At the IFA trade show, Sharp displayed an amazing 85" prototype HDTV that displays in 8K4K resolution. That's an amazing 33 million pixels of high-def picture, around 16 times more than the 1080p HDTVs currently available on the consumer market.
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Revolutionary Electric Motor is a Single Nanometer Wide
Researchers have created an electric "motor" that is essentially a tiny molecule only one nanometer wide.
Read More »Cleverbot Tricks Test Subjects Into Thinking It’s Human
At a tech festival in India, almost 60% of people believed that they were speaking to a human, when in fact they were speaking to Cleverbot.
Read More »New Ford Evos Redefines the ‘Smartcar’ With Cloud Integration
The Ford Evos is constantly connected to the cloud -- which means it can do anything from turn on your at-home coffee maker to adjust its performance based on your driving skills.
Read More »ITRI and Transcend Create Epic 2TB Thumb Drive
ITRI and Transcend have introduced a flash drive that stores an amazing 2 Terabytes of data. Did we mention that this drive is only the width of a penny?
Read More »Is Sharp’s 70-inch 3-D TV Worth $4,800?
Sharp's new 3-D TV has a stunning 70 inch display, and uses active shutter 3-D technology. However, is it really worth the price of $4,800?
Read More »Virgin Galactic Allows Passengers Twitter, Facebook and Instagram in Space
If you can afford the $200,000 price tag, you can reserve one of the coveted seats on Virgin Galactic's commercial spaceship. Oh, and you'll be able to tweet about it.
Read More »Playstation Vita Will Support Foursquare and Skype
At Gamescom, Sony announced that the Playstation Vita will have support for social networking services such as Foursquare and Skype.
Read More »Mach 20 Aircraft “Lost” 9 Minutes After Launch
Nine minutes after the military's latest hypersonic aircraft was launched, communication was lost. It's assumed that the aircraft crashed into the Pacific ocean.
Read More »Taiwan Researchers Brag About Erasable E-Paper
Researchers in Taiwan are hoping that this erasable "e-paper" (which is actually made of plastic) will be available to consumers within about a year.
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