A growing concern: Technology and transportation – Florida Today

Scott Tilley 7:58 a.m. ET Feb. 9, 2017

A recent trip home from Montreal to Melbourne took me nearly 30 hours. It should have taken me 8. The cascade of mechanical problems, poor customer service, and overall incompetence left me tired and frustrated. I lost time. I lost sleep. But at least I eventually made it home safe and sound.

The whole experience made me realize how susceptible our air travel system is to a single point of failure. Just one thing going wrong causes a terrible domino effect. Unfortunately, I can only see the situation getting worse as traffic levels increase.

Air travel is just one form of transportation that makes up our national infrastructure. Consider cargo traffic, which has increased significantly in the last few years. Cargo ships have become gargantuan platforms that carry huge loads across the oceans. Ports around the world are constantly being re-dredged to accommodate these floating behemoths. One of the biggest cargo ships in the world, the CSCL Globe, is more than four football fields long. It can carry 19,000 twenty-foot containers. Think how many 18-wheel transport trucks that means on the highways.

How do we know whats inside each of these cargo containers? What technology do we use to ensure that weapons are not smuggled into the country? Once the containers are unloaded from the ship, what rail and road routes do they take before they reach their final destination?

The volume of trucks and cars on our roads is also growing. In many parts of the world, the rising middle class is resulting in a surge of highway traffic. In 2010, there was a traffic jam outside of Beijing, China that lasted for almost two weeks. Nearly 20 lanes of traffic stretched for more than 60 miles.

And you thought your commute was bad.

The amount of time people waste in their car, stuck in traffic during their daily commutes, continues to increase. In some big cities, spending more than four hours a day each way has become the norm. Not only is this terribly stressful on the driver (and passengers), its a colossal loss of productivity. Our national GDP suffers from gridlock. Its also a mounting security risk.

Tonight at 8:00pm in the Henegar Center, Dr. Cliff Bragdon will be speaking about transportation security as part of the Center for Technology & Societys Tech Talk series. Tickets are just $10 and can be ordered online at http://www.henegar.org or by calling the box office at 321-723-8698. I hope you come to hear about some of the many challenges facing our national transportation system and some of the possible solutions to avoiding intermodal gridlock in the future.

Scott Tilley is a professor at the Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne. Contact him at Technology Today@srtilley.com.

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A growing concern: Technology and transportation - Florida Today

Opinion: Harry Boxer’s stocks to watch: biotechnology and technology – MarketWatch

Biotechnology and technology stocks are dominating our charts to watch this week, because they are displaying strong technical momentum.

Esperion Therapeutics Inc. ESPR, -1.79% is absolutely rocketing. The clinical-stage biopharma, which is focused on developing drugs that treat cardiovascular disease, popped 29% on Friday in response to good clinical news from Amgen AMGN, -0.39% regarding its own cardiovascular drug. The stock followed through on Monday and then again Tuesday, up $2.48, or 14%, to $20.14 on nearly 3.4 million shares traded. The stock pulled back toward the close, testing the bottom of its rising channel and resting in a tight wedge formation. This formation looks poised to break to the upside, with the next target at the channel top near $22.

Exelixis Inc. EXEL, +4.12% also had a strong session on Tuesday, up 54 cents, or 2.7%, to $20.57, on nearly 6.7 million shares traded. The cancer-drug companys stock needs to get through the rising trendline, near $21, connecting the most recent tops from September, December and January. The challenge beyond that would be the mid-channel line at around $22.75, a break through that could accelerate the stock into the high $20s.

Finisar Corp. FNSR, +2.89% edged above resistance on Tuesday, though closed slightly below it, up 76 cents, or 2.5%, to $30.89, on 2.7 million shares. The provider of optical subsystems for data communications recently traversed from the top of its price channel at around $37 in December to the bottom just above $27 on January 23, before rallying in the last two weeks. The stock did close above its 50-day moving average at $30.77 on Tuesday, and a break above current levels could get it to $33.25 next, followed by $35.50.

KEMET Corp. KEM, +2.99% has been in a steady rising channel since its breakout in November. The stock last week bounced off the channel bottom and rallied after the electronic-capacitor maker beat Wall Streets third-quarter earnings and revenue forecasts. The stock popped on Thursday and Friday, had an inside day on Monday (remaining inside the price range from Friday), and on Tuesday it had another solid day, up 17 cents, or 2.2%, to 7.81, on 652,900 shares traded. The stock looks like its about to take out the $7.90 area, and run up toward the channel top in the $9-$9.75 area.

See Harrys video chart analysis on these and other stocks.

The writer has no investments in the stocks mentioned in this column.

Harry Boxer is the founder of TheTechTrader.com, a live trading room featuring his stock picks, technical market analysis and live chart presentations.

