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TECHNOLOGY
91 - 100 from 476 . In "TECHNOLOGY"
The new Instagram feature will let users record and edit 15-second videos with audio, and will let users add visual effects. Users will be able to share Reels with followers on Instagram in a dedicated section called Reels in Explore. — Courtesy photo
Facebook launches its new TikTok clone, Instagram Reels
WASHINGTON — Facebook Inc.’s Instagram photo-sharing app is launching its clone of TikTok in more than 50 countries. The new Instagram feature will let users record and edit 15-second videos with audio, and will let users add visual effects. Users will be able to share Reels with followers on Instagram in a dedicated section called Reels in Explore.It will be embedded into Instagram in the United States and elsewhere, the company announced on Wednesday. The announcement comes a week after Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg defended the company’s copycat strategies to US lawmakers during an antitrust hearing.The company has been testing Reels in Brazil since November and in France, Germany and India since earlier this summer.Facebook has a long tradition of cloning competitive services....
August 06, 2020

Facebook launches its new TikTok clone, Instagram Reels

Deepfakes, explained
By Meredith SomersMIT NewsDeepfakes can be used to manipulate and threaten individuals and corporations. But with a better understanding of the technology, executives can take steps to protect themselves and their companies.In March 2019, the CEO of a UK-based energy firm listened over the phone as his boss — the leader of the firm’s German parent company — ordered the transfer of €220,000 to a supplier in Hungary.News reports would later detail that the CEO recognized the “slight German accent and the melody” of his chief’s voice and followed the order to transfer the money [equivalent to about $243,000] within an hour. The caller tried several other times to get a second round of money, but by then the UK executive had grown suspicious and did not make any more...
August 01, 2020

Deepfakes, explained

DATUM compressors, like the one above, offer maximum performance for all pressure and flow applications.
Siemens compressors selected for gas reservoir storage project with Saudi Aramco
BERLIN — Siemens Energy was selected to provide centrifugal compressor systems for Saudi Aramco’s Hawiyah Unaizah Gas Reservoir Storage (HUGRS) project. The plant includes a gas injection facility with a capacity of 1,500 million standard cubic feet per day (MMSCFD) (42,475,270 cubic meters per day, or m3/d) and a withdrawal facility capable of processing up to 2,000 MMSCFD (56,633,693 m3/d) of gas.Siemens Energy received the order from Samsung Engineering, who was awarded the engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contract for the entire project earlier this year.The project, located 162 miles (260 kilometers) east of Saudi Arabia’s capital, Riyadh, includes a plant that will take surplus pipelines gas in the winter months and inject it into an existing depleted field....
July 29, 2020

Siemens compressors selected for gas reservoir storage project with Saudi Aramco

The latest version of the MIT E-Vent team's emergency ventilator design undergoes testing in their lab. — Courtesy of MIT E-Vent Team
MIT team races to fill COVID-19-related ventilator shortage
By David L. ChandlerIt was clear early on in the unfolding COVID-19 pandemic that a critical need in the coming weeks and months would be for ventilators, the potentially life-saving devices that keep air flowing into a patient whose ability to breathe is failing.Seeing a potential shortfall of hundreds of thousands of such units, professor of mechanical engineering Alex Slocum Sr. and other engineers at MIT swung into action, rapidly pulling together a team of volunteers with expertise in mechanical design, electronics, and controls, and a team of doctors with clinical experience in treating respiratory conditions.They started working together nonstop to develop an inexpensive alternative and share what they learned along the way. The goal was a design that could be produced quickly...
April 26, 2020

MIT team races to fill COVID-19-related ventilator shortage

A new system relies on short-range Bluetooth signals emitted from people’s smartphones to trace who they've been in contact with. These signals represent random strings of numbers, likened to “chirps” that other nearby smartphones can remember hearing, offering a way to find people who may have been in contact with people who have tested positive for COVID-19. — Photo courtesy Christine Daniloff, MIT
Bluetooth signals from your smartphone could automate COVID-19 contact tracing while preserving privacy
By Kylie FoyLincoln LaboratoryImagine you’ve been diagnosed as Covid-19 positive. Health officials begin contact tracing to contain infections, asking you to identify people with whom you’ve been in close contact. The obvious people come to mind — your family, your coworkers.But what about the woman ahead of you in line last week at the pharmacy, or the man bagging your groceries? Or any of the other strangers you may have come close to in the past 14 days?A team led by MIT researchers and including experts from many institutions is developing a system that augments “manual” contact tracing by public health officials, while preserving the privacy of all individuals.The system relies on short-range Bluetooth signals emitted from people’s smartphones. These signals represent...
April 11, 2020

Bluetooth signals from your smartphone could automate COVID-19 contact tracing while preserving privacy

A mural of hopes and questions about artificial intelligence from a middle school workshop. — Photo courtesy of the Personal Robots group/MIT Media Lab
Learning about AI: A hub of MIT resources for K-12 students
MIT Media LabIn light of the recent events surrounding Covid-19, learning for grades K-12 looks very different than it did a month ago. Parents and educators may be feeling overwhelmed about turning their homes into classrooms.With that in mind, a team led by Media Lab Associate Professor Cynthia Breazeal has launched aieducation.mit.edu to share a variety of online activities for K-12 students to learn about artificial intelligence, with a focus on how to design and use it responsibly.Learning resources provided on this website can help to address the needs of the millions of children, parents, and educators worldwide who are staying at home due to school closures caused by Covid-19, and are looking for free educational activities that support project-based STEM learning in an exciting...
April 11, 2020

Learning about AI: A hub of MIT resources for K-12 students

With the coronavirus causing more people to hunker down, consumers are likely to use services like Amazon or Uber Eats for delivery of food and other items. — AFP
Tech lifestyles enable 'safe escape' from coronavirus
SAN FRANCISCO — For people hunkering down due to the coronavirus epidemic, the tech sector has become their new best friend with an array of lifestyle solutions making "social distancing" easier.Those wanting to avoid crowds can have meals delivered from restaurants, stream blockbuster films, socialize online with friends, and work remotely.The latest tech-inspired lifestyle solutions are gaining traction as more people are advised to work from home, and many conferences and gatherings are canceled.Anyone with an internet connection can use Amazon or e-commerce rivals to deliver provisions from groceries to toilet paper and over-the-counter medicine."We can have anything and everything delivered to our homes including hard and soft goods, doctor visits, laundry services,...
March 08, 2020

Tech lifestyles enable 'safe escape' from coronavirus

From household robots to facial recognition, AI will be the technology of the future and Europe is eager to play a central role in defining the rules as well as pushing its own champions. — AFP
EU seeks 'responsible' AI to dispel Big Brother fears
BRUSSELS — The EU unveiled its strategy for artificial intelligence on Wednesday as Europe jumps to catch up to the US and China and dispel fears of Big Brother control.From household robots to facial recognition, AI will be the technology of the future and Europe is eager to play a central role in defining the rules as well as pushing its own champions."We want the application of these new technologies to deserve the trust of our citizens," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told reporters."This is why we are promoting a responsible, human-centric approach to artificial intelligence," she said.EU officials widely acknowledge that Europe missed the first internet revolution with an online world dominated by Silicon Valley's Google, Facebook and...
February 19, 2020

EU seeks 'responsible' AI to dispel Big Brother fears

The EU Commission's digital policy chief Margrethe Vestager compares facial recognition technology to the rise of CCTV security in city centers. — AFP
Fear of Big Brother guides EU rules on AI
BRUSSELS — Amid fears of a Big Brother-style society ruled by machines, the EU will urge authorities and companies to think hard before rolling out facial recognition technology.But the bloc, which will make a much-anticipated announcement this week on the role of artificial intelligence (AI), will stop short of imposing an outright ban, a top official said.On Wednesday, the European Commission will set the stage for European rules on the subject with innovation in the growing sector so far dominated by the US and China.The commission, the EU's powerful regulator, is eager to answer the worries of European citizens about the rising importance of AI in their lives, amid reports from China of facial-recognition technology used to crack down on dissent."I find it truly really scary...
February 17, 2020

Fear of Big Brother guides EU rules on AI

The WhatsApp application is displayed on an iPhone in this file photo. — AFP
Facebook-owned WhatsApp now has 2 billion users
SAN FRANCISCO — The Facebook-owned messaging service WhatsApp said on Wednesday it now has more than two billion users around the world, as it reaffirmed its commitment to strong encryption to protect privacy.WhatsApp, acquired by Facebook in 2014, has grown into one of the most-used services in the Facebook "family" of apps, offering free messaging along with voice and video calls."Private conversations that once were only possible face-to-face can now take place across great distances through instant chats and video calling," a WhatsApp blog post said."There are so many significant and special moments that take place over WhatsApp and we are humbled and honored to reach this milestone."The statement said WhatsApp remained committed to its "strong...
February 13, 2020

Facebook-owned WhatsApp now has 2 billion users

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