An innovative and effective concussion detection & reporting wearable technology available for youth in sports today!
Source: Future Ideas and Technology
Your hub for Blerd news, mobilized by AT&T.
An innovative and effective concussion detection & reporting wearable technology available for youth in sports today!
Source: Future Ideas and Technology
The Internet is a great place to give people a place to be heard. Through all the noise, there are good voices out there shedding light on topics important to Black people and people of color. Here are six amazing podcasts that can entertain your ears and enlighten your mind:
https://soundcloud.com/geedee215/29-ben-carson-at-the-barbershop
Name: PostBourgie
Number of episodes: 12 episodes on SoundCloud
Why you should listen: This is a podcast that features Black journalists and bloggers giving the Black perspective on news and political figures. The show is hosted by Gene Demby of NPR’s Code Switch blog. This podcast is great for fans of The Daily Show and The Nightly Show looking for a Black voice in the news.
Nomad’s Pod
Price: $59.99
This portable battery pack will extend the life of your Apple Watch. Even though the Apple Watch can be functional up to 18 hours, if you talk on the phone for up to three hours, the watch dies. Nomad will start shipping June 15. The Nomad’s Pod can also charge other USB-powered devices and the all-new MacBook model. This is one of the good accessories out there.
Price: $249.99
The Reserve Strap will boost the watch’s standard battery life. This is a very useful accessory, but there is very little information to go on. There is no real release date, however, you can preorder the product.
Field Ready combines 3-D printing with low-tech innovation such as “hyper-local” manufacturing to increase the independence of aid workers and those affected by disasters. And we tested out our approach in Haiti at the end of last year.
Source: Singularity Hub
Many people know there are robotic dogs and T.rexes on the toy shelves right now. However, more bionic animals, used for various activities, have been developed globally. Here are six different types of robots being made in labs that are currently being used:
Harvard researchers have designed a paper snake robot that runs on nothing but air. Their flexible bodies allow them to move into areas hard robots can’t. According to the research team led by George Whitesides, the “soft” robots are also able to lift 100 times their weight. They are pretty much a real life Baymax from Big Hero 6.
Insects, Grasshoppers, Butterflies
There are a variety of insect-based robots. In 2012, insect robots were introduced at a TED Talks conference. These tiny robots could swarm, maneuver like flies and even play music.
There is a grasshopper robot that was developed at the University of Bath in the United Kingdom that can leap and walk on all terrains. The robot was developed by Rhodri Armour, a graduate student at the university.
The robotic butterflies were developed by researchers at Johns Hopkins University. Their goal is to learn more about the behavioral patterns of butterflies.
AeroMobil CEO at South By Southwest says the company’s flying car will be ready for consumers by 2017.
Source: ABC NEWS 24
Depending on what kind of social circle you have immersed yourself into in the Twitterverse, your timeline may have been excitedly squealing about Twitter’s new “Retweet with Comment” feature or angrily smashing their keyboards to push out expletive-filled tweets cursing the new feature’s existence.
It’s one of the moments that truly underlines the great Twitter divide that tends to exist between the social media platforms original, classic users and the newer users who are turning to Twitter as a blogging platform.
The new addition at the center of the digital discourse is the “Retweet with Comment” feature that the tech giant has been testing since last summer.
The feature allows users to add a comment within a retweet to make adding commentary to tweets easier and more convenient.
The feature is being rolled out on the site’s iPhone app, but the site promises that the feature will be coming to its Android app in the future.
From a general view, it’s a new feature that adds a lot more flexibility for users and caters to the desire to make ongoing dialogue easier to follow.
Previously, if users wanted to comment on a retweet they would have to make due with whatever space was left in the already short 140-character limit.
This often resulted in users shortening the original tweet, which could sometimes alter the context of the message. In other instances, users would have to significantly shorten their own comments or use other third-party apps to find their way around the character limit.
This new feature gives users their own additional 140 characters to use to comment on whatever interesting tweets they decide to share on their timeline.
Seems like there is very little not to like about the new feature if you are a part of a growing community of bloggers who use Twitter as a space for dialogue and general dissemination of news.
This is a population that is relatively new to the Twitterverse.
Long before the arrival of a wave of users driving extensive dialogue on the site, however, the brevity of 140 characters was an essential part of the platform’s appeal.