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Opinion: Harry Boxer's stocks to watch: biotechnology and technology - MarketWatch

Nasdaq plans venture arm to invest in financial technology: sources – Reuters

By Anna Irrera | NEW YORK

NEW YORK Exchange operator Nasdaq Inc (NDAQ.O) plans to set up a venture capital arm to invest in financial technology companies that can help grow its own businesses, two people familiar with the plans told Reuters.

The amount Nasdaq would invest could not be learned, though one person described it as "modest" relative to its broader earnings and capital plans. Nasdaq generated $2.3 billion in net revenue last year.

Nasdaq is best known for running stock exchanges around the globe, but it is also one of the largest providers of technology to other exchanges and companies involved with trading.

A venture arm would formalize some of the investing Nasdaq has already been doing in early-stage financial-technology companies. It was one of the earliest supporters of blockchain, a record-keeping tool that some expect will fundamentally change the cost, speed and accuracy of trading.

The move would also align with plans set out by Nasdaq's new chief executive, Adena Friedman, who wants to increase the company's focus on technology.

"Areas of focus for us in terms of big projects are all around technology," Friedman said last month on CNBC. "It's a matter of making sure that we continue to take all of the new technologies that are available in the marketplace and ... offering them to our clients."

Nasdaq's current investments include San Francisco-based blockchain startup Chain.com and artificial-intelligence company Digital Reasoning.

In the venture capital arm under discussion, Nasdaq would go beyond investment dollars to help companies develop technology faster, one of the sources said. The two sources were not authorized to speak publicly.

Nasdaq is not the first financial firm to set up a venture arm as a way to stay competitive. CME Group Inc (CME.O), JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) , Citigroup Inc (C.N) and Banco Santander SA (SAN.MC) are among those that have similar units.

(Reporting by Anna Irrera; Additional reporting by John McCrank; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Alan Crosby)

SAN FRANCISCO Zenefits is laying off nearly half its staff as the software startup grapples with the fallout of insurance violations that resulted in hefty penalties from state regulators.

Apple Inc Chief Executive Tim Cook told Prime Minister Theresa May the company was optimistic about Britain's future after it leaves the European Union, the BBC reported on Thursday.

TOKYO Toshiba Corp has received bids ranging from 200 billion yen to as much as 400 billion yen ($1.8-3.6 billion) for a 19.9 percent stake in its flash memory business, a person directly involved in the deal told Reuters on Thursday.

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Nasdaq plans venture arm to invest in financial technology: sources - Reuters

Berlinale: Jury Talks Up Art But Politics and Technology Enter Discussion – Variety


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Berlinale: Jury Talks Up Art But Politics and Technology Enter Discussion
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While no one at the Berlin Film Festival's opening day jury press conference mentioned U.S. President Donald Trump's name, his shadow loomed large over the crowded room as jury members discussed wide-ranging topics that spanned film, politics, culture, ...

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Berlinale: Jury Talks Up Art But Politics and Technology Enter Discussion - Variety

Mysterious $5 Billion Biotech Moderna Hit With Legal Setback Related To Key Technology – Forbes


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Mysterious $5 Billion Biotech Moderna Hit With Legal Setback Related To Key Technology
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A British Columbia judge has issued a ruling that puts in doubt whether Moderna Theraputics will be able to commercialize some of its first products in clinical trials using key technology that it doesn't own. British Columbia Supreme Court Justice Dev ...

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Mysterious $5 Billion Biotech Moderna Hit With Legal Setback Related To Key Technology - Forbes

How Technology Transforms Dreamers Into Economic Powerhouses – Forbes


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How Technology Transforms Dreamers Into Economic Powerhouses
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Want more jobs, not just here but around the world? Easy! Give dreamers the tools to become doers. Photo by The Videographers courtesy of Makerarm. Back in 2013, Zaib Husain, a Muslim, Pakistani-born, Austin-based, female founder started work on a ...

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How Technology Transforms Dreamers Into Economic Powerhouses - Forbes

Coming technology will likely destroy millions of jobs. Is Trump ready? – Washington Post

By Ed Hess By Ed Hess February 8 at 10:53 AM

American manufacturing job losses to China and Mexico were a major theme of the presidential campaign, and President Trump has followed up on his promise to pressure manufacturers to keep jobs here rather than send them abroad. Already, he has jawboned automakers Ford, General Motors, Toyota and Fiat Chrysler and heating and cooling manufacturer Carrier into keeping and creating jobs in the United States.

What he hasn't yet addressed but should is the looming technology tsunami that will hit the U.S. job market over the next five to 15 years and likely destroy tens of millions of jobs due to automation by artificial intelligence, 3-D manufacturing, advanced robotics and driverless vehicles among other emerging technologies. The best research to date indicates that 47 percent of all U.S. jobs are likely to be replaced by technology over the next 10 to 15 years, more than 80 million in all, according to the Bank of England.

