Shares in Europe trade for the most part in a narrow range, but the technology sector’s a standout as investors pick up on signs that the business environment for the industry could be improving.
The New York Police Department is looking into adapting futuristic technology that would allow officers’ guns to recognize one another in an effort to avoid the type of friendly fire incident that left a cop dead last week.
Visionarium Company has written a new chapter of municipal waste management in Thailand through a technology of Mechanical Biological Waste Treatment (MBT) of the FABER-AMBRA process, which is recogni
Oilfield Technology Magazine covers all facets of the global exploration, drilling and production sector, including…
To hear the folks in Hollywood talk about it, improved 3-D technology and the quality films that are quickly lining up behind it represent nothing short of a moviegoing revolution. Tell that to the folks who still live hours from the nearest 3-D-equipped theater. For them, all the extradimensional summer offerings and slick marketing campaigns amount to nothing more than a big, frustrating tease.
The icons of Silicon Valley are older, grayer, and — if you believe analysts who follow the technology industry — wiser than they were a decade ago, when the Internet bubble inflated company share prices and corporate egos.
The Obama administration released yesterday a counternarcotics strategy for the U.S.-Mexico border that calls for deploying new technology, stepping up intelligence gathering and increasing interdiction of ships, aircraft and vehicles that are smuggling drugs, gun and cash.
The New York Police Department is looking into adapting futuristic technology that would allow officers’ guns to recognize one another in an effort to avoid the type of friendly fire incident that left a cop dead last week.
Nintendo Co Ltd tried and rejected the motion-sensing technology that Sony Corp and Microsoft Corp are counting on to catch up in the video games wars, the company’s president told the Financial Times.
The recent loss of Air France Flight 477 and its 228 passengers over the Atlantic has many experts questioning why GPS systems are not standard in all planes.”The technology’s there - we’ve had this stuff for 15 years and little’s happened,” Michael Boyd, a Colorado-based airline analyst, told the Associated Press.