It was a restriction that presented a challenge for those who originally ushered Twitter into social media spotlight — the virtual comedians.
It’s a culture that’s hard to explain but easy to witness if you find yourself in certain digital subcultures like that of Black Twitter.
The brevity of the messages when commenting on retweets laid the foundation for certain emojis to be granted new meanings, shortened phrases and hashtags to hold greater context and essentially helped formulate secondary digital languages within certain subgroups on Twitter.
While commenting within the same retweet was often messy, difficult for some to follow and lacked any real sense of organization, it was also a cherished part of the Twitter experience.
For that reason, some users aren’t taking too kindly to the new feature that seems to have a Facebook-ish design behind it.
When the official Twitter page sent out a tweet to demonstrate the new feature, these users were quick to urge the social media giant to take another stab at the new addition.
“Revamped? It’s garbage,” one user replied to the tweet.
Another user wrote, “Change it … it looks atrocious.”
“I HATE IT,” another added.
Others voiced their frustrations that they would now have to seek a different Twitter app to use while the official Twitter app would now be boasting the new “Retweet with Comment” feature.
Others, of course, were excited about the feature’s arrival.
A series of thumbs-up emojis flooded Twitter’s replies along with tweets like “finally!” and “THANK YOU.”
Others didn’t seem too interested in the feature and instead suggested Twitter should have been working on a way to allow users to save .gifs from tweets or be alerted of people taking screenshots of their tweets.
It’s also important to note that it is not possible to embed the full retweet with comment to other platforms and websites.
For now, Twitter users remain extremely divided on the new feature’s arrival, but there is also a simple solution for the users who aren’t happy about the feature’s appearance or how it may impact the platform’s previous strictly enforced culture of brevity.
Don’t use the new feature.
Sony’s latest Bravia set is 1/5th of an inch thick
Source: USA Today
After celebrating four years of Chromebook success and experiencing the rising popularity of Chromecast, Google has unveiled another device that could add to its Chrome-centric tech takeover.
Google recently announced the release of the Asus Chromebit, a device that adds a new level to portability when it comes to computers.
The small, sleek dongle has the ability to turn nearly any TV screen into a fully-functioning computer, and it will cost consumers less than $100.
This differs from Google’s Chromecast, which is anchored in useful apps as opposed to providing full browser-based computer capabilities.
To be clear, the Chromebit is many things — convenient, stylish, affordable and impressive overall — but it wouldn’t quite make the cut as being innovative.
Google is a tad bit late to the computer-in-my-pocket party after Intel announced its Intel Computer Stick back in January. Not to mention China-based companies have been pushing out Android HMDI dongle-computers for almost a year now.
The Intel and China-based versions of the devices boast Windows 8.1 operating systems and Rockchip RK3288 processors, respectively.
Google, after already utilizing the same Rockchip processors for its Chromebook, will continue to hold on to its Rockchip ties while adding a list of additional, impressive features.
“In addition to your Rockship RK3288 (with quad-core Mali 760 graphics) you get 2GB of RAM, 16GB of solid state storage, 2×2 dual-band 802.11ac WiFi, Bluetooth 4.0, and a single full-size USB 2.0 port on one end,” Gizmodo reports.
While Google may have lagged slightly behind its competitors when it comes to the new dongles, the tech giant dealt with its tardiness in its usual ways — be fashionably late.
Of all the dongle-computers being introduced to consumers, Chromebit is the most aesthetically pleasing.
It comes in three different colors and flaunts a sleek, functional design that even Intel missed the mark on.
The Chromebit boasts a swivel design that ensures users can plug the device into any HDMI socket without much fuss or stress.
It’s also priced much lower than its Intel rival, which touts a price tag of roughly $150.
The new device is slated to hit shelves this summer and is sure to be followed by a host of other tech giants tossing their own dongle-computers into the ring.
Perhaps this tech battle will heed more impressive competitors than the much-hyped and quickly dismissed battle of the smartwatches.
With the bionic butterflies, for the first time Festo combines the ultralight construction of artificial insects with collision-free flying behavior in a collective. For coordination purposes, the eMotionButterflies make use of a guidance and monitoring system, which could be used in the networked factory of the future.
Source: Festo Bionic