Source: Rainbow PUSH Coalition by Carol H. Williams Advertising. “A new video to educate, engage, empower and connect African Americans and people of color to technology.”
Could This California Startup’s Gun Technology Make Police Officers More Accountable?
Source: Tylerpaper.com- “A Silicon Valley startup has developed technology to let dispatchers know when a police officer’s weapon has been fired.”
The Way This App Solves Math Problems Using Your Phone Camera Is Nothing Short of Amazing
Tired of looking to your calculator to help solve simple linear equations and other math problems? There’s an app for that: PhotoMath.
Source: Huffington Post
After Seeing This Truly Innovative Umbrella You Will Be Fascinated At What Else The Future Holds
Source: Huffington Post – “The creators of a new Kickstarter campaign claim to have developed an umbrella that pushes air against the rain to protect its owner from getting wet, and they’ve blown way past their $10,000 funding goal. They call it the Air umbrella.” See it from all angles here.
You Won’t Believe What This Robot Uses to Stop the Spread of Infectious Diseases Including Ebola
Source: CNN, Paul Vercammen
Could this robot be a new tool in the fight against Ebola?
7 Reasons Why the New Tesla Model D Is a Flipping Big Deal
Source: Business Insider – Elon Musk has unveiled the newest Tesla, and there are a ton of new, futuristic features.
This Hoverbike is Designed to Do What a Helicopter Does, But Only Better
Source: Future Ideas & Technology
Support the project at kickstarter.com
Black Speculative Tech – Uses of Technology in Black Science Fiction, Part 2
While history books would have us believe that scientific and technological advancement suddenly sprang forth during the Age of Enlightenment in late-17th century Western Europe, a deeper dig into the matter reveals that the institution of African enslavement has an inextricable connection to the development of the Western scientific establishment. Scientific experimentation and studies on enslaved Black bodies became the justification for continued enslavement. In her book Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present, Harriet A. Washington provides a history of medical experimentation on African-Americans, presenting the first full account of the gross mistreatment of Black people as forced subjects of experimentation.
Because of institutional racism and our positions as mere subjects of science, Black people have typically been excluded from the mainstream scientific establishment as actors, practitioners, researchers and policymakers. Black scientific and technological innovation and achievement have gone virtually unrecognized, save for the handful of Black scientists and engineers who get their acknowledgments during Black History Month. Contrary to perceptions of Blackness as divorced from tech and science, we have a long and well-documented history, present and anticipated future of technological development behind and ahead of us. In this series, we continue to explore the expansive realm of Black speculative technologies in music, art and literature.
Could Apple iPhone 6 Plus be The Perfect On-The-Go Gaming Device?
Source: Techcrunch
Watch as the Innovator Who Transformed the Music Industry Speaks On What It Is Like to Be a Black Inventor
Source: pianonator – Dr. James E. West, formerly of Bell Laboratories, now research professor at Johns Hopkins University, interviewed on June 10, 2009, for the occasion of the Juneteenth celebration by the Student Technology Services, celebrating contributions to science and technology by African-American innovators. West, together with Gerhard Sesslar, invented the Electret Microphone, which is used in roughly 95 percent of microphone applications today.