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Archive for the ‘electronics’ category: Page 32

Jul 29, 2022

Younger Generation is Falling Out from Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Older Generation Social Media

Posted by in category: electronics

Gen-Z users of social media are flocking to new more visual sites like Twitch. TV, Discord, BeReal, and Poparazzi.

Jul 29, 2022

Technology and Engineering news

Posted by in categories: electronics, engineering

A new division of Science X Network, covers the latest engineering, electronics and technology advances.

Jul 27, 2022

Muon-Based Scanners Will See Through Almost Anything

Posted by in category: electronics

Harnessing muons allows us to see through and inside objects to uncover their secrets.


A muon beam discovered a previously unknown room deep inside the Great Pyramid at Giza. Now DARPA wants to build muon beam imagers.

Jul 27, 2022

50,000-year-old Meteorite Could Revolutionize Electronics And Fast-Charging

Posted by in categories: electronics, futurism

New discoveries from 50,000 year old ‘Diablo Canyon’ meteorite could have interesting potential applications for future electronics.

Jul 26, 2022

Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W Lego-Powered Submarine Makes a Splash

Posted by in categories: drones, electronics

BEC was kind enough to share a parts list of everything used to create this project. It’s operated primarily by a Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W, with most components housed neatly inside an acrylic cylinder. It’s driven by a drone propeller alongside a couple of Pololu 2,130 DRV8833 Dual H-bridge motor drivers. The sensors include both a pressure sensor and a distance sensor, while a Lego Rechargeable 9V Battery Box supplies the power with the assistance of a Pololu 2,123 S7V8F5 5V voltage regulator.

The Raspberry Pi runs Raspberry Pi OS, while the code used to operate the submarine functions is handled using a custom Python script. BEC explains that Thonny was used to run the Python code, which is open-source and available for anyone to explore.

Continue reading “Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W Lego-Powered Submarine Makes a Splash” »

Jul 3, 2022

New Quantum Camera Capable of Snapping Photos of ‘Ghosts’

Posted by in categories: electronics, quantum physics

Circa 2020


By utilizing a process that Einstein famously called “spooky,” scientists have successfully caught “ghosts” on film for the first time using quantum cameras.

The “ghosts” captured on camera weren’t the kind you might first think; scientists didn’t discover the wandering lost souls of our ancestors. Rather, they were able to capture images of objects from photons that never actually encountered the objects pictured. The technology has been dubbed “ghost imaging,” reports National Geographic.

Continue reading “New Quantum Camera Capable of Snapping Photos of ‘Ghosts’” »

Jul 1, 2022

Smart Camera System Saves Eagles from Wind Turbine Deaths

Posted by in categories: electronics, sustainability

An AI-powered camera system reduces wind turbine bird fatalities by stopping the turbine as soon as it spots birds. Read it here.

Jun 27, 2022

This system uses camera and projector to turn a normal pool game into something special

Posted by in category: electronics

Jun 22, 2022

Team develops biobatteries that use bacteria to generate power for weeks

Posted by in categories: electronics, internet

As our tech needs grow and the Internet of Things increasingly connects our devices and sensors together, figuring out how to provide power in remote locations has become an expanding field of research.

Professor Seokheun “Sean” Choi—a faculty member in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Binghamton University’s Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science—has been working for years on biobatteries, which generate electricity through bacterial interaction.

One problem he encountered: The batteries had a lifespan limited to a few hours. That could be useful in some scenarios but not for any kind of long-term monitoring in remote locations.

Jun 22, 2022

A simple tool to make websites more secure and curb hacking

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, electronics

An international team of researchers has developed a scanning tool to make websites less vulnerable to hacking and cyberattacks.

The black box assessment prototype, tested by engineers in Australia, Pakistan and the UAE, is more effective than existing web scanners which collectively fail to detect the top 10 weaknesses in web applications.

UniSA mechanical and systems engineer Dr. Yousef Amer is one of the co-authors of a new international paper that describes the development of the tool in the wake of escalating global cyberattacks.

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