Not exact matches
«The vast majority of people still like to be told what to listen to,» says Mark Mulligan, a media and
technology analyst and managing director of Midia Research
in the U.K. (Indeed, that Nielsen survey revealed 61 % of Americans still find out about new music through traditional and satellite
radio.)
The respondents were also
in favour of the expansion of programs like Nexus, which allows faster processing of pre-screened travellers to the U.S. and Canada by using photo - ID with
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID)
technology and iris scanning.
Colt was a pioneer of this
technology in the 1990s, when it built a prototype that would only fire when the user was wearing a ring emitting a certain
radio frequency.
As of last Wednesday, FM
radio can no longer be found
in the Scandinavian country, which eliminated the stations as part of a national
technology upgrade.
Yet the company is definitely active
in the tech area: It's tested and implemented mobile apps,
radio - frequency identification
technology (RFID), the internet of things devices, mobile payment options and PayPal deposits.
By leveraging
technologies such as
radio frequency identification (RFID) tags to drive inventory transparency (a key tenet of omnichannel success), Lululemon uses stores as distribution centers to optimize the supply chain and improve inventory turns while enabling an elevated
in - store experience for educators and guests.
The risk of cyber attacks targeting ships» satellite navigation is pushing nations to delve back through history and develop back - up systems with roots
in World War Two
radio technology.
Marc if you consider that the thinking behind this plan effectively captures the intent of your Stimulus Plan, contact me to discuss another
technology based proposal which resolves a significant current commercial problem concerning lack of interoperability among technical standards
in the digital satellite
radio sector.
His research on the economics of
technology has been discussed
in White House reports, Congressional testimony, European Commission documents, the Economist, the Globe and Mail, the National Post, CBC
Radio, National Public
Radio, Forbes, Fortune, the Atlantic, the New York Times, the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, and elsewhere.
' American Honda» Ameritech» Baltimore Sunfest» Batesville Caskets» Boise Cascade Office Solutions» Burlington Resources» Campbell's Soup» Diamler Chrysler» Dominos Pizza» Dontech Optical» Federal Express» FINA Oil» General Electric»
In & Out Burger» India Times» Johnson & Johnson» Kentucky Power» KFC Franchise Owners» Lifetime Television» McGraw Hill Publishing» Minnesota Power» Mobile Mini» NCR» New England Telephone» Northrup Aircraft» Oman Resources (Saudi Arabia)» PBS Business &
Technology» Reno
Radio» Scott Paper» Siemens Carrier Networks» Sola Optical» Sonic Burger» SONY Pictures» Sprint / Nextel» Sunkist» Supercuts» TRW» Virgin Records» Xerox
BlackBerry's ability to manage inventory and asset risk; BlackBerry's reliance on suppliers of functional components for its products and risks relating to its supply chain; BlackBerry's ability to obtain rights to use software or components supplied by third parties; BlackBerry's ability to successfully maintain and enhance its brand; risks related to government regulations, including regulations relating to encryption
technology; BlackBerry's ability to continue to adapt to recent board and management changes and headcount reductions; reliance on strategic alliances with third - party network infrastructure developers, software platform vendors and service platform vendors; BlackBerry's reliance on third - party manufacturers; potential defects and vulnerabilities
in BlackBerry's products; risks related to litigation, including litigation claims arising from BlackBerry's practice of providing forward - looking guidance; potential charges relating to the impairment of intangible assets recorded on BlackBerry's balance sheet; risks as a result of actions of activist shareholders; government regulation of wireless spectrum and
radio frequencies; risks related to economic and geopolitical conditions; risks associated with acquisitions; foreign exchange risks; and difficulties
in forecasting BlackBerry's financial results given the rapid technological changes, evolving industry standards, intense competition and short product life cycles that characterize the wireless communications industry, and the company's previously disclosed review of strategic alternatives.
