Robots have been increasingly performing many tasks that humans used to do, which is both good and bad. Simone Giertz’s videos show the potential of robots that have little to no potential.
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Robots have been increasingly performing many tasks that humans used to do, which is both good and bad. Simone Giertz’s videos show the potential of robots that have little to no potential.
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The world has entered a new era of computing.
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Ford Motor Company expects drivers to be able take control of its autonomous vehicles, according to a patent revealed last week, when they’re not watching movies in their mobile theater.
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Bottom line: Sohu is likely to combine its online video service with Tencent’s in an ongoing consolidation of the Chinese sector, and the tie-up could presage a Tencent-backed privatization bid for Sohu later this year.
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This week’s milestones in the history of technology.
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This post was done in partnership with The Wirecutter, a buyer’s guide to the best technology. Read the full article here.
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Recent headlines claimed that scientists have reversed autism, cured cancer, and restored memory loss caused by Alzheimer’s. All of the headlines were based on real papers, but none of them are correct. Scientists and science journalists need to stop over-promising unless they just don’t care about their credibility.
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Apple Rejected by U.S. Supreme Court in $450 Million E-Book Case
Apple must pay $450 million to end an antitrust suit after the US Supreme Court refused to question a finding that the company orchestrated a scheme to raise the prices for electronic books.
March 7, 2016 at 08:53AM
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Samsung Pay is still touring the world map – it launched in South Korea, then arrived in the US where it now covers over 70% of US credit and debit card market. Pay is launching in China this month, then the UK and Spain, Australia, Singapore and Brazil too. In Russia, Pay will launch alongside the Galaxy S7.
The service reportedly lost $16.8 million its first year under Samsung (the Korean giant acquired LoopPay for $229 in February 2015). This is on $4.12 million in net sales generated by the service. It has $23.6 million in debt and its net worth stands at $10.5.
Samsung says the service is worth a lot more, though, for the value it adds to its Galaxy smartphones – currently Samsung Pay is supported by the S6, S6 edge, Note5 and several Galaxy A phones, soon the new Galaxy S7 and S7 edge star duo too.
The company also thinks highly of MST – the magnetic stripe emulation, which is both unique and valuable in the US, since the country is behind on new chip-protected credit and debit cards. Bloomberg reports Samsung Pay is growing faster than Apple’s service, which had a head start.
Samsung sees Pay and things like Gear VR as avenues to generate revenue after the initial hardware sale. It’s not just about making a cut on sales through Pay either, industry insiders think Samsung can mine purchase data to use it for marketing, R&D and…
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Hillary wants to restrict tax deductions, but not for charitable contributions, a dramatic contrast from President Obama.
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