Portrait de Mikel Orobengoa

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ISEA

Sweat Sensors Will Change How Wearables Track Your Health.

Sweat, ick. It betrays our nervousness, leaves unsightly blotches on our clothes, drips down our faces, and makes us stink. Sure, it cools us when we overheat, but most of the time we think of it purely as an inconvenience.

We may soon, however, learn to like our sweat a lot more—or at least what it can reveal about our health. We’d certainly prefer giving a doctor a little sweat to being punctured for a blood test—or even providing a urine sample—as long as we didn’t have to run a mile or sit in a sauna to do it. And if sweat could provide constant updates about our bodies’ reactions to a medication, or track head trauma in athletes, we might just start to appreciate it.

A new material that requires no electricity uses the universe as a heat sink—even when the sun is shining.

A material that simultaneously reflects light and radiates heat at frequencies that vent it through the Earth’s atmosphere could one day help cool buildings on hot days. The material cools itself to a temperature below the ambient air, and has been tested on a rooftop at Stanford University by its inventors, who are now working on scaling up the design.

The new material uses optical engineering tricks to behave in ways that are counterintuitive and, at first glance, appear to violate the laws of thermodynamics, says Stanford electrical engineer Shanhui Fan, who developed it.

This connected suitcase just raised $1.4M and actually looks useful.

If Will.i.am can have a futuristic, high-tech backpack that charges his devices and amplifies music, there’s no reason why the average person can’t have high-tech luggage that’s a bit better adjusted to everyday life.

Enter Bluesmart, a self-weighting, auto-locking, device-charging suitcase that’s raised almost $1.4 million in funding through its Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign.

El grupo Sherpa renuncia a comprar Amper.

Los bancos han prorrogado hasta el 19 de diciembre el plazo para negociar la refinanciación de la deuda de Amper, después de que el grupo Sherpa renunciara a comprar la compañía.

Amper ha comunicado a la Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores (CNMV) que ha alcanzado un acuerdo con los bancos para prorrogar hasta el próximo 19 de diciembre el plazo para alcanzar un acuerdo de refinanciación de su deuda de 127 millones de euros.

Ikus-entzunezko Komunikazioa graduko irakasle eta ikasle ohiak irabazle Lekeitioko 37. Euskal Zinema Bileran.

Aitor Arregi Mondragon Unibertsitateko Ikus-entzunezko Komunikazioa graduko irakaslearen Zarautzen erosi zuen filmak irabazi ditu Lekeitioko 37. Euskal Zine Bilerako sari nagusia eta zuzendari onenaren saria. Gainera, gradu horretako 4. mailako ikasle ohiek egindako bi lanek ere jaso dituzte sariak: Anonymous eta Positibatzera film laburrek

MGEP-ek EUREKATURISM+ topaketan parte hartu du.

Ekitaldi honetan Ainhoa Serna doktoreak, Software ingeniaritza – Web ingeniaritza ikerketa lerroko ikertzaileak, TOURISM AND MOBILITY - SMART CITIES aurkeztu zuen. Lan hori SMARTUR proiektuaren ikerketa-emaitza da, “El turismo en destinos inteligentes” izenburua du eta Eusko Jaurlaritzako Industria, Berrikuntza, Merkataritza eta Turismoa Departamentuko ETORTEK programaren (2012-2014) barneko proiektu bat da.

11 Futuristic Ways to Improve Our Cities, From Robotic Rats to Talking Trash Cans.

City Hall. It's traditionally the place where technology gets stuffed into a drawer and forgotten. But as budgets recover from the Great Recession and smartphone-toting citizens prod municipal officials, cities are now more Boston Dynamics than Boss Tweed. Soon the pols will be promising sensor-driven pots that cook the chicken for you, just the way you like it.

1. Graffiti-busting drones. The Deutsche Bahn, Germany's railroad, is testing drones to see if they deter graffiti artists, after taggers did $9 million in damage to its railcars in 2012 alone.

Telehealth Companies See Investor Funding Jump in 2014 – The Doctor is Always In.

The promise of bringing the doctor’s office directly to one’s home or digital device is spurring a wave of investment into the growing telehealth market. According to CB Insights data, 2014 YTD has already seen the highest amount of funding of any year to the telehealth, or telemedicine, space since at least 2007.

Connected Car Space Sees Investment Deals Climb 4x Since 2009.

Over the past couple years, both Nokia Growth Partners and Intel Capital announced separate $100M Connected Car Funds. Is the promise of universally connected and intelligent vehicles closer to becoming a reality?

According to the data, investments to companies in and around the connected car space are indeed gaining traction among both venture capital and corporate investors. Firms tracked in the connected car market within the CB Insights database include a range of technologies, covering:

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