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3,635 articles from Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories
- title
- Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories
- tags
- description
- Technology Review exists to promote the understanding of emerging technologies and their impact.
- last updated
- January 16, 2012 (22:07)
- homepage
- http://www.technologyreview.com
- feed url
- http://www.technologyreview.com/rss/rss.aspx
- date added
- November 26, 2007 (12:38)
- meta
- alexa, technorati, rojo
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FRIDAY 10. FEBRUARY, 2012
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All of CrowdFusion's 30+ employees work at home.
"If you're a good developer but you can't read and comment on a ticket, than we can't work with you," declares Brian Alvey, former co-founder of Weblogs, Inc. and the current head of
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Humbled by production challenges, the company plans to scale back production goals, it told investors Thursday.
In
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THURSDAY 9. FEBRUARY, 2012
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The area used to grow genetically modified crops keeps growing, fueled by rapid increases in developing nations.
Farmers around the world used 160 hectares to grow biotech crops in 2011--12 million more than in 2010--according to a
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A suite of new cameras offer image stabilization.
Our cameras demand increasingly little of us. Do photography students these days even learn about aperture and shutter speed? Increasingly, they will also be able to ignore admonitions to keep their cameras steady in order to avoid a blurry picture. Image stabilization joins a suite of new lenses and cameras announced this week, at both the high and low ends of the price scale.
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Apple may dole out a fortune to use the iPad name in China
Millions of Chinese people want Apple’s products. But one Chinese company wants something quite different from Apple: a billion dollars.
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The US financial markets have suffered over 18,000 extreme price changes caused by ultrafast trading, according to a new study of market data between 2006 and 2011
On 6 May 2010, shares on US financial markets suddenly dropped on average by around 10 per cent but in over 300 stocks by more than 60 per cent. Moments later the prices recovered.
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WEDNESDAY 8. FEBRUARY, 2012
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Last June, an 83-year-old woman received an unusual implant.
I’ll set aside, for the moment, the question of whether 3-D printing can revolutionize manufacturing--a topic that
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Computer scientists prove that networks of cells can compute as efficiently as networks of computers linked via the internet
Distributed computing is all the rage these days. The idea is to break down computational tasks into convenient chunks and distribute them across a network to a number of computers. The benefits are clear, such as easy, on-demand access to huge computing resources.
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TUESDAY 7. FEBRUARY, 2012
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Can Google save the world?
Among the headlines trumpeting Google’s new
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Computer scientists have discovered the four factors that make news stories popular on Twitter
Twitter has revolutionised the way millions of people receive news and the type of news they get. So it's no surprise that there is huge interest in predicting what kind of stories are likely to spread furthest and fastest.
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Strong enough to tow a car, Warrior is designed to be a jack-of-all-trades for military, police, and rescue services.
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MONDAY 6. FEBRUARY, 2012
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So much for "two-factor authentication."
Throwing another lock on seems like the most logical way to secure an apartment -- or a website. But a new attack called "Man in the Browser" allows attackers who have infected a computer with malicious software to get around the bank website security systems that demand, for example, a pin in addition to a password.
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The notion of intelligence makes no sense without a broader view of computation, argues one of the world's leading AI researchers
One of the buzzwords in artificial intelligence research these days is 'embodiment', the idea that intelligence requires a body.
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FRIDAY 3. FEBRUARY, 2012
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When it's the Boxx.
This isn’t your grandfather’s electric bike. (Assuming he had one?)
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An intelligent assistant would be the ideal way to deal with remote-control overload.
Rumor has it Apple is about to start making the world’s favorite gadget.
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THURSDAY 2. FEBRUARY, 2012
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Is this a bad sign for electric vehicles?
Electric vehicle enthusiasts (and critics) are keeping a close eye on sales of GM’s Volt this year to get a sense of whether electric vehicles will really finally catch on. GM has said that it hopes to sell 30,000 Volts in 2012, which would mean selling, on average 2,500 a month. It’s far short of that pace for January having sold just 603.
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But it's doing very, very well.
iRobot Corp., makers of the beloved Roomba (and a lot more),
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Just how ants create the highly efficient network of trails around their nests has never been fully understood. Now researchers think they've cracked it
Among the most impressive transportation networks on the planet are the complex trails that ants create around their nests. These networks arise through the ants' exploration of their environment and end up channelling the distribution of food for the colony and the daily movements hundreds of thousands of individuals.
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The world's largest social network is profitable but fears Google and Apple.
In an announcement Facebook hopes will be “liked” by many, the world’s largest social network filed to become a publicly listed company late Wednesday. Documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission provide investors and Facebook users the first public glimpse of the company’s financial state, technological challenges and ambitions.
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WEDNESDAY 1. FEBRUARY, 2012
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New England gets more website hits, but the Giants get more social buzz.
Social media analysis reveals that Giants fans show more online gusto than do their Patriots counterparts.
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It's not all that different from how it won consumers.
Back in 2010, an audience member at a conference put a question to Steve Wozniak: Could Apple ever become the dominant player in the enterprise, as opposed to the consumer, market? Woz had a
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Geophysicists want to use neutrinos to 'x-ray' the Earth, a technique that could reveal undiscovered oil fields. But how practical is such a scheme?
Neutrinos are peculiar particles. They have little mass, no charge and come in three flavours. These flavours are not fixed. The strange thing about neutrinos is that once created, they change from one flavour to another as they travel.
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A new Nook's on its way. Can it save books?
A Goliath has now become a David. Gigantism, it turns out, is relative.
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TUESDAY 31. JANUARY, 2012
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Kinect belongs to the world; the world belongs to Kinect.
The Daily’s Matt Hickey continues to mine what seems like a loose-lipped source at Microsoft, reporting that Kinect tech may be
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The pattern of calls and texts between humans reveals how women invest more heavily in their main relationship than men; and how this changes as they age
Various studies have shown that the frequency of contact between individuals is a reliable indicator of the emotional link between them. So it should come as no surprise that the data from mobile phone calls is a potential treasure trove of information about the social lives of humans.
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Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (16. 1, 22:07)

