Drone warfare: Olympia vs. robot
A bipartisan group of legislators is getting behind a new bill that would regulate the use of unmanned government drones.
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A bipartisan group of legislators is getting behind a new bill that would regulate the use of unmanned government drones.
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The biomedical pioneer is one of the 2013 National Science Medal recipients.
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Snippets from a day of digital mania at the Seattle Interactive Conference.
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Both candidates for governor say they will help biotech and biomedical research in Washington state. But formerly robust state investments have dwindled as leaders divert tobacco-settlement money.
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Once a strong Republican enclave, the Eastside is undergoing a shift from Red to Blue. But it's also incubating a new, centrist shade featuring pragmatic and aggressive political centrism that opens opportunity for Democrats, the GOP and independents.
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The suicide last week of B.C. teen Amanda Todd and the unmasking of creepy Internet predator Violentacrez make one thing clear: Freedom of speech doesn't mean a person should be free of criticism.
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Seattle's no Bay Area for venture capital, but Social Innovation Fast Pitch offers social entrepreneurs a chance to strut their stuff.
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Once it was a simple black object that rarely broke the silence. Now it's a ubiquitous monster, intruding all the time. This is progress?
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After last week's record-setting LivingSocial-Starbucks deal, rumors are flying about why Seattle's coffee king went in for the daily deal gimmick.
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As Amelia Earhart put it, "The most effective way to do it, is to do it."
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NASA's Curiosity rover isn't just another robot we sent into space; it's a game-changer for science.
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Using your cameras, smartphone, tablets and other gear on vacation should be fun - not a nightmare. Here are some tips.
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Every Olympics event will be live on virtually every electronic gadget you may have. What's not to love?
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A new service is offering multiple major magazines online for a single monthly subscription. Caveat: you'll need the right tablet to read them.
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The arrival of Google's new Nexus 7 tablet is pending, and Amazon and Apple may be upping the ante with new tablets of their own.
READ MORE | COMMENT NOWThe latest from news outlets and blogs around the Northwest and beyond, chosen by Crosscut editors.
"After all the strife, I expected something similar to happen in the Bitcoin community. One day, there would be a catastrophe too devastating to recover from; some people would pick up the pieces but most would lose interest. Instead, Bitcoin has rebounded from every setback stronger than before."
“There is a tremendous thirst from people all over the world to see and understand data ... Traditional analytics technologies are universally complicated and development-heavy. They’re slow-moving and inflexible.”
Joel Kotkin writes: "A new, and potentially dominant, ruling class is rising. Today’s tech moguls don’t employ many Americans, they don’t pay very much in taxes or tend to share much of their wealth, and they live in a separate world that few of us could ever hope to enter. But while spending millions bending the political process to pad their bottom lines, they’ve remained far more popular than past plutocrats, with 72 percent of Americans expressing positive feelings for the industry, compared to 30 percent for banking and 20 percent for oil and gas."
The Obama administration is expected to back an FBI plan that would change the law to make it easier to wiretap online communication. Large companies that "do not comply with wiretap orders" would face fines of at least $25,000 a day.
Writes Farhad Manjoo: " Though it’s a clever stunt, the printable gun does nothing to weaken the case for gun control—and, in the long run, it might well strengthen it. That’s because, for the foreseeable future, the printed gun can’t compete with manufactured weapons. It’s more expensive, less durable, and a worse shot than any gun you can buy from a store. At best, then, it’s a distraction from the mainstream politics of gun control."
The company has circulated some designs of a possible new treatment, and the raspberries are loud.
Do foreign computer workers cut off opportunities for U.S. graduates? Or is the real issue the difference between a top computer grad and one with middling skills?
"In the past, the tech industry created middle-class jobs and lifted the overall economy of Silicon Valley. But as tech companies have shifted manufacturing and midlevel jobs overseas over the years, highly paid workers have increasingly clustered here. Per-capita incomes have been rising even as median incomes have decreased for five years in a row,"
Here it is, 20 years later. Pretty basic, but pretty thrilling to see a revolution being born.
Did computer programs read a false Tweet about the White House being bombed and start selling off stock? Did a pause by human traders as they read the phony message cause the computers to think they should sell?