Senin, 09 Juni 2014

Turing Test Passed; New Car Can Lean Into Curves, Literally

 
 
Why Security and the Cloud Are a Perfect Match
Security protects your key devices from malware, viruses and other nasty threats. Cloud technology is a simple way to use sophisticated software without the day-to-day hassles of updates and maintenance. Independently, security and the cloud have lots of benefits, but they are better together.  
Learn More!

 
Benefits from the Consumerization of IT
What does consumerization really mean and why does it matter? Understand the basics to accurately identify the practical implications and benefits for your organization. 
Learn More!

  
From the almost-human department
schwit1 (797399) writes "Eugene Goostman, a computer program pretending to be a young Ukrainian boy, successfully duped enough humans to pass the iconic test. The Turing Test which requires that computers are indistinguishable from humans...
 
From the you-got-to-do-it,-why-can't-we department
mdsolar writes: 'Paul Krugman, who won a Nobel Prize for understanding world trade, has proposed carbon tariffs as a way to get China to cut greenhouse gas emissions. He wrote, "China is enormously dependent on access to advanced-country markets...
 
From the lean-into-it department
cartechboy (2660665) writes "You know how motorcycle riders lean into the corners, sometimes even touching their knee to the ground? Mercedes-Benz has developed new technology that replicates that sensation by leaning the car into bends. It's...
 
From the how-high's-the-water department
An anonymous reader writes "The foreign minister of the Marshall Islands says that, 'even the dead are affected' by climate change. From the article: 'Speaking at UN climate talks in Bonn, the Island's foreign minister said that high tides had...
 
From the red-buttons-are-scarier-than-blue-buttons department
An anonymous reader writes "Researchers from Columbia University's Network Security Lab discovered a flaw affecting millions of Smart TVs supporting the HbbTV standard. The flaw allows a radio-frequency attacker with a low budget to take control...
 
From the video-games-caused-the-holocaust department
An anonymous reader writes 'Earlier this month, at least three U.S. states reported that a hacker had broken into electronic road signs above major highways, with the hacker leaving messages for people to follow him on Twitter. The Multi-State...
 
From the time-after-time department
JonZittrain (628028) writes "I'm curious whether there are good prospects for 'time capsule encryption,' one of several ways of storing information that renders it inaccessible to anyone until certain conditions — such as the passage of time...
 
From the print-a-home-for-a-nice-martian department
An anonymous reader writes "MakerBot, in collaboration with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), is hosting a competition for the design of a future Mars base. The competition is open to any Thingiverse account holder regardless of...
 
From the last-chance department
An anonymous reader writes "Miami scientists are scrambling to rescue a crop of coral at the bottom of one of the world's busiest shipping channels that they say could hold clues about climate change. 'The coral, which may hold clues about how sea...
 
From the hurry-up-and-wait department
MarkWhittington (1084047) writes "It turns out that the recent FAA environmental impact statement that seemed to give a stamp of approval for the proposed SpaceX space port in south Texas is not the end of the regulatory process, but the end of...
 
From the protect-ya-neck department
msm1267 (2804139) writes "If enterprises are indeed moving services off premises and into the cloud, there are four letters those companies' IT organizations should be aware of: IPMI. Short for Intelligent Platform Management Interface, these tiny...
 
From the onward-and-upward department
An anonymous reader writes "Mesa 10.2 was introduced this week as the new shining example of what open source graphics (and open source projects in general) are capable of achieving. The latest release of this often underrepresented open source...
 
From the take-that-name-out-of-your-mouth department
An anonymous reader writes "The Mexican Institute of Industrial Property (IMPI) on Thursday announced it has absolved Apple of wrongdoing in a trademark lawsuit surrounding the iPhone's infringement of a local telecommunications company marketing...
 
From the beam-it-down department
An anonymous reader writes "NASA successfully beamed a high-definition video 260 miles from the International Space Station to Earth Thursday using a new laser communications instrument. Transmission of 'Hello, World!' as a video message was the...
 
From the old-school-sick department
Taco Cowboy (5327) writes "A few ancient ticks, some 15-million to 20-million old, trapped inside a piece of amber were bought by a researcher some 25 years ago, in Dominican Republic. Upon examination, he found ancient spirochetes bacterium, a...
 
 
 

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