UK gov't launches blockchain tech project to track how you spend your benefits
Can virtual currency tech police how those on benefits spend their cash?
Can virtual currency tech police how those on benefits spend their cash?
After the world's oldest working digital computer was rebooted at The National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park last week, it showed its paces in a race against a man with a hand-cranked Facit mechanical calculator.
Having consulted on the matter, the government looks to set to press ahead with legislative plans that could force companies to reveal data they hold on customers to those customers, if they ask for it.
An algorithm by MIT graduates will scour Twitter to work out how the country's feeling towards the Olympics, and translate the result into a light show on the capital's big wheel
Some weeks back I met James Governor, Chris Dalby and Mark Charmer in London. James will be well known to some readers as the brash, outspoken industry analyst who has branched into eco issues with Greenmonk.
A German community is not just encouraging bicycles, it's avoiding cars. Peddlers in this part of Freiburg don't go door-to-door, they're the residents coming out of the doors.
Personal rapid transit (PRT) has seen its fair share of political strife and skepticism, particularly in the U.S.
The Anglo-Dutch company provides business consulting and systems integration as well as IT and business process outsourcing services across 36 countries.
A2B, courtesy Ultra Motors.This is the A2B, as in "gets you from A to B.
Phase one of the Clinton Climate Initiative (CCI) is a program called the Energy Efficiency Building Retrofit, under a group of designated "energy service companies" have been charged (get it?) with assessing buildings in 40 cities around the world, figuring out their energy-efficiency IQ, and making improvements.