AT&T opens latest Foundry facility in Atlanta, focusing on the connected car, home automation and emerging devices

AT&T opens latest Foundry facility in Atlanta, focusing on the connected car, home automation and emerging devices

If you haven’t been paying attention, here’s the skinny: US carriers are doing everything they can to expand their horizons, and in the case of Verizon and AT&T, this sense of urgency has led to the creation of numerous innovation labs. In a nutshell, these facilities serve as incubation centers for startups and well-positioned outfits alike that are looking to add cellular connectivity to whatever it is they’re hawking.

AT&T’s latest facility — its fourth in total — will open its doors later today, with the Atlanta-based Foundry focusing on innovation in the connected car and emerging devices sectors. Moreover, it’ll be used to further AT&T’s own U-verse and Digital Life platforms, though specifics of what exactly engineers will be toiling on remain under wraps. For an idea of what all goes down at places like this, have a look at a tour we took through one of Verizon’s Innovation Centers right here; we’re hoping to get a similar look at AT&T’s lairs when time allows.

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Source: AT&T

Notorious Cyberspy Caught By His Own Malware

The nation of Georgia discovered a botnet trying to steal sensitive government documents, and what did they do? They gave the cyber-spy a taste of his own medicine, infecting his computer with the very same software he was targeting governments with. His infected computer eventually captured a photo of the alleged cyberterrorist, as well as his IP address. Georgia’s Computer Emergency Response Team says the hacker is behind the “Georbot Botnet” which targeted major governments around the world, including Georgia, the US, and France. The botnet was pretty sophisticated, using 0-day vulnerabilities, embedding itself in links on major Georgian news sites, and turning on microphones and webcams to glean important government data from infected computers. According to CERT, they’ve hack is linked to “Russian Security,” but all we know about him is the photo they gave us.

If you’re interested, read the entire report from CERT here.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Google disputes claims of Android botnet , German Police monitor Gmail, Skype, and Facebook via snooping malware,

Sprint LTE spreads its wings to four more areas by Labor Day

Sprint LTE spreads its wings to four more cities by Labor Day

Sprint may have played slightly fast and loose with its definition of a 15-city LTE launch this month — some of those areas were mighty close to each other — but it’s taking that expansion a little further down the road with its next stage. Hand-in-hand with its second quarter results, the pin-drop network has outlined plans to revisit its 4G hometown in Baltimore as well Gainesville in Georgia, the Junction City-Manhattan area in Kansas and the Denison-Sherman region in Texas, giving them all LTE by Labor Day. The expansion will certainly please Georgian Galaxy S III owners; unfortunately, it still leaves many major cities fending with EV-DO 3G until later in the year, if not 2013. Maybe Sprint’s Hitchcock-inspired nightmares are to blame.

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Sprint LTE spreads its wings to four more areas by Labor Day originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Jul 2012 13:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Georgia Tech scientists developing biology-inspired system to give robot eyes more human-like motion

Georgia Tech scientists develop biologyinspired system to give robot eyes more humanlike motion

Having difficulty getting your robot parts to work as planned? Turn to nature — or better yet, look inside yourself. After all, where better to find inspiration than the humans that the machines will one day enslave, right? Researchers at Georgia Tech have been working to develop a system to control cameras in robots that utilizes similar functionality as human muscle. Says Ph.D. candidate Joshua Schultz,

The actuators developed in our lab embody many properties in common with biological muscle, especially a cellular structure. Essentially, in the human eye muscles are controlled by neural impulses. Eventually, the actuators we are developing will be used to capture the kinematics and performance of the human eye.

The team recently showed off their work at the EEE International Conference on Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics in Rome. When fully developed, they anticipate that the piezoelectric system could be used for MRI-based surgery, rehabilitation and research of the human eye.

Georgia Tech scientists developing biology-inspired system to give robot eyes more human-like motion originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 07 Jul 2012 04:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Georgia Tech’s Shimi robot wants to rock with you all night, rock the night away

Georgia Tech's Shimi robot wants to rock with you all night, rock the night away

Shimi certainly has the makings of a viral video hit, but its creators at Georgia Tech want you to know that there’s more to the dancing robot than just a pretty face. The “interactive musical buddy,” designed by the school’s Center for Music Technology, is a one-foot-tall smartphone-enabled “docking station with a brain.” Shimi has a whole slew of functionality, using the phone’s face-detection to track listeners and better position its speakers. Users can also clap out a beat, which the ‘bot will use to pull a matching song from the phone’s playlist, playing the track and, naturally, dancing to the beat. Forthcoming functionality includes the ability for users to shake their heads or wave a hand to affect Shimi’s song choices. Google I/O attendees will get the opportunity for a closer look at Shimi this week in San Francisco. In the meantime, check out a couple of videos of the robot doing its thing after the break.

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Georgia Tech’s Shimi robot wants to rock with you all night, rock the night away originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jun 2012 09:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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