Science
Google looks to balloons to provide Internet access in Third World
By Brandon Bailey, San Jose Mercury News
Aug. 2, 2013
midnight
DOS PALOS, Calif. — Only half-filled with helium, and already more than 12 feet wide, the giant plastic envelope shimmered and shook in the breeze like some airborne jellyfish rising through a gentle current.
Only half-filled with helium, and already more than 12 feet wide, the giant plastic envelope shimmered and shook in the breeze like some airborne jellyfish rising through a gentle current.
pair of Alabama lawmakers are asking for $100 million to replace school textbooks with digital devices.
Advocates of the idea have said allowing children to
. Aside from that, the devices may help districts cut down on the need to replace aging textbooks.
found a new way to combine them for more accurate information about a person's state of mind.
They tracked brain activity using an electroencephalograph
Distracted driving is also a hurdle for researchers working on self-driving cars. The first wave of automated vehicles won't completely take over the job of driving
I think that this is pretty cool. I dont know if it would completely work because if it were to mess up it could cause crashes and many other things.
"There are a variety of behaviors that are related to sleepiness and distractions," said Dr. Ison. "Some of them, such as blinking more frequently, changing our eye movements’ pattern, or not fixating on the road ahead are well suited to be detected with an eye tracker.
But new technology could help detect when those drivers start to feel tired and possibly prevent dangerous accidents
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According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, there are more than 100,000 crashes, 40,000 injuries and 1,550 deaths a year in the United States as a result of drivers nodding off at the wheel.
computer can tie that data to specific types of thoughts, and together with eye-movements, the information collected can tell a computer system if a person is getting sleepy.
To detect eye movements, researchers aim an array of LED lights at the subject's eyes. An infra-red camera sensor detectes the reflection of the lights off of the eyes.
Distracted driving is also a hurdle for researchers working on self-driving cars. The first wave of automated vehicles won't completely take over the job of driving.
I thought this article was cool but I was a little freaked out to on how a the car can sense when you are going to possibly fall asleep. But at he same time I realize that technology has come far so if they can release this to the public, then I'am just even more excited to see what new technology comes out next.