Think back to the human misery in this country during the financial recession when unemployment hit 10 percent. Triple that. Or even quintuple it. We as a society and as individuals are not ready for anything like that. This upheaval has the potential of being as disruptive for us now as the Industrial Revolution was for our ancestors.

Techno-optimists tell us to relax dont worry, technology will produce lots of new jobs just like it did during the Industrial Revolution. History will repeat itself, they say. Well, not so fast.

First, human disruption caused by the Industrial Revolution in Britain lasted 60 to 90 years, depending on the historical research. That is a long time for society to right itself, and lot of personal pain. Second, this time will be different because there will be new questions: Will technology produce lots of new jobs that advancing technology itself cant do? And will displaced workers be able to keep up with the pace of advancing technologies?

These issues should be front and center on the presidents agenda. Planning for how our country will adapt to the coming technology tsunami must start now. We are talking about a major societal challenge preservation of the American Dream as well as the future of work in the United States and the world.

Jobs at risk include a diverse range of service and professional positions. Retail and fast-food jobs will be almost entirely automated. Manual laborers and construction workers will be replaced by robots; long-haul truck drivers by self-driving trucks; accountants, clerks, paralegals, telemarketers and customer-service reps by artificial intelligence; and security guards by robots and drones. Even professionals in the fields of accounting, law, finance, consulting, journalism and medicine are at risk of losing their jobs to smart machines.

What jobs will be secure? Well, that will change as technology advances. For now, the consensus is that humans will be needed to perform those tasks that require higher-order critical thinking, innovation, creativity, high emotional engagement with other humans and trade skills requiring real-time problem-solving and manual dexterity. Humans will need to excel at doing those things that are, for now, uniquely human. Good will no longer be good enough.

We need to begin planning for what is coming. Our political leaders need to embrace this challenge. We need an American Dream 2.0 Plan for how we, as a society, will remain the land of opportunity as technological advances cause massive job losses. The stresses upon our system and way of life will be huge. This is not science fiction.

I ask the president to appoint a diverse blue-ribbon committee to study and make recommendations about how we, as a nation, will prepare for the coming technology tsunami and answer the tough economic questions of our time: How will we keep the American Dream alive in the Smart Machine Age? How will people find meaning and purpose in a world where full-time work will be limited? How must our public education system be transformed to better prepare our children for this new world? How do we, as a society, deal with the fact that the future of work for many will be no work at all?

We need to begin preparing ourselves, our families and our nation by mastering those skills that technology cannot replace. We need to rethink human excellence for the Smart Machine Age.

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Coming technology will likely destroy millions of jobs. Is Trump ready? - Washington Post

Three Ways That Digital Technology Can Help Chemical Producers – Forbes


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Three Ways That Digital Technology Can Help Chemical Producers
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Chemical producers were among the first industrial companies to deploy digital technologies extensively, using digital sensors and controllers to optimize production and control plant operations. More recently, however, the chemicals sector has slowed ...

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Three Ways That Digital Technology Can Help Chemical Producers - Forbes

Cinematographers Deploy Innovative Technology to Create Better Images – Variety


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Cinematographers Deploy Innovative Technology to Create Better Images
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As always, technology and technique intertwined with personal artistic sensibilities and stories to drive changes in filmmaking. New markers were laid down on the road to the future with high-tech endeavors like The Jungle Book, lensed by Bill Pope ...

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Cinematographers Deploy Innovative Technology to Create Better Images - Variety

Five Rules That Define The Technology Innovator – Forbes

Five Rules That Define The Technology Innovator
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The technology company I started introduced real-time TV measurement to an industry accustomed to waiting 30 days for the same data no one had thought about it yet. Along the way, I've touched nearly every aspect of the business, including product, ...

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Five Rules That Define The Technology Innovator - Forbes

Solutions replace technology as the focus at ISE 2017 – Installation International

For a show as huge and diverse as ISE has become, it might seem like a fruitless exercise to try to discern the emergence of any single major theme, writes Ian McMurray. However, both Brad Grimes, director of communications for InfoComm, and Dave Pedigo, VP of emerging technologies at CEDIA, believe that two have emerged.

Ive had a number of conversations with our exhibitors, and an important shift in our industry is becoming increasingly clear, saysGrimes. Were starting to go beyond the technology, and pivot towards the solution. What does this achieve? What outcome will the customer get from this?

He cites as an example some remarkable technology that Avocor is demonstrating which sees IR embedded in the glass of the screen. But, says Grimes, the people at Avocor are emphatic: theyre looking to provide a solution. Theyre entirely focused on the customer experience.

