Similar Articles |
|
National Defense August 2010 Grace V. Jean |
Look Ma, No Glasses: Moving to 3-D Television and Beyond In the future, military robot operators may search for roadside bombs in 3-D. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2005 Alan Sullivan |
3-Deep New displays render images you can almost reach out and touch. A few small companies are just now emerging to try to carve out a piece of a market for volumetric displays that could be worth $1 billion by 2006. |
Knowledge@Wharton |
The New Age of Service Robots: From Fighting Fires to Serving Beer R2-D2 and Rosie the robot maid may be coming soon to a home, or nursing home, near you. Thanks to advances in computing and navigation technology, robots -- including sophisticated robot toys and appliances -- are now being developed to serve people directly. |
Fast Company Mark Sullivan |
Report: Samsung To Ramp Up Manufacturing Of Flexible iPhone Displays Samsung's display business is planning to spend $7.47 billion to expand its capacity to manufacture flexible OLED displays for future mobile devices, including iPhones. |
Salon.com February 25, 2002 John Glassie |
Flesh, robots and God Are they becoming us or are we becoming them? One of the world's leading roboticists discusses the machines in our future -- their ability to think, feel, reproduce and achieve personhood... |
The Motley Fool September 9, 2011 Alex Planes |
Take My 3-D, Please Ignoring consumer sentiment, some electronics manufacturers are determined to have you watching the future through special glasses. |
PC Magazine January 1, 2008 |
The Next 25 Years in Tech We've enlisted industry leaders as well as our own analysts and editors to share their fascinating visions of tomorrow's computing technology. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2010 Mark Harris |
3-D Without Four Eyes Nintendo and Toshiba will bring glasses-free 3-D to portable devices |
BusinessWeek May 10, 2004 Otis Por |
Just Two Words: Plastic Chips They can endow just about anything with computer smarts -- and they'll be cheap |
Wired January 2006 Robert Capps |
The 50 Best Robots Ever They're exploring the deep sea and distant planets. They're saving lives in the operating room and on the battlefield. They're transforming factory floors and filmmaking. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2010 Erico Guizzo |
Hiroshi Ishiguro: The Man Who Made a Copy of Himself A Japanese roboticist is building androids to understand humans -- starting with himself |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2004 |
Display technology leaps to the next generation Liquid-crystal displays still dominate military and aerospace applications, but new technologies are set to introduce flexible, conformal displays that could be part of clothing or rolled up like a scroll. |
Popular Mechanics February 2010 Erik Sofge |
The Uncertain Future For Social Robots Humans have feared a robotic uprising since the machines first appeared in science fiction. Today, experts caution against a more insidious threat: We might like living with them too much. |
The Motley Fool December 8, 2009 Anders Bylund |
A Kodak Moment for OLED Displays The final chapter of Kodak's OLED history has been written. The company is selling its OLED technologies to Korean technology giant LG Group. |
BusinessWeek July 19, 2004 |
Ready To Buy A Home Robot? For a glimpse into the future, BusinessWeek checked out some of the most intriguing robotic developments -- things your digital home could grow to love. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2011 Lora G. Weiss |
Autonomous Robots in the Fog of War Networks of autonomous robots will someday transform warfare, but significant hurdles remain. |
CIO January 1, 2003 Mindy Blodgett |
Thin Is In Displays for computers and handheld devices keep getting lighter and thinner, and now two new technologies -- OLEDs and E Ink -- promise to take this trend to the next level in 2003. |
PC World December 2004 Harry McCracken |
What Happened to the Next Big Things? We have seen the future...but imperfectly. An update on yesterday's future tech. |
Fast Company April 1, 2011 Rachel Z. Arndt |
Fast Talk: Cynthia Breazeal on Teaching Robots The director of MIT's Personal Robots Group uses crowdsourced data to teach robots about human behavior. |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2002 Jill Jusko |
The Robot Evolution MIT's Rodney A. Brooks is among researchers leading the charge to develop a smarter and more useful artificial creature. |
Wired July 2004 Robert Capps |
The Humanoid Race Machines are getting more and more like the rest of us. A piece-by-piece guide to the globe's most advanced bots. |
PC World April 2005 Melissa J. Perenson |
OLED: New Star of the Small Screen A raft of sharp, bright, and power-thrifty displays for new small devices arrive. |
Wired June 2003 Luc Steels |
Roam Free: How Space Perception Seperates Man From Machine Combining sensory perception and spatial reasoning remains elusive, which explains why robots lack a true sense of space. |
IndustryWeek July 1, 2005 John Teresko |
New Roles For Robots Once viewed largely as a way to save on labor costs, robots today have taken on more significant roles in manufacturing. They're part of global competitiveness plans and are seeing, moving and servicing better than ever. |
