Welcome to NewsforDev | News for Development
 Home  | Contact Sources  | Newsletters  | Top Ten  | Search  | Help
  NewsforDev is a service of the Technical Cooperation Agency ACP-EU (CTA)  
 Submit Source
 New User
Username

Password

Dossiers
 ACP-EU 
 Agriculture 
 Biodiversity 
 Biofuels 
 CTA 
 Climate Change 
 Development 
 HIV/AIDS 
 ICT 
 ICT4D 
 S&T 
 S&T4D 
 Trade 
 World News 

My News

Subscribe to Source: The Future of Things | Magazine

User Login | Lost your Password?
 

New User

Email:
Username:
Country:
Security Code:Security Code
Type Security Code:
 
The Future of Things / Magazine
Online magazine dedicated to bringing original content on science, technology, and medicine from around the world. TFOT aims to provide comprehensive, accurate, and high quality coverage of emerging scientific and technological innovations.
Special Operations Gets Hummingbird UAV
02 12 2008
The United States Special Operations Command (SOCOM) is in the process of deploying its first Boeing A160 Hummingbird unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). The new UAV, developed by Boeing in conjunction with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) looks like a traditional helicopter but it goes higher, stays airborn longer, travels farther, and runs more quietly than any helicopter in current use. Its biggest bonus - it doesn't have a pilot that could be shut down.
USB 3.0 Unleashed - First Products - 2010
02 12 2008
The USB 3.0 Promoter Group released the USB 3.0 specifications at the first SuperSpeed USB Developers Conference in San Jose, California, held on on Monday, November 17th. The completion of the specification, the technical map for USB 3.0 - also known as SuperSpeed USB, will enable manufacturers to produce new USB 3.0 based devices for the market in about a year.
Special Operations Gets Hummingbird UAV
01 12 2008
The United States Special Operations Command (SOCOM) is in the process of deploying its first Boeing A160 Hummingbird unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). The new UAV, developed by Boeing in conjunction with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) looks like a traditional helicopter but it goes higher, stays airborn longer, travels farther, and runs more quietly than any helicopter in current use. Its biggest bonus - it doesn't have a pilot that could be shut down.
More...
Subscribe: receive free updates in your mailbox!


Latest News | Login: Users

© 2008 CTA | Disclaimer

Website by Maarten van den Berg | RISQ Consultancy

Powered by MyHeadlines © 2004-2006 Mike Agar.

Page generation: 3.49 Seconds