For Pedigo, the overriding impression from the show is the move towards voice as the user interface to the smart home a phenomenon currently driven largely by the Amazon Echo and Google Home. He acknowledges that that will take more time in Europe, given the limited availability of the Echo and as-yet-unavailability of Home but is certain it will happen.

Its all about use cases, he says. There are just so many occasions when its easier to use your voice than a control panel, remote or app. Those wont go away, of course people like things they can touch but now, the industry is able to give our users even more choice. Voice is complementary to what they already have.

Delivering a better experienceThat fundamental idea of exciting technology being seen, not as something in its own right, but as something that provides a valued solution and delivers a better experience to users, is one that both Grimes and Pedigo see as a significant change in the industry.

Our customer is no longer just the AV guy at the end user, continues Grimes. What were delivering as an industry is now widely seen by our customers as part of their enterprise technology strategy. What were doing is of enormous interest to CIOs and IT managers. What theyre focused on is ROI, productivity and solutions, and theyre the people who are going to be writing the cheques that will keep our industry going.

Both men see an important and shared challenge. Technologies such asAlexa can be seen as symptomatic of a shift towards standards. In a world that has historically prided itself on its ability to deliver custom solutions, that can perhaps be seen as threatening.

In reality, its an opportunity, believes Grimes. As an industry, we need to understand where our skills really lie. We deal in environments and experiences, and the interaction between audio, video, acoustics, lighting and so on. Thats our area of expertise and it has no less value in a standards-based world than it did before.

Pedigo agrees.What custom installers must realise that they bring isnt so much those technical skills, but a real understanding of how to deliver to a home owner exactly the right solution that precisely meets that home-owners needs, he says. That can be in the simplest of things adopting good practice for voice control, for example that can make a big difference to the end result.

The last word goes to Grimes.

When it comes to ISE, it may be the technology wow factor that brings people through the door, he laughs, But what our customers buy is something that solves a problem for them.

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Solutions replace technology as the focus at ISE 2017 - Installation International

Factory Boss Says Fishing Technology Could Improve Controversial US Border Wall – Voice of America

NORTHBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

A manufacturing company says skills and technology it developed making lobster traps could help save money on U.S. President Donald Trump's controversial plan to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Riverdale Mills' super-tough steel fence already guards 43 kilometers of the border, and the company says its technology has proven to be a cost-effective way to secure airports, prisons and nuclear facilities.

The small firm is based in Northbridge, Massachusetts, and CEO Jim Knott says his company came up with a much better way to make lobster traps. The metal mesh is assembled on huge automated machines that weld many joints at once. The mesh can be made of different sizes of steel, with different size openings for different applications.

The mesh is run through a huge vat of molten zinc to protect the product from rust. For lobster traps and other marine applications, the product gets an additional coating of special plant-based plastics that protect the zinc. The plastic formula is a trade secret. Lobster traps have to be sturdy, effective and affordable, and Knott says lessons from making them improved the design and production of mesh for other applications.

For security fences, the mesh openings can be made too small to allow people to get a grip with their fingers or to allow a cutter to work effectively. Knott says, "It's difficult to climb, it's difficult to cut I think it just makes more sense than a concrete wall, or a bollard wall, or an expanded metal wall."

Riverdale Mills says mesh openings in fencing can be made too small to allow people to get a grip with their fingers or to allow a cutter to work effectively.

Knott says this industry is very "capital intensive" and a big new order for a border fence could require a bigger investment in expensive equipment. It would also increase the need to recruit and train more skilled workers. According to Knott, "Adding people might be a challenge, but our plant pays a good wage and people, I think, are fairly happy here."

Riverdale already supplies some fencing on the Arizona border with Mexico.

Trump's plan to build a wall along the southern U.S. border is controversial, so a large order to supply material for the project might bring criticism to the company. Knott, however, expects job gains will generate goodwill and may temper critiques of his company.

"For every one person who works here directly, we're probably influencing 10 other people somewhere else in the community," he said.

In the meantime, this small manufacturing company has already grown from 60 employees to 185 over the past several years and still needs 35 more workers. These employment gains come after a period when the United States has lost millions of factory jobs that generally pay fairly well.

Knott says manufacturing is an important source of good jobs and a crucial source of innovation for the nation's economic health.

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Factory Boss Says Fishing Technology Could Improve Controversial US Border Wall - Voice of America

Republicans Aim to Kill Election Technology Standards Agency – Gizmodo

In a party line vote, the House Administration Committee voted today to kill the Election Assistance Committee, which sets federal standards for voting technology. If the bill becomes law, it could affect efforts to protect US elections from cyber attacks, further indicating that Republicans arent all that bothered by the threat of election hacking.

