Why virtual assistants are the ‘killer app’ for wearables
‘Hearables’ and smart glasses will keep us in range of our virtual assistants everywhere, all the time.
‘Hearables’ and smart glasses will keep us in range of our virtual assistants everywhere, all the time.
What will smart glasses look like? How will they work? Who will use them? And how widespread will they be? It all became clearer this week.
They should acknowledge that Apple is doing face scanning right with Face ID.
Technology like the iPhone X's new camera system and Face ID will increasingly figure out how you feel, almost all the time.
Smart people are starting to cancel their social accounts and turn off smartphones. (Maybe that’s why they’re so smart.)
The most revolutionary product of the year so far is Google’s ‘trivial’ Clips camera. The reason might surprise you.
New technologies abound in the iPhone 8 and iPhone X, but one of them is not like the others.
When everyone is ‘remote’ at least part of the time, the whole idea of a remote worker is obsolete.
'Computational propaganda' started in politics, but may be coming soon to the world of business.
As costs go down, quality goes up and ease of use improves, wearable cameras will become more compelling, even at work. Here's why the body cam revolution is coming.
Major smartwatch makers – Apple, Samsung and others – rushed into the market before the technology was ready and didn’t focus on the enterprise first.
Only two virtual assistants – those from Google and Facebook – can eavesdrop on your conversations and chime in with helpful suggestions.
A smartphone can sap attention even when it's not in use or turned off and in your pocket. That doesn't bode well for productivity.
People are already confused about virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), mixed reality (MR), 360-degree video and heads-up displays.
Laying high-speed fiber across an entire city and connecting sensor-based public Wi-Fi kiosks is good for the public -- and very good for business.