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#EmTechMIT Coverage
Presented by MIT Technology Review
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Workers at This Startup Will Soon Swap Their PC Monitors for Augmented Reality Glasses
Meron Gribetz says that his gesture controlled glasses can make you more productive.
by Tom Simonite

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Stop “Gene Spills” Before They Happen
Proposal would use gene-editing patents to force scientists to open their labs to scrutiny.
by Antonio Regalado

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Making VR Movies You’d Actually Want to Watch
Google’s in-house VR filmmaker has figured out how to improve cinematic content for VR headsets.
by Elizabeth Woyke

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EmTech is where technology, business, and culture converge. The 16th annual event examines this year's most significant news on emerging technologies.
Features
Work
Learning to Prosper in a Factory Town
Greenville, South Carolina, has bet its future on high-tech manufacturing. Who wins and who loses in this increasingly automated economy?

Better batteries
What We’re Doing Wrong in the Search for Better Batteries
The world needs cheap, scalable batteries to support a clean energy grid—but there’s a big obstacle standing in the way.

Security and privacy
Major Opponent of Phone Encryption Still Expects Congress to Roll the Technology Back
The top prosecutor in Manhattan thinks Washington will finally heed his call to make Apple resume opening devices to investigators.
Smartphones and apps
Google’s New Pixel Phone Matters (But You’re Not Going to Buy It)
The device is the first phone Google designed from scratch, and it has its AI-powered personal assistant built in.
Wearable devices and sensors
This Contact Lens Will Kick-Start the Internet of Disposable Things
Objects that recycle ambient radio signals can get online without a power source.

View from the Marketplace
Emerging Trend Analysis: What is Digital Performance Management?
Organizations serious about gaining—and maintaining—competitive advantage must optimize their digital customer experience. This introduction to DPM explains how this emerging approach can provide serious business value.

Sponsored White Paper
IPO Readiness: Control the Variables Within Your Grasp
Produced in partnership with Deloitte
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How ubiquitous information and communication are transforming our lives.
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This E-Ink Post-It Never Needs to Be Charged
It may be time to say goodbye to your Sharpie.
by Jamie Condliffe

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Workers at This Startup Will Soon Swap Their PC Monitors for Augmented Reality Glasses
Meron Gribetz says that his gesture controlled glasses can make you more productive.
by Tom Simonite

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Making VR Movies You’d Actually Want to Watch
Google’s in-house VR filmmaker has figured out how to improve cinematic content for VR headsets.
by Elizabeth Woyke

Features
Automated cars
What to Know Before You Get In a Self-driving Car
Uber thinks its self-driving taxis could change the way millions of people get around. But autonomous vehicles aren’t anywhere near to being ready for the roads.

The Growing Threats to Cybersecurity
Sponsored by Northrup Grumman
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Israeli Hacking Firm Said to Be Behind Groundbreaking iOS Malware
NSO Group, a firm that trades in spyware, stands accused of peddling an unprecedented attack on iPhones.
by Jamie Condliffe

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Security Experts Agree: The NSA Was Hacked
Analysis of the software tools made available by the Shadow Brokers suggests that they’re the real deal.
by Jamie Condliffe

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Hackers Claim to Be Selling Secret U.S. Spy Software
A group called the Shadow Brokers appears to be in possession of NSA code, though it’s unclear exactly how powerful it is.
by Jamie Condliffe

Robotics
Smart machines are beginning to speak to us and act on their own.
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Tesla Announces New Sensors and Puts the Brakes on Autopilot
Every new Tesla will be kitted out with all the hardware that Elon Musk claims is required for the cars to go fully autonomous—but they won’t be allowed to for now.
by Jamie Condliffe

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Searching Rat Brains for Clues on How to Make Smarter Machines
A $28 million government project is betting that tapping rodent brains will pay big dividends for AI research.
by Tom Simonite

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Novelty of Driverless Cars Wears Off Quickly for First-Timers
NuTonomy is conducting “the world’s largest, most expensive focus group” with self-driving taxis in Singapore.
by Will Knight

Working Toward Tomorrow’s Healthcare Today
Sponsored by Horizon Pharma
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Fetal Cells Offer Promise in Prenatal Testing
A scientist says a blood test that can discern a fetus’s entire genome is coming.
by Bonnie Rochman

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In Rehab Clinics, a Possible New Role for Brain-Computer Interfaces
Paralyzed people regained some motion after operating a brain-controlled robotic exoskeleton.
by Ryan Cross

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A Big Step Forward in the Quest for a Better Painkiller
Scientists have developed a new drug that promises the pain-numbing effects of opioids without the addiction.
by Adam Piore

Innovations, Ideas, and Insights
Provided by BBVA
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The Ethics of Human Enhancement
Recent scientific advancements increasingly allow humans to improve everything from memory to appearance. But those capabilities come with questions about how they should be used, and who should make those decisions.
by Andy Miah

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Outlook for the Internet of Things
Fast-growing networks of smart, Web-connected objects are creating both opportunities and challenges—and this is just the beginning.
by Juan Ignacio Vázquez Professor of Telematics, University of Deusto

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A Gender Power Shift in the Making
We are well into the second decade of the 21st century, but the vexing topic of gender in corporate life is commanding more serious attention than ever before.
by Alison Maitland