Many factors could cause BlackBerry's actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward - looking statements, including, without limitation: BlackBerry's ability to enhance its current products and services, or develop new products and services
in a timely manner or at competitive prices, including risks related to new product introductions; risks related to BlackBerry's ability to mitigate the impact of the anticipated decline
in BlackBerry's infrastructure access fees on its consolidated revenue by developing an integrated services and software offering; intense competition, rapid change and significant strategic alliances within BlackBerry's industry; BlackBerry's reliance on carrier partners and distributors; risks associated with BlackBerry's foreign operations, including risks related to recent political and economic developments
in Venezuela and the impact of foreign currency restrictions; risks relating to network disruptions and other business interruptions, including costs, potential liabilities, lost revenues and reputational damage associated with service interruptions; risks related to BlackBerry's ability to implement and to realize the anticipated benefits of its CORE program; BlackBerry's ability to maintain or increase its cash balance; security risks; BlackBerry's ability to attract and retain key personnel; risks related to intellectual property rights; BlackBerry's ability to expand and manage BlackBerry ® World ™; risks related to the collection, storage, transmission, use and disclosure of confidential and personal information; BlackBerry's ability to manage inventory and asset risk; BlackBerry's reliance on suppliers of functional components for its products and risks relating to its supply chain; BlackBerry's ability to obtain rights to use software or components supplied by third parties; BlackBerry's ability to successfully maintain and enhance its brand; risks related to government regulations, including regulations relating to encryption
technology; BlackBerry's ability to continue to adapt to recent board and management changes and headcount reductions; reliance on strategic alliances with third - party network infrastructure developers, software platform vendors and service platform vendors; BlackBerry's reliance on third - party manufacturers; potential defects and vulnerabilities
in BlackBerry's products; risks related to litigation, including litigation claims arising from BlackBerry's practice of providing forward - looking guidance; potential charges relating to the impairment of intangible assets recorded on BlackBerry's balance sheet; risks as a result of actions of activist shareholders; government regulation of wireless spectrum and
radio frequencies; risks related to economic and geopolitical conditions; risks associated with acquisitions; foreign exchange risks; and difficulties
in forecasting BlackBerry's financial results given the rapid technological changes, evolving industry standards, intense competition and short product life cycles that characterize the wireless communications industry.
«The
radio silence from executives over the last few days has added fuel to the growing Cambridge fire and if this data leak fiasco is left to fester it could take on a life of its own leading to tougher regulatory oversight / chatter,» Daniel Ives, head of
technology research at GBH Insights, said
in a research note.
This is the third possibility: Life appears and
in some cases develops into intelligent beings, but when it reaches the stage of sending
radio signals it will also have the
technology to make nuclear bombs and other weapons of mass destruction.
Whereas
radio, television, and film are usually linear, many aspects of network interactivity find expression
in new media
technologies that are two way.
And the centrality of the power significance of the communications
technology is attested by the pivotal importance of which faction controls the
radio - TV stations and the telephone systems whenever a coup or revolution takes place
in an African, Asian or Latin American country.
In fact, most of our attention is focused on only a few of the components: film, audio and video tapes / cassettes (storage
technologies); and broadcast
radio and TV and cable (distribution
technologies).
Especially important
in supplying such information are books, magazines, newspapers,
radio, and television, through which the public can best be kept continually abreast of developments and possibilities both
in weapons
technology and
in efforts toward armament reduction and control, and can be made aware of the nature and scope of the peril
in which the world stands so long as war remains the ultimate resort
in the settlement of international differences.
A close parallel is observable between a comment by an early protagonist of the theory, Dorwin Cartwright, who
in 1949 suggested that, «it is conceivable that one persuasive person could, through the use of mass media, bend the world's population to his will,» (3) and the 1979 affirmation by NRB Executive Secretary Ben Armstrong, «I believe that God has raised up this powerful
technology of
radio and television expressly to reach every man, woman, boy, and girl on earth with the even more powerful message of the gospel.»
