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Radar is a technology that uses radio waves to detect and track the position, speed, and movement of objects.
Real-Time Location Intelligence to Power Smarter Apps and Experiences.
Radar is a system that uses radio waves to detect and monitor the location, speed, and direction of objects.
Real-time object detection and tracking.
Accurate tracking in all conditions.
Real-time location awareness.
Instant detection and response
Enhanced visibility and precision.
Improves tracking accuracy instantly.

LATEST
- Computing: Research and Innovation for Consumer AI ProfitabilityThere is a recent report by Menlo Ventures, 2025: The State of Consumer AI, stating that, “More than half of American adults (61%) have used AI in the past six months, and nearly one in five rely on it every day. Scaled globally, that translates to 1.7–1.8 billion people who have used AI tools, with 500–600 … Read more
- Explore the World Through Architecture: Iconic Styles Across ContinentsThere are various ways to study culture, like its culture and food, but perhaps nothing tells as much about a culture as the buildings it creates. There is something about architecture that keeps on fascinating, be it the soaring domes in Istanbul to the clean geometric lines characteristic of Tokyo. Whether you are interested in … Read more
- A Node.js-Powered App in Record TimeIn today’s developer case study, speed to market matters. The faster and better you can create a working application, the greater the chances of success. Node.js rapid app, through its flexibility, ease, and strong ecosystem, is rapidly becoming one of the top tools for setting development on a fast trajectory and evolving from delivery boy … Read more
- Open vs. closed models: AI leaders from GM, Zoom and IBM weigh trade-offs for enterprise useWant smarter insights in your inbox? Sign up for our weekly newsletters to get only what matters to enterprise AI, data, and security leaders. Subscribe Now Deciding on AI models is as much of a technical decision and it is a strategic one. But choosing open, closed or hybrid models all have trade-offs. While speaking … Read more
- Would you let AI plan your holiday itinerary?In his latest column, Jonathan McCrea is striking a lighter tone and telling us how AI has become his ideal travel companion. I’m heading away for a couple of weeks with the family. We’re going through the packing list now. Underwear, Calpol, flip flops, emergency sugar rations (for me, to be clear). The most important … Read more
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Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Aug. 12
Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles. Dog lovers, today’s Mini Crossword is barking your name. You’ll likely have fun with this one. Need answers? Read on. And if

Why AI chatbots make bad teachers – and how teachers can exploit that weakness
SEAN GLADWELL/Getty Images ZDNET’s key takeaways ChatGPT Study Mode offers little to distinguish it from normal ChatGPT. A Study Mode user must work hard to make the lesson interesting and rewarding. Developers and educators should push AI to stimulate students’ curiosity. In the nearly three years since OpenAI’s ChatGPT burst onto the scene, the use

NASA takes a trip to Seattle area to thank suppliers for work on the next moonshot
NASA astronaut Woody Hoburg faces the TV cameras at L3Harris’ Aerojet Rocketdyne facility in Redmond, Wash. An R-4D-11 thruster and a decontamination oven are off to his left. (GeekWire Photo / Alan Boyle) REDMOND, Wash. — The first crewed flight around the moon in more than 50 years is still months away, but NASA is

Google Gemini has started spiraling into infinite loops of self-loathing – and AI chatbots have never felt more human
Gemini has been calling itself a “disgrace” and a “failure” The self-loathing happens when coding projects fail A Google representative says a fix is being worked on Have you checked in on the well-being of your AI chatbots lately? Google Gemini has been showing a concerning level of self-loathing and dissatisfaction with its own capabilities

Why Did Some WW2 Pilots Fly With The Canopy Open?
Andy_oxley/Getty Images The F-35 Lightning II, the primary fighter jet of the U.S. military and its allies, can scream through the sky at up to Mach 1.6, or 1,200 miles per hour. It is literally impossible for today’s pilots to fly the most advanced aircraft the world has ever seen …

OK I did it, I bought the $37 AirPods Max dupes – and I’m absolutely fuming
C’mon, you’ve wondered about this too, right? I can’t be the only one. I mean, what if the dupes are just as good, for less than a tenth of the price? I see enough people wearing them every day to at least make me consider the notion. What if the folk who made the 2020-release

I went hands-on with ChatGPT Codex and the vibe was not good – here’s what happened
Aleksandra Konoplia/Getty Images ZDNET’s key takeaways ChatGPT Codex wrote code and saved me time. It also created a serious bug, but it was able to recover. Codex is still based on the GPT-4 LLM architecture. Well, vibe coding this is not. I found the experience to be slow, cumbersome, stressful, and incomplete. But it all

S’pore is the richest country thanks to… low prices?
Disclaimer: Unless otherwise stated, any opinions expressed below belong solely to the author. Yesterday Singapore’s Mothership revived last month’s ranking of the “richest countries of 2025” published by the esteemed British weekly, The Economist. I have to say, I missed the original release and was curious to see what it says (unfortunately, a lot of

IBM Cloud hit by Severity One outage with familiar symptoms • The Register
IBM Cloud experienced a Severity One outage on Monday that left customers unable to access resources. Big Blue’s incident report states “Customers may experience service outages, degraded performance, or inability to access IBM Cloud services.” That report starts with an entry time-stamped 12:59 UTC on Monday, a moment at which the company’s engineers were “actively