Welcome From Renewablesradar
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
Feature your latest articles
This sub headline is a text block global style that is larger and bolder.
Workers in Singapore are happy, but also burnt out. What’s up?
View Article
Sixteen Claude AI agents working together created a new C compiler
View Article
Malicious packages for dYdX cryptocurrency exchange empties user wallets
View ArticleKNOW MORE
How Hyundai Owners Are Saving Money On New Cars
According to information gathered by Cox Automotive — the parent company behind autotrader.com, Kelley Blue Book, and dealer.com — the average new car price in the U.S. is close to the record high of $49,929 set in December 2022. The cost of a new car in the U.S. in
Today’s NYT Connections Hints, Answers for July 31, #781
Looking for the most recent Connections answers? Click here for today’s Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles. Today’s NYT Connections puzzle has a fun numerical theme, with each category playing along with that topic, but featuring different clues. Once
NYT Connections hints and answers for Thursday, July 31 (game #781)
Looking for a different day? A new NYT Connections puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Wednesday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Connections hints and answers for Wednesday, July 30 (game
Blue Origin sets the date for controversial crypto billionaire’s $28M trip to space
A digital rendering shows crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun in a spacesuit. (Justin Sun via X / Twitter in 2021) Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin space venture says it’ll launch crypto billionaire Justin Sun on a suborbital space trip on Sunday, four years after he put in a precedent-setting $28 million bid for a ticket. Sun and
What Liberal Media? Axios Thinks Being Neutral Means Kissing Trump’s Ass
from the that’s-not-journalism dept The news org Axios launched in 2017, just as the first Trump administration began, created by some ex-Politico folks, claiming that they would be “an antidote to this madness” and talking about how “the world needed smarter, more efficient coverage” of important news stories. The reality is that Axios launders rightwing
Your Windows 11 PC has a secret restart method – here’s how to access it
Kerry Wan/ZDNET Usually, whenever a new feature comes out for Windows, Microsoft advertises it widely in a blog post to let everyone know. Or if they don’t, people discover the feature soon after an update. However, a helpful feature sometimes slips through the cracks, only to be unearthed years later. Also: Hate Windows 11? Here’s
Agentic AI: the rising threat that demands a human-centric cybersecurity response
AI agents were once theoretical, but now they are a tangible force reshaping the modern threat landscape. Also known as Computer-Using Agents (CUAs), these advanced AI bots can use applications and browse the internet to complete complex, often time-consuming tasks with minimal or no human oversight. Their rapid evolution is unlocking new efficiencies across a
DJI introduces its Amflow e-bikes to the U.S. market
DJI has been on a roll lately. The popular consumer drone brand has expanded in recent years to feature more types of products, from gimbal cameras to wireless microphones. Despite the looming threat of a ban on DJI drones in the United States, the company has also been aggressively expanding its footprint this summer. Recently,
Hackers hit SAP security bug to send out nasty Linux malware
A critical flaw in SAP NetWeaver is still being abused, months after patching Researchers saw it used to deploy Auto-Color This backdoor remains dormant when not in use A vulnerability in SAP NetWeaver is being exploited to deploy Linux malware capable of running arbitrary system commands and deploying additional payloads, experts have warned. Security researchers