In his recent book The Electronic Church (Nelson, 1979), he writes:» I believe that God has raised up this powerful
technology of
radio and television expressly to reach every man, woman, boy, and girl on earth with the even more powerful message of the gospel.»
The most significant
technology,
in cultural terms, turns out to be not the steam turbine, or X-rays, or
radio waves.
Not only is every room stocked with top - quality linens and refreshments, but also has all the
technology you would expect from a modern inn like a flat panel TV with pay - per - view and
in - room check out; complimentary Wireless high - speed Internet access; two direct - dial telephones with voicemail and two - line data and voice ports; and a CD clock
radio and MP3 player with iPod docking station.
Unlike laser surgery,
in which extreme heat is used to cut tissue, ElectroThermal Arthroscopy employs
radio - frequency
technology, which is less costly and safer.
On the
radio call
ins a caller called
in to point out the contrast between the referees getting aid from
technology in the Rugby, before flicking over to see players arguing with the ref
in the football, wasting more time etc. then
in the rugby.
In a pilot venture with SiriusXM Satellite
Radio, Stanford is launching two talk programs hosted by faculty members: The Future of Everything, focused on engineering, science and
technology, and School's
In, focused on teaching, learning and education.
FDR (
radio), JFK (television), Barack Obama (Internet), and recently Donald Trump (social media) all exploited some new
technology in their own times, providing them significant advantages
in the presidential race.
The company has applied its expertise
in RFID (
radio frequency identification)
technology to map and locate underground utilities; it has used its understanding of the healthcare industry to develop innovations that help the early diagnosis of heart and lung conditions; and its range of pocket projectors are the ultimate presentation devices for business people on the go.
And I am not suggesting that tweets from the chamber should be protected by parliamentary privilege... But
in this age of immediate crowd - sourced mass communication, the idea that the Commons chamber can cut itself off from modern
technology and social media is as doomed as when written reports of Commons debates were banned
in the 18th century, or when discussion of current Commons business on the
radio was not allowed until the 1950s, or, indeed, as obsolete as the ban on television itself before 1989.
Since the era of mass communications really began - towards the end of the nineteenth century -
technology has completely reset the way political consultants work on two occasions: firstly, during the inter-war period, when
radio became commonplace and politicians had the chance to speak directly to the masses; and secondly,
in the 1950s and 60s, when TV ownership mushroomed and politicians could construct and project image on a massive scale.
Aregbesola said
radio stations must at this hardship times do all they could to support the government's efforts
in promoting innovative and
technology - based ideas to move the nation forward.
«
In addition to several excellent site options and a low - cost operating environment, we believe that it is our people, highly - skilled workforce, world - class colleges and universities, and strong regional competency in radio - frequency identification, sustainable packaging, flight controls, drone technology, high - performace computing, software development, and data analytics that will help our proposal stand out.&raqu
In addition to several excellent site options and a low - cost operating environment, we believe that it is our people, highly - skilled workforce, world - class colleges and universities, and strong regional competency
in radio - frequency identification, sustainable packaging, flight controls, drone technology, high - performace computing, software development, and data analytics that will help our proposal stand out.&raqu
in radio - frequency identification, sustainable packaging, flight controls, drone
technology, high - performace computing, software development, and data analytics that will help our proposal stand out.»
«
In addition to several excellent site options and a low - cost operating environment, we believe that it is our people, highly - skilled workforce, world - class colleges and universities, and strong regional competency in radio - frequency identification (RFID), sustainable packaging, flight controls, drone technology, high - performance computing, software development, and data analytics that will help our proposal stand out.&raqu
In addition to several excellent site options and a low - cost operating environment, we believe that it is our people, highly - skilled workforce, world - class colleges and universities, and strong regional competency
in radio - frequency identification (RFID), sustainable packaging, flight controls, drone technology, high - performance computing, software development, and data analytics that will help our proposal stand out.&raqu
in radio - frequency identification (RFID), sustainable packaging, flight controls, drone
technology, high - performance computing, software development, and data analytics that will help our proposal stand out.»
