Video Game Current Events | Video Game News | 8
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An open source first for embedded real-time systems The first commercially available embedded real-time system built from open source components has been developed, opening the door to new critical and non-critical systems applications for industrial control and video surveillance to robotics and aerospace. view more (2005-03-24)
Developing a voice-activated control device for household electrical goods and ticket machines Fagor Home Electrics Group and Telvent (technological offshoot of Abengoa), working with the University of the Basque Country and the IKERLAN technological centre, are involved in the Genio project, with the aim of directing and designing the manufacture of devices capable of voice-based dialogue, thus enabling such products to join the new array... view more... (2004-10-26)
Dr. Roman Cibirka - Games for Health Simulation helps students learn dental implant procedures A realistic computer game will soon be used to help dental students worldwide learn and reinforce dental implant procedures. view more (2009-06-12)
Indelible watermarks As the Internet extends its reach and grows in complexity, there is a greater need for digital watermarks in image, audio and video data. Using a similar technique to banknote watermarking, invisible or inaudible information is inserted into digital content to thwart unauthorized use and ensure that honest paying consumers receive the authentic... view more... (2001-08-21)
Online game feeds music search engine project at UC San Diego UC San Diego electrical engineers and computer scientists are working together on a computerized system that will make it easy for people who are not music experts (like the senior author's mom) to find the kind of music they want to listen to - without knowing the names of artists or songs. view more (2007-09-26)
CRANFIELD LAUNCHES INTERNET POWERED CAR STATIONS The government is constantly looking at ways to reduce the number of people driving to work. The recent Transport Bill suggests giving local authorities the power to charge for work place parking. Because of this many companies and organisations are setting up car stations to save both money and the environment but Cranfield University is well... view more... (2000-02-01)
Learning to trade in carbon dioxide "You have to be well prepared to enter the emissions trading arena. Otherwise you'll run the same financial risks as on a conventional stock exchange," declares Franzjosef Schafhausen of the German ministry for the environment, who heads the working group on the national climate change program. Poor awareness of the implications of... view more... (2003-12-01)
Friendly farming could halt Orkney hen harrier decline Loss of preferred hunting habitat has been identified as the most likely cause of decline in Orkney's hen harrier population, according to recent research. Speaking at the British Ecological Society's Winter Meeting, being held at the University of York on 18-20 December 2002, Dr Arjun Amar of the Game Conservancy Trust will say: "Despite the... view more... (2002-12-09)
Removing the barriers of autism Autism can build a wall of poor communication between those struggling with the condition and their families. view more (2009-08-31)
Pressure on football referees is greater if there's no running track The football team of Schalke 04 should really have won the German Football Championship this year: Schalke simply has the right stadium. Unlike their rivals from Bavaria, Bayern Munich, whose ground contains a tartan track separating the pitch from the spectators' stands. And that reduces the home advantage, and does this to a spectacular extent.... view more... (2005-05-17)
CU-Boulder tracks movements of ancient Central Americans using satellites, video-game technology Satellite imagery meshed with video-game technology is allowing University of Colorado at Boulder and NASA researchers to virtually "fly" along footpaths used by Central Americans 2,000 years ago on spiritual pilgrimages to ancestral cemeteries. view more (2007-01-04)
MSU researcher adds to knowledge of how early stars, galaxies formed Research by a Michigan State University scientist sheds new light on how stars and galaxies were formed back in the early days of the universe - some 13 billion years ago. view more (2009-07-10)
High speed broadband will create energy bottleneck and slow Internet "Increased services like Video on Demand will put pressure on the system and create an energy bottleneck," said Dr Kerry Hinton of the University's Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering and the ARC Special Centre for Ultra-Broadband Information Networks (CUBIN). view more (2008-11-25)
The next generation in digital video High-definition TV, film recordings on DVD and video clips on a cell phone - none of this would be possible without advanced image compression techniques. The successor to MPEG-2 is due to be launched in 2005, accompanied by better quality and a reduced volume of data. view more (2004-11-09)
The Next Step in Health Care: Telemedicine Imagine a scenario where doctors from different hospitals can collaborate on a surgery without having to actually be in the operating room. What if doctors in remote locations could receive immediate expert support from top specialists in hospitals around the world? view more (2008-11-13)
XML Web Services - The next service revolution in telecoms Heidelberg. The Internet of today is a worldwide library, built on static HTML pages. The Internet of tomorrow will be more: a global service machine, enabling to access any application on any server in the world. The integrating technology, which has the potential to make this service revolution come true, is called XML Web Services. One of the... view more... (2003-05-26)
Wake up and smell the sweat Some people are oblivious to the odor in the locker room after a game, while others wrinkle their noses at the slightest whiff of sweat. view more (2007-11-26)
Computer card game detects cognitive changes A popular, computer-based card game is helping Oregon Health & Science University researchers monitor cognitive changes in the elderly, a new study shows. view more (2006-07-19)
Academics' detective work to speed up crime scene investigation Kingston University is heading a major investigation that could help police officers solve crime more quickly. Experts from Kingston's Digital Imaging Research Centre have joined forces with Surrey University and independent research organisation Sira for a project called REVEAL (Recovering Evidence from Video by Fusing Video Evidence Thesaurus... view more... (2004-04-27)
Early human hunters had fewer meat-sharing rituals A University of Arizona anthropologist has discovered that humans living at a Paleolithic cave site in central Israel between 400,000 and 250,000 years ago were as successful at big-game hunting as were later stone-age hunters at the site, but that the earlier humans shared meat differently. view more (2009-08-13)
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