PC World March 2001 Yardena Arar |
Big and Flat: LCD Monitor Prices Thin Out Prices for big LCDs and bigger plasma displays are falling. Could one of these screens be on your desktop (or wall) soon? |
National Defense May 2008 Stew Magnuson |
Navy to Field a Family of Next-Generation Bomb Disposal Robots The Navy will field a family of bomb disposal robots to replace the ad hoc commercial systems being used in Iraq and Afghanistan today. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2013 Tekla S. Perry |
OLED TV Arrives For the past decade, two television display technologies -- liquid crystal and plasma -- have fought for supremacy, and although the LCD won the battle, it is about to lose the war. A third contender's is the organic light-emitting diode, or OLED. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2011 Erico Guizzo |
Robots With Their Heads in the Clouds A Google researcher argues that cloud computing could make robots smaller, cheaper, and smarter |
PC Magazine July 1, 2003 |
Future Tech: 20 Hot Technologies to Watch 20 of the most promising technologies of tomorrow. And since we're all gadget freaks, we couldn't help but show you some of the prototype products we found along the way. |
PC Magazine November 7, 2008 |
Emerging Trends of the Display LED backlighting for flat-panel displays has taken longer than expected to develop, but it should prove to be a boon to the life-expectancy of flat-panels. |
Wired November 27, 2007 Gregory Mone |
Getting a Grip: Building the Ultimate Robotic Hand To do real work in our offices and homes, to fetch our staplers or clean up our rooms, robots are going to have to master their hands. |
BusinessWeek September 10, 2009 Pete Engardio |
Losing Out on Flexible Displays Some high-tech industries based on taxpayer-funded research are gone even before U.S. companies put up their first plants. |
Popular Mechanics May 20, 2008 Erik Sofge |
The Problem With Asimo: Tabloid Humanoid Is Holding Back Bots Forget what Honda's 4-ft. 3-in.-tall humanoid robot Asimo can and cannot do: When will this robot get a job? |
The Motley Fool October 7, 2010 Travis Hoium |
Should Cree Be Worried About OLEDs? OLEDs pose the biggest threat to the surge in LED usage. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2010 Erico Guizzo |
When My Avatar Went to Work A robot surrogate or telepresence robot took my place at the office. Here's why one may take yours, too |
IEEE Spectrum October 2012 Guizzo & Ackerman |
How Rethink Robotics Built Its New Baxter Robot Worker Rodney Brooks's new start-up wants to spark a factory revolution with a low-cost, user-friendly robot |
PC World October 2, 2006 Eric Butterfield |
The Future of Robots Tomorrow's domestic help at your service. |
Fast Company April 2006 |
Oy, Robot! Are we doomed to some post-apocalyptic nightmare in which robots rule the planet? Roboticists Henrik Hautop Lund and Rodney Brooks square off. |
Technology Research News February 23, 2005 Kimberly Patch |
Humanoid robots walk naturally There's a reason most movie robots have wheels in place of legs or are powered by an embedded human. Making machines walk on two legs is exceedingly difficult. |
PC World July 22, 2002 Sean Captain |
Future Gear: Spielberg's Computer Many technologies from the movie Minority Report are tantalizingly close to becoming real. They just need more attention from developers. |
Technology Research News December 31, 2003 Smalley & Patch |
Bots, humans play together Researchers from Carnegie Mellon University are betting that putting humans and robots on the same soccer team will encourage the kind of cooperation that leads to understanding. |
PC Magazine May 20, 2009 Lance Ulanoff |
The Future of Robots: Prepare to Be Underwhelmed Still waiting for that ultimate robot companion? Don't hold your breath. |
PC World October 2, 2006 Christopher Null |
The Future of Your PC With breakthroughs such as faster multicore processors on the way, raw PC muscle is about to return with a vengeance. And it will come in more shapes and sizes than ever. |
PC World May 23, 2002 Martyn Williams |
Robots Strut and Sell at Japanese Show A growing population of mechanical attendees rolls into the second Robodex exhibition... |
IndustryWeek September 1, 2002 John Teresko |
Robots Revolution The arrival of robots at General Motors Corp. in 1961 brought the promise of flexible automation. Today's advances in research offer robots the chance to reach their full industrial potential. |
National Defense June 2005 Robert H. Williams |
Military Seeks Flexible, Thin Computer Screens The Army Research Laboratory has partnered with another researcher in a $44 million deal to develop computer displays that can be incorporated as part of a soldier's uniform. |
PC Magazine May 4, 2004 Alfred Poor |
What's New With Displays Our guide explains state-of-the-art display technology and looks ahead. |
PC Magazine February 2, 2005 Natalie Goel |
Robots in Motion Bust out your robot dance move now, because it may become obsolete. |
National Defense September 2012 Eric Beidel |
Tiny Musician Robots Could Benefit Soldiers University of Pennsylvania researchers have been attracting attention for their work with nano-quadrotor robots. |
Metropolis April 2007 Bruce Sterling |
Chips with Everything In 2007 the computer gave up taking over the world. Instead the world took over the computer. |