Buhari, who doubles as Chairman, Senate Committee on Information and Communications
Technology (ICT) and Cybercrime, while speaking on Saturday
in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital during a live
radio program on Fresh FM tagged «Political Circuit» monitored by DAILY POST, insisted that the clamour for governorship ticket to be zoned to a particular senatorial district
in the state will not be
in the interest of the party.
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is
in the process of transforming its Very Large Array
radio telescope into the — wait for it — Expanded Very Large Array, thanks to digital
technology that will boost the Socorro, N.M., facility's already impressive ability to tune
in on black holes, supernovae and the rest of the deep space menagerie.
The MWA is located
in Western Australia's remote Murchison region, one of the most
radio - quiet areas on the planet and far from human activity and
radio interference caused by
technology.
In 1865, James Clerk Maxwell predicted that light travels in waves, but humanity needed Heinrich Hertz's first radio transmitter to unleash modern technology and unveil new types of cosmic phenomen
In 1865, James Clerk Maxwell predicted that light travels
in waves, but humanity needed Heinrich Hertz's first radio transmitter to unleash modern technology and unveil new types of cosmic phenomen
in waves, but humanity needed Heinrich Hertz's first
radio transmitter to unleash modern
technology and unveil new types of cosmic phenomena.
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, sporting the latest
in camera and
radio technology, is capable of spotting objects only a few feet across.
To find out, Judd Bowman of Arizona State University
in Tempe and Alan Rogers of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology deployed a small
radio antenna called EDGES
in Western Australia.
Just as
radio channels close to each other
in frequency can bleed into one another, creating static, so too can
radio interference from different
technologies bleed into the channels astronomers use to observe.
Cynthia Graber is a print and
radio journalist who covers science,
technology, agriculture, and any other stories
in the U.S. or abroad that catch her fancy.
With an 85 - foot
radio telescope
in Green Bank, W.Va., he looks at two sunlike stars for signs of alien
technology.
Since
radio towers began climbing over towns and cities
in the early 20th century, the air has grown thick with wireless communication, the platform on which
radio, television, cellphones, satellite broadcasts, Wi - Fi, GPS, remote controls and hundreds of other
technologies rely.
Using the world's largest
radio telescope, two astronomers from Swinburne University of
Technology in Australia have detected the faint signal emitted by atomic hydrogen gas
in galaxies three billion light years from Earth, breaking the previous record distance by 500 million light years.
We're talking on Tuesday afternoon, by the time people listen to this, things may have fundamentally changed, so I am going to assume that people will follow it with all the
technology available:
radio, TV, and especially on their computers, just seeing developments, practically
in real - time.
Instead of NFC, the company has (since the debut of its iPhone 4S
in 2011) endorsed Bluetooth 4.0, which includes a low - energy version of the wireless
radio technology that is a bit slower than NFC but has a much greater range (about 50 meters).
«
In the 1950s, when the SETI field started,
radio waves were the best
technology we could imagine aliens using,» says Avi Loeb of Harvard University, one of Breakthrough Listen's research leaders.
So a team of researchers led by Romina Scardamaglia, a behavioral ecologist at the University of Buenos Aires, decided to use new
radio - tracking
technology to snoop on two kinds of devious cowbirds
in Argentina.
Ira Flatow is the host of National Public
Radio's Science Friday, an in - depth talk show that reaches radio and Internet listeners with discussions on science, technology, health, space, and the environ
Radio's Science Friday, an
in - depth talk show that reaches
radio and Internet listeners with discussions on science, technology, health, space, and the environ
radio and Internet listeners with discussions on science,
technology, health, space, and the environment.
The BBC will launch a digital audio broadcasting service
in September 1995, making Britain the first country
in the world to use the new European
technology for a fully fledged digital
radio service.
Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) have demonstrated that quantum physics might enable communications and mapping
in locations where GPS and ordinary cellphones and
radios don't work reliably or even at all, such as indoors,
in urban canyons, underwater and underground.