Vince Young to Work for University of Texas


Former NFL and Texas Longhorns quarterback Vince Young is set to work for his alma mater as a development officer. The Longhorns' official website issued a press release on Young's hire on Aug....

Alt-week 8.18.12: Graphene sponges, zero-g athletics and tweets in space

Alt-week peels back the covers on some of the more curious sci-tech stories from the last seven days.

Alt-week 8.18.12: Graphene sponges, zero-g athletics and tweets in space

We see a lot of crazy stories here at Engadget, especially when we spend our week poking around in dark and scary corners of the internet specifically in search of them, just so you don't have to. We consider it a service almost. One that we're delighted to provide, we must add. When else would we be able to share such delights as an astronaut triathlete, soft, color-changing robots and a recent response to a thirty-year-old alien broadcast? Exactly. This is alt-week.

Continue reading Alt-week 8.18.12: Graphene sponges, zero-g athletics and tweets in space

Filed under:

Alt-week 8.18.12: Graphene sponges, zero-g athletics and tweets in space originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 18 Aug 2012 17:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

UT Dallas researchers seek to imbue your smartphone with X-ray superpowers

UT Dallas researchers hope to imbue your smartphone with X-ray superpowers

If anybody ever told you that the future would be awesome, they were right. A new bit of research has emerged from the University of Texas at Dallas, which describes equipment that may allow people to see through walls -- and if that weren't wild enough, creators of the specialized CMOS imaging hardware believe the same technology could be integrated into our mobile phones. To pull off the feat, the scientists tapped into a portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that exists between microwave and infrared known as the terahertz range. Due to privacy concerns, the equipment is being designed to operate at a distance of no more than four inches, but its creator hypothesizes that the technology will still be useful for finding studs in walls, verifying documents and detecting counterfeit currency. In other words, this brand of x-ray vision isn't exactly on par with Superman's abilities, but it's bound to work better than mail order spectacles from Newark.

UT Dallas researchers seek to imbue your smartphone with X-ray superpowers originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Apr 2012 03:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TG Daily  |  sourceUT Dallas  | Email this | Comments