Archive for the ‘internet’ category: Page 251
Apr 2, 2018
This weird-looking plane isn’t a joke
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: humor, internet
Technically Incorrect offers a slightly twisted take on the tech that’s taken over our lives.
With so much fake news slithering around the web all year, is it still possible to enjoy April Fools’ Day?
Apr 1, 2018
One of Estonia’s first “e-residents” explains what it means to have digital citizenship
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: economics, internet
Three years in, what I find most incredible about e-Residency is that it actually works.
Estonia’s quest to become a “digital nation”
To better understand how e-Residency came about, let’s go back almost 30 years, to 1991. Estonia had just won independence from the Soviet Union and was in the early stages of building a market-oriented economy from scratch. At the time, leaders were quick to identify the potential of the internet and open source collaboration tools (interestingly this was less out of principle, and more for the simple reason that they had no money to pay for Microsoft Office). They decided to become the world’s premier “digital nation.” A favorite quote I’ve heard in Estonia: “What do you think of when you hear the word Slovenia? Nothing. Precisely! We don’t want to be Slovenia.”
Mar 29, 2018
FCC approves SpaceX plan for 4,425-satellite broadband network
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: Elon Musk, internet, satellites
SpaceX has a green light from the FCC to launch a network of thousands of satellites blanketing the globe with broadband. And you won’t have too long to wait — on a cosmic scale, anyway. Part of the agreement is that SpaceX launch half of its proposed 4,425 satellites within six years.
The approval of SpaceX’s application was not seriously in doubt after last month’s memo from FCC Chairman Ajit Pai, who was excited at the prospect of the first U.S.-based company being authorized to launch a constellation like this.
“I have asked my colleagues to join me in supporting this application and moving to unleash the power of satellite constellations to provide high-speed Internet to rural Americans,” he wrote at the time. He really is pushing that “digital divide” thing. Not that Elon Musk disagrees:
Continue reading “FCC approves SpaceX plan for 4,425-satellite broadband network” »
Mar 25, 2018
An Investor’s Primer: 5G, the Internet of Things, and Augmented/Virtual Reality
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: internet, virtual reality
Mar 23, 2018
The price of the internet is the space race nobody knows about
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: internet
Spectrum warehousing lets corporations control the price of the internet in the developing world.
Mar 22, 2018
Lana Awad is engineering the neuro-tech that will transform humanity
Posted by Carse Peel in categories: biotech/medical, business, Elon Musk, engineering, internet, military, neuroscience
Perfect vision is great. But like any advantage it comes with limitations. Those with ease don’t develop the same unique senses and strengths as someone who must overcome obstacles, people like Lana Awad, a neurotech engineer at CTRL-labs in New York, who diagnosed her own degenerative eye disease with a high school science textbook as a teen in Syria and went on to teach at Harvard University.
Though they see themselves as clear leaders, visionaries with all the obvious advantages—like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg, for example—can be blind in their way, lacking the context needed to guide if they don’t recognize their counterintuitive limitations. This is problematic for humanity because we’re all relying on them to create the tools that increasingly rule every aspect of our lives. The internet is just the start.
Tools that will meld mind and machine are already a reality. Neurotech is a huge business with applications being developed for gaming, the military, medicine, social media, and much more to come. Neurotech Report projected in 2016 that the $7.6 billion market could reach $12 billion by 2020. Wired magazine called 2017, “a coming-out year for the brain machine interface (BMI).”
Continue reading “Lana Awad is engineering the neuro-tech that will transform humanity” »
Mar 22, 2018
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey says Bitcoin will be world’s ‘single currency’
Posted by Carse Peel in categories: bitcoin, internet, mobile phones
Speaking at London’s British Library, Dorsey said; ‘The world ultimately will have a single currency, the internet will have a single currency.
‘And I believe that it will be bBtcoin’, he said.
Continue reading “Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey says Bitcoin will be world’s ‘single currency’” »
Mar 17, 2018
Stephen Hawking Lived Beyond His Body
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: computing, internet, sustainability
For all of us, the act of being and thinking requires a network of complex support. The late physicist’s disability made it visible.
Midnight. As I was browsing the internet, I saw, like shooting stars, emails suddenly appear and disappear from the right-hand corner of my computer screen. The first from CNN announcing the death of Stephen Hawking, the second from an editor at The Atlantic asking me to write about him.
I had written about the man for 10 years—as a biographer of some sort, or an anthropologist of science to be more precise, studying the traces of Hawking’s presence. But now I felt a powerless inertia, unable to write anything. I didn’t think I would be affected by his death, but it touched me deeply. I was overwhelmed by the numerous articles that started to appear all over the world doing precisely what I had studied for so long and so carefully: recycling over and over again the same stories about him. Born 300 years after the death of Galileo Galilei, holder of Cambridge’s Lucasian Chair of Mathematics (once held by Isaac Newton), and now … died on the same day Albert Einstein was born. The life paths of history’s most iconic scientists intersected in weird ways. The puzzle seemed complete: Hawking had fully entered the pantheon of the great.
Mar 16, 2018
Pentagon Wants Silicon Valley’s Help on A.I.
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: government, internet, military, robotics/AI
On Thursday, Robert O. Work, a former deputy secretary of defense, will announce that he is teaming up with the Center for a New American Security, an influential Washington think tank that specializes in national security, to create a task force of former government officials, academics and representatives from private industry. Their goal is to explore how the federal government should embrace A.I. technology and work better with big tech companies and other organizations.
Older tech companies have long had ties with military and intelligence. But employees at internet outfits like Google are wary of too much cooperation.