking in six years
Video: Getting friendly with the future of robots at the IBM Cognitive Studio
Video: From SXSW, 3 rockin' gadgets that blend music and technology

Video/Webcast: QuickBase

Unlocking Hard-to-Reach Data with No-Code Integration

In this recorded webinar, you'll discover how business professionals can easily and automatically connect to data stored in any system, on premises or in the cloud, via CSV files in the cloud to drive seamless processes and better decisions. Read More

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Apple's Liam is a robot that takes apart your iPhone for recycling

Apple shared some details on what it does with the iPhone after it is returned. Read More

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Networked streetlamps are lighting the way to smarter cities

Huawei is getting into networked streetlamps with a system that will let third-party developers add other smart-city capabilities. Read More

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How smartphones helped NASA to build tiny satellites you can hold in your hand

The same advances in electronics that bring us ever more powerful smartphones are helping NASA become more nimble in exploring the universe. Read More

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In this online demo, IBM's Watson will tell you what's in your photos

Image recognition is a hot area of research using artificial intelligence, and now IBM offers an online demo to let anyone test out the capabilities in Watson. Read More

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Shapeshifting robots using a new material could be on horizon

A new material being researched could make shape-shifting robots real, but let's hope they aren't as violent as the Transformers. Read More

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Sales of wearables to jump, as Android starts to catch up to Apple

Makers of wearable computing devices will ship 110 million products in 2016, a big increase from 2015, with smartwatches accounting for about a quarter of those sales, IDC predicted. Read More

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All cars will have automatic braking in six years

Twenty of the world's top automakers have agreed to make automatic emergency braking a standard feature on cars and trucks starting by September 2022. Read More

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Video: Getting friendly with the future of robots at the IBM Cognitive Studio

Robots rule at SXSW, where Leah beat one at rock-paper-scissors and controlled another with her mind. Watch Now

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Video: From SXSW, 3 rockin' gadgets that blend music and technology

We went all over SXSW on a mission to find the coolest, never-before-seen gadgets that take music to a whole other level. Watch Now

White Paper: Silver Peak Systems Inc

Brief: Redefine Your WAN with Broadband

This solution brief explains how organizations can work to improve business agility as they learn to reduce their dependency on MPLS for stable, high-performance networking. Read More

The 2016 Premier 100 Technology Leaders

Check out our March Digital Magazine, featuring this year's class of honorees: The 2016 Premier 100 Technology Leaders. It's a chaotic world for this year's honorees, but that's just how they like it, as they embrace countless ways to spearhead change at their organizations, from shaking up the IT structure to driving technology investments. The magazine also includes News Analysis, Opinions and Shark Tank -- all free for download with registration. View the magazine here

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