The Election Assistance Commission is charged with testing and certifying voting technology, and creating best practices and guidance for states on their voting systems. It was created by the Help America Vote Act, after the chaos of the 2000 election showed the need for better and more standardized electronic voting systems. The agency doesnt make rules or enforce requirements, but does certify technology. It also sets standards that states can use if they choose, and it provides grants for research into improving voting technologies. Its budget was $10 million in 2013, making it practically a rounding error in federal budget terms.

Bills that would eliminate the EAC have been introduced in previous years, but its more of a threat now with a united Republican congress and a Republican president. Its hard to imagine why Republicans would want to eliminate a small agency with such a limited budget and remit, particularly given the growing concern over foreign hacking of US elections systems. The EAC itself was hacked in 2016, and voter registration systems in multiple states were targeted by hackers. None of these incidents caused the elections to be compromised, but future attempts at hacking could be more successful without the EAC setting national standards for election security and performing tests on voting machines. And hacking isnt the only problem: according to the Brennan Center, a democracy and voting rights advocacy group, 43 states use at least some machines that are more than 10 years old.

In a statement, Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, who is on the House Administration Committee, took on Donald Trump for his partys attempts to kill the agency:

It strikes me as odd that at the same time their President Donald Trump is claiming massive voter fraud, House Republicans on the House Administration Committee are advancing legislation to eliminate the very commission which helps ensure that voting systems are secure, accurate, and accessible.

We received reports that dozens of state voter registration databases were subject to Russian hacking attacks last year. Eliminating the Elections Assistance Commission means these state and local jurisdictions will be less prepared to prevent efforts to delegitimize or disrupt our elections.

The EACs chair, Tom Hicks, also cited the threat of hacking if the agency is eliminated:

Efforts to dismantle the Election Assistance Commission are seriously out of step with the current U.S. election landscape. At a time when the Department of Homeland Security has designated election systems as part of the countrys critical infrastructure, election officials face cybersecurity threats, our nations voting machinery is aging and there are accusations of election irregularities, the EAC is the only federal agency bridging the gap between federal guidance and the needs of state and local election officials.

The bill would still have to pass the House and Senate before it reaches the presidents desk, so Senate Democrats may filibuster the effort.

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Republicans Aim to Kill Election Technology Standards Agency - Gizmodo

How 3D and Self-Design Will Change Technology – Huffington Post

There is no doubt 3D printing is more than a temporary nourish for the world. According to some recent surveys, the worldwide 3D printing industry is now projected to reach revenues $12.8 billion by 2018 and surpass an enormous $21 billion globally by 2020.

The role of 3D cannot be undermined -- from product design in the technology industry to modeling and presentation in the real estate sector, 3D has proven its stay. Self-design, an advancement on 3D designs that allows users to create custom designs from which manufacturers can create a customer-specific product is the new trend.

Here are some ways 3D and self-design are making the world a better place.

Touchable Picture Isn't it amazing if the blind and visually weaken could feel images? 3D technology has made it achievable for the world. With the advent of cutting-edge printers, the users can print the photographs and pictures in 3D version. What's more? 3D models of even unborn babies can be created with this technology.

Owing to amazing customization features of the 3D and self-design techniques, it will be possible to design and build implants depending on the needs and requirements of the clients. It means that the technology will help to get improved body parts. Sturdier and better means of transportation

Nowadays, most transportation companies are using 3D printed parts to increase the strength and protection of the vehicles. This technology is utilized to design even planes. 3D printed components to make the plans lightweight and sturdy. When it comes to evaluating a vehicle, we always look at fuel efficiency. With 3D components, vehicles are made fuel efficient.

Comfortable plaster cast for broken bones

Traditional plaster casts are somehow uncomfortable to carry. But modern plaster cast built with 3D design are easy to wear and more hygienic. Faster medical progress

The role of 3D technology is really great in the healthcare sector. It brings various new discoveries in medicine. It saves loads of time and resources spent on surveys and researches. Owing to the advanced printers and supplementary devices, it is now easier and faster to design and craft tailor-made implants. Improve working efficiency

Various tasks related to design have become quick, simple and efficient with 3D and self-design technology. It improves the efficiency and reduces the need for manpower. Ultimately, it speeds up the production and reduces the expenses. Faster solutions

At present scenario, designs and looks of almost everything are changed very rapidly. 3D printers allow the employees to save time and let them focus on their main work. It helps to streamline the work. Creating faster and a proficient solution are easy with a smart printer.

Brian Walker, Ph.D., the co-founder, and CEO of CircutScribe says self-design will make 3D adoption rate even faster. "Due to the speed at which jobs can be completed, from the customer interaction point to the printing and manufacturing stage, a lot of previously wasted time will be cut. This means more people will adopt 3D as a way of getting things done," he said.

