From flying warehouses to robot toilets – five technologies that could shape the future
Flying warehouses, robot receptionists, smart toilets… do such innovations sound like science fiction or part of a possible reality?
Flying warehouses, robot receptionists, smart toilets… do such innovations sound like science fiction or part of a possible reality?
To better understand how non-economic value creation works, we examined the global treasure-hunting game known as geocaching.
Known as malware, some perpetrators use it to infect apps and get inside your smartphone. Why do they do it? Money, mostly.
Much is heard nowadays about the “cultural appropriation” of styles and images, but Augmented Reality bypasses that kind of appropriation by making use of physical sites as part of a game.
If machine learning is a pack horse for information processing, a neural network is the carrot that draws the horse forward.
Fun fact: We are producing more data than ever before, with more than 2.5 quintillion bytes produced every day.
Musk’s new medical research company will explore how to physically interface computers and the human brain.
Devices are increasingly at risk from “side-channel” attacks, where an intruder can bypass traditional network entry points and use another way to compromise the device.
Can an algorithm explain itself?
You can find common themes and design goals that Nintendo has been refining for years and that still emerge in the Switch.