Smart mobility: it will save us millions of tons of CO2
Introducing smart technologies to manage mobility can cut our CO2 emissions by 2030, and that's just one of the benefits it brings.
Introducing smart technologies to manage mobility can cut our CO2 emissions by 2030, and that's just one of the benefits it brings.
Piaggio's "robot luggage" becomes more compact and covers greater distance. In my opinion, it is not long before its mass adoption. Oh yeah?
A system of tiny chips will be able to detect and record neural activity from multiple points in the brain.
An innovative active camouflage system can change branch research, and has given birth to a chameleon robot that behaves like the real thing.
All the steps forward (and the challenges to be faced) to get closer within 5 years to a model that allows us to have "weather forecasts" of an earthquake.
A sensor system that does not require an external power supply allows those who have suffered damage to recover their touch.
The old "self-control" of bad breath isn't very effective. A small sensor now promises to check for this condition (which also signals dental problems).
A Chicago team develops the small magnetic device capable of inducing the perception of odors. Here's the whole study.
A data collection system in Italian museums will overturn the pattern: visitors will be observed, to establish their appreciation of the works.
From sweat or from the pressure of the fingertips, a wearable device generates energy in an extraordinary cost / yield ratio.
A special "patch" analyzes the volatile compounds emitted by plants to monitor the health of the crops in real time.
A smart carpet from MIT distinguishes and monitors movements - just step on it. In the future he can become a medical assistant, a fitness coach, a playmate
A special electromechanical sensor can detect psoriasis in less than a minute. It will be very useful for skin ailments, wounds and aesthetics
Google wants to do with every parking lot what it did with every urban route: make it accessible. And this technology could truly transform mobility.
A third eye that does not show us invisible, but visible realities: the light pole we encounter if we look at the smartphone, for example. Here is a much more interesting project than it looks.
A device allows ICU patients to observe the phases of their actions, and to communicate without using words.
A special sensor can measure itching, something that is not easy to communicate and quantify, but it is necessary to understand the extent of many diseases.
A smart lure that leaves no way out for fish and can create a detailed database of everything you need to fish without ever failing.
A natural feature of freshwater mussels allows, thanks to a motion sensor, to obtain precise monitoring of river pollution.
If you move less than ten times in half an hour, maybe you are already dead. If not, and you are "lonely" TOO sedentary, maybe now there is a solution.
A sensor allows you to literally listen to the vegetables. Not only does it assess plant stress, but also heat suffering and nutritional needs.