Improved and engaging education

The emergence of art and technology has changed the way schools offer education to the students. With the 3D and self-design technologies, students learn various subjects especially, science, technology, engineering and math with fun. Art and technology have always been interconnected, but now they are allied more than ever before to change the world.

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How 3D and Self-Design Will Change Technology - Huffington Post

Broadcaster dangles new technology for Winter Olympics – Reuters

By Ossian Shine | St Moritz, Switzerland

St Moritz, Switzerland With the Winter Olympics just a year away, Europe's broadcast rights holder is dangling a host of technological breakthroughs - from "ghost skiers" to performance patches - which it says will enhance the drama of the Pyeongchang Games.

Feb. 9 marks the one year countdown to the South Korean Games, and Eurosport CEO Peter Hutton says the sports broadcaster will spend that year continuing to test new technology as it looks to revolutionize coverage.

"Subject to all the approvals from federations and the International Olympic Committee, I'm hopeful we will be able to use some very cool technology to bring more data to the sports than ever before," Hutton told Reuters on the sidelines of the World Skiing Championships. "We've seen tests of patches which show not only heart rate and positioning of athletes, but can also show how tired an athlete is, or how much power they are using.

"These patches feed data direct to viewers, or to commentators which can make sport more understandable... more dramatic."

Hutton said he was confident the technology would mark a big leap forward for sports viewers and that he had held talks with sports federations eager to harness the data for themselves.

"Some of this data is really revolutionary, the challenge now is knowing what to do with it, how to use it to tell stories."

One of the most compelling technologies being tested is the use of "ghost skier" graphics depicting the last run, or quickest run so far, to compare with the skier on the course.

"It is not as easy as you might think... everything happens so quickly," production head Arnand Simon told Reuters.

"With the human eye it is very, very difficult to be able to tell who is doing better or who is leading. But with technology we can show many aspects from a skiers speed to their acceleration."

Hutton says the "ghost skier" could transform the viewing experience in a way similar to the world record line being beamed onto swimming races.

"It instantly puts the performance in context," he said.

Initially, the technology would have to be voluntary, Hutton said, but the Paris-based Englishman does not see that as a barrier. "We have seen cyclists asking for technology to be put on their bikes, he laughed. "Because it puts them centre stage in the story... and typically athletes like to be centre stage."

Eurosport, through parent company Discovery Communications, bought the exclusive multimedia rights to broadcasting the Olympics in some 50 countries and territories in Europe in a 1.3 billion Euros ($1.37 billion) deal which began on Jan. 1 and takes them through to the 2024 Olympic Games.

(Editing by Richard Lough)

Sacramento Kings power forward DeMarcus Cousins is facing a suspension after receiving his 16th technical foul of the season on Monday against the Chicago Bulls.

ST MORITZ, Switzerland Lindsey Vonn's first run at the World Championships lasted just a few seconds on Tuesday when the American slid out of the Super-G in St Moritz.

NEW YORK Heavyweight boxing champion Deontay Wilder and Russian boxer Alexander Povetkin battled in court on Tuesday, at a trial over a title bout that was called off after the Russian tested positive for a banned substance.

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Broadcaster dangles new technology for Winter Olympics - Reuters

These Four Black Women Inventors Reimagined the Technology of the Home – Smithsonian

As 19th century urban living became more cramped, some women began to reinvent the domestic sphere with technology.

In 1888, a woman named Sarah Goode applied for and was granted a patent in Chicago, Illinois. Goode had just conceptualized what she called the "cabinet-bed,"a bed designed to fold out into a writing desk. Meeting the increasing demands of urban living in small spaces, Goode invented the cabinet-bed so as to occupy less space, and made generally to resemble some article of furniture when so folded.

Goode was a 19thcentury inventor who reimagined the domestic space to make city living more efficient. Yet unless youre a very specific kind of historian, youve probably never heard of her name. She doesnt appear in history books, and what she did remains largely unknown. The same goes for Mariam E. Benjamin, Sarah Boone and Ellen Elginall 19thcentury African-American women who successfully gained patents in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds.

In a post-Civil War America, job opportunities and social mobility for African-American citizens were highly restricted. The obstacles for African-American women were even stronger. Universities seldom accepted womenlet alone women of colorinto their programs. And most careers in science and engineering, paid or unpaid, remained closed off to them for decades to come.

Women faced similar discrimination in the patent office, as law professor Deborah Merritt notes in her article Hypatia in the Patent Office, published in The American Journal of Legal History. Restrictive state laws, poor educational systems, condescending cultural attitudes, and limited business opportunities combined to hamper the work of female inventors, Merritt writes. And in the era of Reconstruction, [r]acism and a strictly segregated society further encumbered female inventors of color.

