For entrepreneur Myshkin Ingawale the logic was unassailable. Everybody pees. And everyone has a cellphone. “There has to be something going on there,” Ingawale told a chuckling crowd at the TED conference.
Wearable accelerometers aren’t just for fitness trackers anymore. Newly founded Innovative Developments is releasing Mycestro, a wearable “fingermouse,” via Kickstarter.
Forget about robots rising up against humans for world domination. In the future we’re all going to be robot-human hybrids with the help of wearable computers.
This week, the Mobile World Congress is taking place in Barcelona. The annual four-day event brings together more than 70,000 people from the cell phone industry to showcase new products and talk about the future.
As Google unveiled more photos and videos of its much anticipated Google Glass yesterday, Canon introduced to us its own computerized glasses-like device.
So as .22 ammo has dried up and been impossible to find, you might wonder how is it supply isn't keeping up with demand. We can't answer that. But here's a peek inside a factory.
Attaching a computer to your head is not going to bring you happiness, it’s only going to make your life more synthetic, more artificial, less real, less genuine, less spontaneous.
THERE IS little doubt that the proliferation of taxi-booking apps is changing how people get around. Hailo, which is already used by more than half of all black-cab drivers in London, is also available in Dublin, Toronto, Boston, and Chicago.
In a few years, the soldier, marine or special operator out on patrol might be able to record the facial features or iris signature of a suspicious person all from his or her smartphone — and at a distance, too.
Watch Streaming Broadcast Live:
Flote
LRN.fm
DLive
Live Chat Telegram
Share this page with your friends
on your favorite social network: