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Fast Company Neal Ungerleider |
Cisco Gains Traction In The Connected Road Race In the latest installment of their ongoing expansion into the Internet of Things, Cisco recently announced an agreement with Swiss security firm AGT International to develop smart traffic systems for cities around the world. |
Fast Company November 2008 Anya Kamenetz |
Attack of the Green Tech Geeks Jetsons-style apps that measure just what we're consuming are the hottest trend in sustainable business. Can the energy savings trump the privacy hit? |
InternetNews March 24, 2010 |
IBM Smart Grid Push Aims for Power Efficiency In a team-up with eMeter, IBM plans to help public utilities improve their power usage and efficiency. |
Fast Company October 19, 2011 Rachel Z. Arndt |
Intelligent Cities Expo To celebrate the planners and engineers at this Hamburg expo, we've gathered some particularly smart urban solutions from around the world. |
The Motley Fool July 25, 2011 Travis Hoium |
Heat Wave Highlights Our Aging Grid When the temperature rises, we can see exactly where there's money to be made investing in the power grid. |
Popular Mechanics January 2007 Daniel H. Wilson |
DARPA's Tough New Robot Road Test A robot expert explains why DARPA's previous robotic races were GPS-guided cakewalks compared to the upcoming Urban Challenge. |
Fast Company November 2008 |
High-Tech Ways to Go Green at Home Advanced sensors and incentives can trim electricity, water, and gas use at home and boost recycling. |
Fast Company John Paul Titlow |
Self-Driving Cars Will Be The Biggest Auto Safety Innovation Ever Like so many things in life, the future of driving is automated. In fact, autonomous vehicles could reduce traffic accidents by 90%, according to a new report from McKinsey. |
National Defense March 2008 Grace V. Jean |
Robots Get Smarter, But Who Will Buy Them? While the technologies to enable fully autonomous vehicles have advanced, robotics experts say there is still more to be done to make them viable in military and commercial applications in the next decade. |
CIO July 15, 2005 Megan Santosus |
Stuck in Traffic? IT Can Ease the Commute Some methods of decreasing traffic involve heavy costs and manual labor, but there are technological workarounds. For example, some technologies relay detailed traffic information to properly equipped cars. Traffic signals can also be improved. |
InternetNews August 8, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
IBM Grows The Grid The company's Grid and Grow is intended to help enterprises get going on distributed computing at an entry-level price. |
IndustryWeek April 20, 2011 |
Powering Up: The Smart Grid's Next Steps While meters have received the bulk of the attention so far, the supply side is where the smart grid will be built. |
National Defense January 2011 Eric Beidel |
Fish Provide Clues To Underwater Detection Issues At its recent science and technology conference, the Office of Naval Research called upon industry for validation that fish could point the way forward for underwater sensors. |
Science News September 8, 2001 Ivars Peterson |
Waves of Congestion From a physicist's point of view, traffic flow can be regarded as a "many-body system of strongly interacting bodies." Various studies have revealed that such systems can show wavelike behavior and abrupt transitions from one state to another... |
The Motley Fool September 22, 2008 Toby Shute |
Google Swoops on the Smart Grid Fresh off of its investment in next-generation geothermal power, Google makes another notable cleantech move, announcing it's pairing up with General Electric to bring our electric grid into the 21st century. |
The Motley Fool August 19, 2008 Tim Beyers |
To Get Green, Go With Big Blue IBM unveils a consulting practice called "Green Sigma" that will assist clients with reducing energy and water usage. |
The Motley Fool December 26, 2010 Manikandan Raman |
What's on IBM's "Next Five in Five"? The company sees "breathing batteries" and holographic calls by 2015. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2010 Susan Karlin |
Green Living in Nashville The city turns a run-down warehouse district into an upscale eco-neighborhood |
PC Magazine January 18, 2006 Bill Howard |
The Technology Cocoon A technology package for cars with active cruise control, lane departure warning, and backup sonar and cameras that beep as you approach objects. |
Wired November 2001 Dan Baum |
The Ultimate Jam Session It takes more than technology to solve the world's traffic problems. While Singapore succeeds with an iron fist, the United States waits for the invisible hand... |
Technology Research News January 26, 2005 Kimberly Patch |
Adaptive Lights Organize Traffic A researcher in Belgium has devised a way to allow traffic lights to self-organize to improve traffic flow. The method, which taps the self-organizing principles of social insects, does away with central control. |
The Motley Fool July 20, 2010 Michael Kanellos |
A Half a Century Later, AT&T Gets Back Into Solar By linking up with Petra Solar, AT&T capitalizes on one of its best inventions. |
Popular Mechanics July 2006 Logan Ward |
Highway of the Future: Interstate Intelligence Our nation's highways are being primed for a major transformation, one that will bring them into the wireless information age suitable for the wireless capabilities of our cars. |
Entrepreneur October 2009 Mikal E. Belicove |
Analyzing the Analytics How to make sense of your website's performance data. |
Fast Company Chris Gayomali |
This Is How Google's Driverless Cars Navigate Tricky Roadblocks In a new blog post, Google shows us how its smart cars assess and navigate some of the trickier traffic scenarios, like, say, a road construction bottleneck near its Mountain View campus. |
Fast Company July 2000 Amy Wilson |
Thin Is In IBM offers a svelte alternative to your average monitor. |
The Motley Fool February 1, 2010 Anders Bylund |
Can Google, GE, and IBM Create a Better World? Many household names are working on ways to collect traffic data automatically, then put the data flow through another automated process, and end up with usable traffic reports without any human input. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 8, 2012 Dina Gerdeman |
Unplugged: What Happened to the Smart Grid? Replacing the antiquated electrical system in the United States with a super-efficient smart grid always seemed a surefire opportunity for entrepreneurs. So what went wrong? |