As a result, historians can identify only four African-American women who were granted patents for their inventions between 1865, the end of the Civil War, and the turn of the 19th century. Of these, Goode was the first.

The second was schoolteacher named Mariam E. Benjamin. Benjamin was granted her patent by the District of Columbia in 1888 for something called the gong and signal chair. Benjamins chair allowed for its occupant to signal when service was needed through a crank that would simultaneously sound a gong and display a red signal (think of it as the precursor to the call button on your airplane seat, which signals for a flight attendant to assist you).

Benjamin had grand plans for her design, which she laid out in her patent paperwork. She wanted her chair to be used indining-rooms, in hotels, restaurants, steamboats, railroad-trains, theaters, the hall of the Congress of the United States, the halls of the legislatures of the various States, for the use of all deliberative bodies, and for the use of invalids in hospitals. Intending to see her invention realized,Benjamin lobbiedto have her chair adopted for use in the House of Representatives. Though a candidate, the House opted for another means to summon messengers to the floor.

Next was Sarah Boone, who received a U.S. government patent from the state of Connecticut for animprovement on the ironing board in 1892. Before her improvement, ironing boards were assembled by placing a board between two supports. Boones design, which consisted of hinged and curved ends, made it possible to iron the inside and outside seam of slim sleeves and the curved waist of womens dresses.

In her patent paperwork, Boone writes: My invention relates to an improvement in ironing-boards, the object being to produce a cheap, simple, convenient, and highly effective device, particularly adapted to be used in ironing the sleeves and bodies of ladies garments.

Ellen Elgin might be completely unknown as an inventor if not for her testimony in an 1890 Washington, D.C. periodicalThe Woman Inventor, the first publication of its kind devoted entirely to women inventors. Elgin invented a clothes wringer in 1888, which had great financial success according to the writer. But Elgin did not personally reap the profits, because she sold the rights to an agent for $18.

When asked why, Elgin replied: You know, I am black, and if it was known that a negro woman patented the invention, white ladies would not buy the wringer; I was afraid to be known because of my color in having it introduced to the market, that is the only reason.

Disenfranchised groups often participated in science and technology outside of institutions. For women, that place was the home. Yet although we utilize its many tools and amenities to make our lives easier and more comfortable, the home is not typically regarded as a hotbed of technological advancement. It lies outside our current understanding of technological changeand so, in turn, do women, like Goode, Benjamin, Boone, and Elgin, who sparked that change.

When I asked historian of technology Ruth Schwartz Cowan why domestic technology is not typically recognized as technology proper, she gave two main reasons. First, [t]he definition of what technology is has shrunk so much in the last 20 years, she says. Many of us conceptualize technology through a modernand limitedframework of automation, computerization, and digitization. So when we look to the past, we highlight the inventions that appear to have led to where we are todaywhich forces us to overlook much of the domestic technology that has made our everyday living more efficient.

The second reason, Cowan says, is that we usually associate technology with males, which is just false. For over a century, the domestic sphere has been coded as female, the domain of women, while science, engineering, and the workplace at large has been seen as the realm of men. These associations persist even today, undermining the inventive work that women have done in the domestic sphere. Goode, Benjamin, Boone and Elgin were not associated with any university or institution. Yet they invented new technology based on what they knew through their lived experiences, making domestic labor easier and more efficient.

One can only guess how many other African American women inventors are lost to history because of restricted education possibilities and multiple forms of discrimination, we may never know who they are. This does not mean, however, that women of color were not therelearning, inventing, shaping the places in which we have lived. Discrimination kept the world from recognizing them during their lifetimes, and the narrow framework by which we define technology keeps them hidden from us now.

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These Four Black Women Inventors Reimagined the Technology of the Home - Smithsonian

A flare for self-destruction: How technology is the means, not the cause, of our demise – National Post

A flare for self-destruction: How technology is the means, not the cause, of our demise
National Post
Catastrophic, because of our now far more interconnected technology, according to the opening section of The Dark Side of Technology by Peter Townsend, a professor of experimental physics in engineering. Despite an uneven style and an unwarranted ...

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A flare for self-destruction: How technology is the means, not the cause, of our demise - National Post

Ossia hires new CEO to help commercialize its wireless charging technology – GeekWire

Ossia CEO Mario Obeidat. Photo via Ossia.

Ossia has hired a new leader as the Bellevue, Wash.-based company prepares to commercialize its wireless charging technology.

Long-time tech executive Mario Obeidat is Ossias new CEO. He takes over forDidier Le Lannic, who joined the company this past March but isstepping down to explore other opportunities closer to his home and family in San Francisco.

