[Announcement] New Deals Section on The Tech Journal
We are happy to announce our brand new Deals section. With the collaboration of new partner, we are bringing amazing deals on gadgets, accessories, consumer tech, digital products and many more.
We are happy to announce our brand new Deals section. With the collaboration of new partner, we are bringing amazing deals on gadgets, accessories, consumer tech, digital products and many more.
At present, multiple SIM card supported smartphones are available in the market. But lately, Japanese company DoCoMo has announced world’s first wearable SIM that could let people use one number with any device!
Now a days, big thing are coming in small packages, thanks to science and technology. And this might be the best example of the saying – London-based university student George Mabey has created such a scooter which can be folded up to the size of an A4 piece of paper!
Twitter is used for many purposes, from sharing breaking news to indulging in discussions about the buzzing topics. A new account has put the site to a new use, aiming to tweet all the words in English language. The task will take an expected 7 years to complete.
We have often seen laser beams popularly deployed in spaceships in sci-fi movies and NASA is about to turn that into a reality. The space agency sent specialized hardware to International Space Station and this equipment was recently successful in beaming a video back to Earth using laser.
Imagine an entire city with roads, street signs, pedestrians, bicycles, parked cars and buildings, all meant to test drive automated vehicles. That is precisely what Mobility Transformation Facility at University of Michigan is. The 32-acre facility will open for vehicle testing this fall.
Turkish government has been increasingly proactive in banning online services in the last year or so. In a rare reversal of this trend, the government has now unbanned YouTube after a two-month blackout of the video service.
NSA has been at the heart of a huge debate about digital privacy for the past year or so. A new report now suggests that the agency collects millions of images per day from the web for use in facial recognition to find intelligence targets.