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Bio hacking 

Control a living insect from your smartphone!

8bitfuture:

James Webb Telescope Model at South by Southwest
As big as a tennis court and as tall as a four-story building, a full-scale model of the James Webb Space Telescope model was on display from March 8-10 at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin, Texas. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is the successor to Hubble and the largest space telescope to ever be built.

8bitfuture:

James Webb Telescope Model at South by Southwest

As big as a tennis court and as tall as a four-story building, a full-scale model of the James Webb Space Telescope model was on display from March 8-10 at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin, Texas. 

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is the successor to Hubble and the largest space telescope to ever be built.

Mar 8

Clothing With Touchscreen Capabilities 

who-is-in-japan:

This creepy projection lady works for the cell phone company in japan to bring in customers

yberpunk

Bionic Man : REX

cnet:

Luminae glass keyboard: From vaporware to reality
CES-goers run their fingers over the sleek glass curves and ogle the ever-changing color glow options of the Luminae keyboard.
Check it out

cnet:

Luminae glass keyboard: From vaporware to reality

CES-goers run their fingers over the sleek glass curves and ogle the ever-changing color glow options of the Luminae keyboard.

Check it out

Kenshiro : Humanoid robot flexes its 160 muscles for creepy realism

Read more and see video

US military train in cyber-city to prepare hack defence

A miniature “cyber-city” has been created in New Jersey, complete with a bank, hospital, water-tower, train system, power grid and a coffee shop.

The buildings are tiny - fitting into an area 6ft (1.8m) by 8ft - but the underlying computer systems mimic those in the real world.

The aim is to train US government “cyber-warriors” to fend off attacks.

Experts believe attacks on critical infrastructure are likely to become more widespread.

Real-world damage

Developed in response to a challenge from the US military, the NetWars CyberCity was created by security training organisation the Sans Institute.

It will send government hackers on various missions, starting in December.

These will include fending off attacks on the city’s power company, hospital, water system and transportation services.

CyberCity director Ed Skoudis said: “We’ve built over 18 missions, and each of them challenges participants to devise strategies and employ tactics to thwart computer attacks that would cause significant real-world damage.”

The missions will typically last between a few hours and a few days.

Lose control

Sans Institute director Eric Bassel said Greater understanding of a city’s vulnerabilities could be critical as computer attacks from nation states became increasingly frequent and sophisticated.

“When you lose control of cyberspace, you lose control of the physical world,” he said.

“We have seen detailed evidence of foreign nations deep inside the computer networks of our financial services companies, manufacturing companies and critical infrastructure,” Mr Bassel added.

Such attacks had been going on for many years, he said, but efforts to fight them off had been limited.

“With NetWars CyberCity we hope to turn the tables by providing our first-line cyber-defenders with the necessary skills and hands-on training to fend off online attacks and regain control of cyberspace,” he added.

For security consultant Alan Woodward, such cities perform a vital job.

“Dotted around Salisbury Plain there are loads of deserted villages that the army now uses for training, and this is the cyber-equivalent,” he said.

He said such mock-ups would become increasingly sophisticated but would always be limited.

“All it will do is teach you have to defend and respond to a situation but it will never prevent attacks,” he said.

faatmatiu:

johncoltrane via dystopiantimes

In-Store Facial Recognition Market Research 

New technology from Japan can monitor all shop visitors, discerning age, gender, and visiting frequency, and measures the data with a system called ‘NeoFace’, all with a normal PC and webcam - via DigInfo (video embedded below):

NEC has developed a marketing service that utilizes facial recognition technology to estimates the age and gender of customers, and accumulates the data, along with the dates and times that customers visit stores. This data is then used to analyze trends in customer behavior and visit frequency.

This service is provided in Japan via NEC’s cloud computing technology, only requires a regular PC and video camera, and is available for approximately $880 (70,000 yen) per month per store.

“This service is mainly intended for retailers that have several stores. It provides retailers with customer attributes based on facial images. That information is helpful for sales strategies.”

This service can also detect repeat customers across multiple stores. It uses a face detection and comparison engine developed by NEC, called NeoFace.

More Here