Obeidat was previously vice presidentof licensing at Pendrell Corporation and head of telecommunications licensing at Intellectual Ventures. Hes also served as an advisor to Ossia for the past six years and is now leading the company at a critical time.

Founded in 2008, Ossia has spent nearly a decade developing its Cota technology that can charge electronic devices wirelesslywithout wires or pads. The 40-person company has raised $50 million from investors like Intel Capital, KDDI, Molex, and others.

For me, leading Ossia is a natural extension of things Ive done over the past 20 years: Lead technology organizations on a commercialization path, Obeidat told GeekWire.

Obeidat said Ossia is ready to go to market. The company recently released a reference design kit for Cota, allowing other companies to build the wireless technology into their own products. It is also working withother household-name consumer electronic makers, as Obeidat noted, to license Cota into products like smartphones, IoT devices, wearables, and more.

Were talking about a year or so until you see devices that will have Cota technology in them, Obeidat said.

Ossia has appeared at events like the Consumer Electronics Show it was named a Best of Innovation Awards Honoree at CES last month to show how Cota can charge devices wirelessly up to 20 feet away, through walls and around objects. It does thisby sending out a low-power signal from a base transmitterto Cota-equipped devices.

Ossia is fundamentally transforming the way consumers will use power, Obeidat said. Consumers will no longer have to be stuck next to electrical outlets to power devices. Its a huge transformation.

Its been quite the journey for Ossia and its founder, Hatem Zeine, who started the company in 2008 and shifted from a CEO position to CTO last year. Zeine first showed GeekWire some of Ossias early prototypes in 2014.

I want my 3-year-old to grow up and neverknow about charging devices, Zeine said at the time.

Ossia is still going through the regulatory process to get its technology approved.

Cota is inherently a very safe technology, Obeidat said. Were confident well be able to pass all the regulatory requirements.

There are plenty of other companies like uBeamand Energous, for example also developing their own wireless charging technology. But competitors havent shown off their products like Ossia, Obeidat said.

No other company has done a public demo to show that they can power a device from 20 feet away, he noted.

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Ossia hires new CEO to help commercialize its wireless charging technology - GeekWire

Microsoft’s AI group debuts customizable speech-to-text technology, rapidly expanding ‘cognitive services’ for … – GeekWire

Microsofts Artificial Intelligence and Research Group, a major new engineering and research division formed last year inside the Redmond company, is debutinganew technology that lets developers customizeMicrosofts speech-to-text engine for use in their own apps and online services.

Thenew Custom Speech Service is set for releasetoday asa public preview. Microsoft says itletsdevelopers upload a unique vocabulary such as alien names in Human Interacts VR game Starship Commander to produce a sophisticated language model for recognizing voice commands and other speech from users.

Its the latest in a series of cognitive services from Microsofts Artificial Intelligence and Research Group, a 5,000-person division led by Microsoft Research chief Harry Shum. The company says it has expandedfrom four to 25 cognitive services in the last two years, including 19 in preview and six that are generally available.

The company says it will bring two more cognitive services,Content ModeratorandBing Speech API, out of preview and make them generally available next month. Content Moderator analyze images and videowith technology including optical-character and objectrecognition, helping companiesfilter out unwanted content. The Bing Speech API converts audio into text, interprets the intent of the language and converts text back to speech.

Microsoft formed the group to accelerate its artificial intelligenceadvances, aiming get more of its technologies out of the labs and into itsown products as well as its services for third partydevelopers. TheAI and Research Groupalso includes MicrosoftsCortana voice-based assistant and Bing search engine.

The company is competing against rivals including Amazon, Google and others in the booming field of artificial intelligence. AI and machine learningare increasingly becoming integralparts of their cloud platforms, as well.

Microsoftsnew Custom Speech Servicealso includesan acoustic model that cancels out background noise to improvespeech recognition. Microsoft citedthe example of using Custom Speech Service at anairport kiosk where the environmental noise would otherwise make speech recognitionvery difficult.

The combination of a language model and this acoustic model in a single API that is customizable for your vocabulary is truly unique in the market, said Irving Kwong, group program manager, in an interview. In going from a private preview to a public preview, the servicewill be able to take on tens of thousands of new customers.

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Microsoft's AI group debuts customizable speech-to-text technology, rapidly expanding 'cognitive services' for ... - GeekWire

Learning From Last Year: Technology Funding Outlooks For 2017 – Forbes

Learning From Last Year: Technology Funding Outlooks For 2017
Forbes
Do these signs point to another burst, another shock wave through technology similar to what happened in 2000? I don't think so. And what will the funding climate look like in 2017? I think it will be calmer and less risky. My thoughts are based on ...

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Learning From Last Year: Technology Funding Outlooks For 2017 - Forbes