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Ivy Chang

Wearable Electronic Sensors Can Now Be Printed Directly on the Skin | MIT Technology Re... - 1 views

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    researchers have devised a way to "print" devices directly onto the skin so people can wear them for an extended period while performing normal daily activities. Such systems could be used to track health and monitor healing near the skin's surface, as in the case of surgical wounds.
John Rich

3D Printed Conductive Jell-O - 3D Printing Industry - 0 views

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    Printable gel electronics that we could eat. Love it.
Simeon Spearman

Facebook's Incredible Potential as an Offline Retail Tool | DigitalNext: A Blog on Emer... - 0 views

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    "Several companies have successfully built cooperative marketing structures online. Companies such as OwnerIQ, for example, enable online retailers like Crutchfield to retarget people who visit the web sites of electronics manufacturers, offering the flatscreen TVs they were just studying - at a discount. When it comes to driving brick-and-mortar sales from online, though, Facebook appears to offer the best solution yet. CPG brands gladly pay for retail circulars to help sell their products, and there's reason to believe they could buy Facebook advertising to drive consumers into retail locations. One company with which we work, ShopLocal, puts a retailer's circular content into a database, including images and all the sale prices and details. In so doing it makes local data portable and extendable, so retailers can build online-only pages of the circular, or utilize QR codes to generate more content than exists in the print world."
Ivy Chang

New Chase Bank Kiosks Replace ATM Logins With Palm Prints - PSFK - 3 views

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    "The electronic banking kiosks may soon include features like biometric scanning to identify customers and be able to sync with an app that will allow customers to withdraw money remotely and simply pick up the money when they are ready."
Simeon Spearman

High-tech helps revive low-tech habits | JWT Intelligence - 3 views

  • Good old-fashioned reading is on the rise thanks to the booming popularity of e-readers. In 2007, a study by the National Endowment for the Arts found that half of 18-24-year-old Americans read no books for pleasure. The e-book era may be changing that. A Sony-commissioned survey conducted in May found that 40 percent of e-reader owners report reading more than they did with print books. Amazon says its customers buy roughly three times as many books after getting a Kindle. And finally, smartphone apps have re-popularized classic games and toys. The much-anticipated Scrabble iPad app hit the market this fall after the wide adoption of Newtoy’s Scrabble knockoff, Words With Friends. Electronic Arts has turned the classic Lite Brite into a digital experience.
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    gonna blog this mofo
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