Chromebook sales have made a stratospheric climb in 2013. Last year, U.S. sales for notebooks running the Chrome OS made up just 0.2% of the computer and tablet market. This … Continue reading
Christmas shipping snafus, the black market of stolen credit card numbers, Snowden claims “mission a
Posted in: Today's ChiliChristmas shipping snafus, the black market of stolen credit card numbers, Snowden claims "mission accomplished," and more: it’s this week’s Tech Reads.
The 2013 Mac Pro has a removable CPU, Other World Computing has discovered in a teardown. By “removable”, we mean the CPU can be pulled out of its socket by … Continue reading
Look, up in the Sky!
Posted in: Today's ChiliThank you to Sprint for sponsoring this article. Get inspired by innovation and see what’s next at Sprint.com/faster.
Sprint Faster is a great site to visit if you’re looking for the latest on new and upcoming technological breakthroughs, featuring stories from leading tech experts on the shape of things to come.
While flying drones are often associated with military missions or espionage, the ability to send small payloads through the air under remote control opens up possibilities for all kinds of other interesting applications. In fact, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) could change everything from the way we provide emergency services in disasters to how your pizza is delivered. Here are just a few technologies in the works that could send tiny aircraft into our skies in the not-too-distant future.
Perhaps the most well publicized recent story about flying drones is that of Amazon’s Prime Air service. This outlandish sounding package delivery service would use flying drones to deliver small packages at ranges up to 10 miles from Amazon’s warehouses. The drones would autonomously navigate to their destination using GPS coordinates, and could deliver payloads up to five pounds, which Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos says would cover 86% of the individual items they sell. Such a service could substantially reduce delivery and fuel costs, since the flying drones operate on electricity, and fewer drivers would be required for delivery.
In addition, the service could enable deliveries in as little as 30 minutes to homes within range of Amazon’s widespread shipping facilities. There are certainly questions about the viability of such a service, ranging from theft to air and consumer safety, but it sure seems like a cool idea. And Amazon is one of the few companies with the resources and logistical expertise to pull something like this off.
While remote-controlled drones are frequently used in search and rescue missions, they generally are used to assess conditions and safety or to look for survivors. But there’s at least one project in which the drones could more directly save lives. In development by Iran’s RTS Lab, the Pars Aerial Rescue Robot could be used not only to relay visual and heat signature feedback to rescue personnel, it could actually carry and drop rescue supplies.
The most compelling example of this so far is the ability to do marine search and rescue operations, flying over victims in the water and dropping life preservers to them. Multiple rechargeable drones would be stored aboard rescue ships to help search much larger areas of open water than possible with a single helicopter, and deliver supplies to multiple victims in the water.
Another unexpected use of UAVs is in the field of archeology. Inexpensive flying drones have been used to survey large archaeological dig sites and generate topographic maps in a fraction of the time required for traditional surveys. Even more importantly, the drones can be used as to monitor and protect historically significant sites from damage or destruction. In Peru, archaeologists have used drones to map numerous sites, though they have struggled with the nation’s higher altitudes, and are currently experimenting with blimp-based drones instead of quadcopters.
These are just a few of the more unconventional uses for UAV technology. In addition to the examples here, flying drones are regularly being used to help shoot movies and TV shows, to detect and monitor forest fires, and to even help locate deposits of minerals for use in the production of fuel. They’re also being used for less serious uses, like delivering sushi and burritos.
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Thank you to Sprint Faster and Technorati Media for being sponsors of this article. All opinions expressed here are my own.
Okay, history buffs. We’ve got a challenge for you: Learn as much as you possibly can from the 700 odd maps just uploaded to the University of Richmond’s Digital Scholarship Lab. Your brain will thank you later.
We’ve seen our share of gingerbread TARDIS, but this one takes the cake, er, gingerbread – because it is decked out in holiday decorations. It has Christmas lights, a wreath and snow all over.
Redditor Fortunekitty really went the extra mile (or is it years – or light years when you are talking about a time machine that can travel through space?) with this gingerbread TARDIS.
Say, when a TARDIS gingerbread house goes stale, can it just go back in time and be fresh again? For that matter, can it even become stale? Does it get all timey wimey? These are questions for a mind much sharper than my own. All I know is that this TARDIS is just waiting to be devoured.
[via Neatorama]
In an age where the Web and all its "Cyber Space" matters more than ever, it is interesting to think and understand why is it so important to be safe when browsing, this is, the importance of Cyber Security. Reasons for this go from the economical to the conjunctures of our world, and have multiple origins behind it. Let’s have a look at them.
Wireless speakers are nothing new these days, and when it comes to choosing a particular model for your home, it can be quite a challenge considering the number of models that are out there in the market. Well, here we are with the $399.95 Verbal Music Request Speaker that might just make you look at it in a different way. As its name suggests, this is a wireless speaker which will be able to find and play music that you verbally request – regardless of where you are at that point in time.
Just how is it possible? Well, it will rely on a free Apple or Android app, where an award-winning voice recognition software will come into action, letting you hunt down songs that you want to hear simply by speaking into the smartphone. The app will then go through your list on the smartphone, music library on a computer, or Internet radio stations and organizes results by artist, album, or song so that it is a snap to navigate to the desired track. Once done, just touch the smartphone screen and it will automatically stream the song to the speaker. The speaker itself sports a single subwoofer, a pair of woofers, two tweeters, and five class-D amps for tubthumpin’ audio.
[ Verbal Music Request Speaker – speak and make it so! copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]
You know how when a guy courts a girl, sometimes the right move is a grand gesture? A bouquet of flowers to say you’re sorry. A surprise weekend getaway to mark an anniversary. How about a giant Transformers replica to pop the question?
Take some notes guys. This is the best way ever to propose to your girlfriend and potential wife. If this technique does not win her over, then she is a cold cold witch and you are probably better off without her. Luckily for Robert Fink, a 3D artist, it all went off without a hitch.
With some help from his friends, Robert created a retro-style platformer called Knight Man for his girlfriend Angel White. You can watch as she plays through the whole game to the end. The end? Not really. That’s where the proposal is revealed and she has to choose either “Yes” or “No” to continue.
Of course, she picked “Yes”. How could she not? This video is sure to give you the feels. Robert should make custom games for guys with gamer girlfriends so that other guys can do this and be all awesome too.
[via Geekosystem]