Fever-scanner company pulls device off market following FDA warning
The company, Certify Global, was among the seven manufacturers tested in research first reported by The Washington Post that raised questions about their effectiveness in scanning for covid infections
Read MoreOne innovation we won’t be seeing soon: Over-the-air charging
Several companies have demonstrated over-the-air charging for smartphones, but none are trying to sell it
Read MoreHP's Reverb G2 is the ultimate headset for sim racing in VR
Want to try out virtual reality sim racing but worried about things being blurry? HP's latest headset is the fix.
Read MoreAmazon's Zoox reveals self-driving taxi
Amazon’s Zoox division has unveiled the autonomous vehicle it hopes will soon start delivering people.
Read MoreWith coronavirus pandemic in mind, NASA created a ventilator in just over a month that could aid critically ill patients
NASA is no stranger to incredible achievements -- it sent men and women to the moon, explored the depths of space with the Hubble Space Telescope and visited Mars multiple times. As the planet deals with the ramifications of the coronavirus pandemic, the space agency designed a critical piece of medical equipment in short supply to aid critically ill COVID-19 patients: a ventilator.
Read MoreEngineers crack 58-year-old enigma, make quantum breakthrough
A team of engineers in Australia has cracked a problem that has stood for more than half a century. In 1961, scientist and Nobel Laureate Nicolaas Bloembergen had suggested that the nucleus of a single atom could be controlled using only electric fields. Now, the engineers at the University of New South Wales Sydney have achieved just that.
Read MoreFortnite Chapter 2, Season 6 is here: Wild animals, Lara Croft, Neymar Jr. and everything coming
Forget about finding weapons in Fortnite. The video game's latest season will let players make their own.
Read MoreHacked security firm reportedly let staffers peek into clients’ cameras
Surveillance startup Verkada reportedly enabled dozens of staffers to peep on its clients — just like the hackers who attacked the company this week.
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