Photograph by Jason Grow/Wonderful Machine Timothy Gifford and Anjana Bhat Movia Robotics CEO and University of Connecticut Assistant Professor of Kinesiology, Movia Robotics and UCONN Hartford and Storrs, Connecticut Movia Robotics CEO Gifford, 48, and Bhat, 34, an assistant professor of kinesiology at the University of Connecticut, use robots to help autistic children develop social and physical skills.
Read More »Category Archives: Professional Development News
Feed SubscriptionDavid Ferrucci on Watson, the Jeopardy Supercomputer
IBM Yorktown Heights, New York | Photograph by Reed Young David Ferrucci Principal Investigator - Watson Project, IBM Yorktown Heights, New York The principal investigator for IBM's DeepQA/Watson project, Ferrucci, 49, led the creation of the Jeopardy-playing robot, Watson.
Read More »Samsung’s Anti-iPad 2 Policy: Clone the Heck Out of It
In what may be a perfect "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em" maneuver, Samsung has just revealed its answer to the iPad 2--a new set of Galaxy Tab tablets. In terms of specs, they're pretty much clones of Apple's offering.
Read More »How Resource-Strained Cities Can Save Water
Los Angeles, Houston, and Phoenix are three of the biggest cities in the U.S, and also the most water-constrained.
Read More »Captured Carbon Can Be Safely Stored Underground: Study
Carbon capture and storage (CCS), a technique that captures carbon emissions from industrial and coal-fired plants and buries them underground, is understandably controversial.
Read More »Blockbuster’s Largest Shareholder Calls Blockbuster Worst Investment Ever Made
Finally! Admission of wrongdoing! After years as Blockbuster's largest shareholder, Carl Icahn, who at one point amassed some 17 million shares of the now-bankrupt company, has called Blockbuster "the worst investment I ever made." In a candid piece written for the Harvard Business Review, Icahn opens up about the rental giant's struggles and failures in an ever-changing industry. "[Blockbuster] failed because of too much debt and changes in the industry.
Read More »Facebook Booting "20,000" Underage Users Per Day: Reaction to Growing Privacy Concerns?
According to a study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, nearly half of all 12-year-olds in the U.S. are using social network sites, despite not meeting the minimum age requirements for sites like Facebook
Read More »Wave-and-Pay NFC Credit Cards Are Definitely In-Bound
A number of moves by different companies and organizations around the world seem to be confirming a long - held rumor is true: Wireless credit card payments using NFC (Near Field wireless Communications) are coming. And (although we ourselves have wavered a bit ) they're coming soon. Verifone We knew Verifone , one of the biggest players in the handheld credit card processing unit market, was going to be adding NFC to all its new handsets, but the company has just set out exactly how and why it's making this move.
Read More »This Lens Takes Pictures From Nine Angles at Once to Make a 3-D Image
Fingernail-sized, gemstone-shaped, it's the first device of its kind.
Read More »A Look at the James Beard Noms
In my previous life as fashion editor I covered the Oscars for many years. And now that the finalists for the James Beard Foundation Awards have just been announced, I can totally see how the JBAs are like the Oscars for the food world, complete with just as much campaigning, intrigue and breathless live blogging as Hollywood's biggest night.
Read More »IPOs Aren’t the Only Way to Access Capital
Today I participated in a conference held at the Treasury Department on access to capital. The session, which was convened by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, and Karen Mills, head of the Small Business Administration, explored what the government can do to make it easier for entrepreneurs to access growth capital. I participated on a panel that explored the environment for initial public offerings or IPOs
Read More »SXSW 2011 Highlight Reel: Designing Careers That Don’t Yet Exist
[Moderated by Anya Kamenetz;
Read More »Post-Japan, Is a New Type of Nuclear Reactor in the Future?
As the ongoing nuclear saga in Japan plays out, a spotlight is being thrown on the reactor technology at the heart of it.
Read More »How Netflix Is Pushing the Envelope With Fincher-Spacey Project, "House of Cards"
CEO Reed Hastings told investors he wasn't interested in "creative risks." But his company is betting a rumored $100 million for 26 episodes of a series no one has seen--based largely on "intuition" and the reputations of David Fincher and Kevin Spacey. On a Jan. 26 earnings call, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings told investors he was not interested in taking creative risks.
Read More »How to Shrink the College Minority Gap
Two Stanford researchers have tested a confidence-boosting technique that dramatically increases the performance of minorities in college. Two Stanford researchers have found a free, universally accessible method of shrinking the college minority grade gap
Read More »