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Tuesday, August 20, 2013

DARPA wants computers that fuse with higher human brain function

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From: "Network World After Dark" <nww_newsletters@newsletters.networkworld.com>
Date: Aug 19, 2013 9:01 PM
Subject: DARPA wants computers that fuse with higher human brain function
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  Celebrating Unix heroes | How do you abandon the cloud?

 
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DARPA wants computers that fuse with higher human brain function
In the never-ending quest to get computers to process, really understand and actually reason, scientists at Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency want to look more deeply into how computers can mimic a key portion of our brain. Read More
 


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Ensuring Business Continuity of SAN Storage
The Taneja Group examines what business continuity means in storage systems. Built from the ground up with business continuity in mind, Taneja reviews the HP 3PAR StoreServ 7000 array and highlights how its capabilities deliver a high level of business continuity. Learn More

Celebrating Unix heroes
Unix, the multitasking, multi-user operating system was developed in 1969 at Bell Labs by AT&T employees and associates. Unix descendants and clones include Berkeley Unix, Minix, Linux, AIX, A/UX, HP-UX and Solaris. Apple's Mac OS X is based on Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) UNIX. This presentation features the early Unix pioneers and their contributions to the computer industry. Read More
 

How do you abandon the cloud?
For quite some time I was an advocate of boycotting various cloud services. Instead of Gmail, I opted to utilize an old-fashioned, desktop email client and POP server. Instead of DropBox, I went with a variety of file storage solutions that I could host myself (such as SparkleShare). I had two key motivating factors for this: Read More
 

7 IT security skills certifications on the rise
A number of IT security skills certifications requiring candidates to pass exams have sharply gained in terms of demand and pay value, according to a new Foote Partners report. Read More
 

iPhone 6 rumor rollup for the week ending August 16
As the days shorten, so does the iOSphere's patience. But we may only have to wait 25 days before our agony is over and the Next iPhone is revealed. Read More
 

7 mobile hard drives: More portable and more powerful
As more and more business travelers depend on portable hard drives to both back up their data and carry it around with them, the technology has been consistently improving. Even with the proliferation of cloud data services, hard drives are often considered more private and secure (and are especially useful where there is no wireless connection). Read More
 

Big data is reaching the peak of its hype, Gartner says
Each year Gartner gives buzzwords a reality check by publishing its Hype Cycle report. The latest one focusing on big data shows that the industry is just reaching the peak of its hype right now, with vendors flocking to the market, customers getting anxious that they don't yet fully understand the technology, and the expectations about what big data can do for an organization being over-inflated. The... Read More
 

15 most powerful Big Data companies
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Is having your photo featured on Bing homepage enough reason to give up your rights?
When a company creates a search engine that is so popular that it becomes a verb, who does a competitor hire to change the default behavior of the majority of web users? In the case of Microsoft, it hired social scientist Matt Wallaert to work with Bing. Wallaert was tasked "with figuring out ways to make it easier for Bing users to make decisions and take actions, as well as ways to wean people off... Read More
 

Smartphone interference tackled by Kansas startup
Future smartphones could gain numerous benefits from algorithms to fight interference, developed by a little-known startup in Lawrence, Kansas, that last week drew closer to implementing the technology in devices. Read More
 

 

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