Posts Tagged: develop

Pebble’s Alumni are leading a community project to develop a Small Android Phone

Pebble fans have long lamented about the smartwatch company shutting down, missing its simple but clever wearables. One of Pebble’s alumni, Eric Migicovsky, is involved with a “community-based project” to produce a new device, but hold your excitement, it aims to create a compact Android smartphone instead of resuscitating the Pebble watch brand. Thanks to […]

Come comment on this article: Pebble’s Alumni are leading a community project to develop a Small Android Phone

Visit TalkAndroid

TalkAndroid

Researchers develop blood test that can reliably detect Alzheimer’s disease

When doctors need to confirm an Alzheimer's diagnosis, they often turn to a combination of brain imaging and cell analysis. Both have their downsides. The latter involves a lumbar puncture, an invasive and painful procedure that’s more commonly known as a spinal tap. A doctor will insert a needle into the lower back to extract a sample of the patient’s cerebrospinal fluid. A lab technician then tests the sample for signs of progressive nerve cell loss and excessive amyloid and tau protein accumulation. MRI scans are less invasive but they’re often expensive and accessibility is an issue; not every community has access to the technology.

The next best tool for diagnosing Alzheimer’s disease is a blood test. While some can detect abnormal tau protein counts, they’re less effective at spotting the telltale signs of neurodegeneration. But that could soon change. This week, in the journal Brain, a multinational team made up of researchers from Sweden, Italy, the UK and US detailed a new antibody-based blood test they recently developed. The new test can detect brain-derived tau proteins, which are specific to Alzheimer’s disease. Following a study of 600 patients, the team found their test could reliably distinguish the illness from other neurodegenerative diseases.

Dr. Thomas Karikari, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh and one of the co-authors of the study, told The Guardian he hopes the breakthrough could help other researchers design better clinical trials for Alzheimer’s treatments. “A blood test is cheaper, safer and easier to administer, and it can improve clinical confidence in diagnosing Alzheimer’s and selecting participants for clinical trial and disease monitoring,” he said. There’s more work to be done before the test makes its way to your local hospital. To start, the team needs to validate that it works for a wide variety of patients, including those who come from different ethnic backgrounds.

Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics

Honda teams up with MIT and others to develop curious AI

Honda is teaming up with three universities on a project aimed at developing curious artificial intelligence. The new three-year initiative, dubbed the Curious Minded Machine, will work towards an intelligent system that can learn continuously, much…
Engadget RSS Feed

AI robots can develop prejudices, just like us mere mortals

It's not only humans and animals that can hold biases against outsiders. Psychology and computer science researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Cardiff University have discovered that artificial intelligence robots can develop…
Engadget RSS Feed

Rolls-Royce is the latest to develop a flying taxi

The flying taxis from Airbus and Uber may have some fresh competition, albeit not quite in the way they might have expected. Rolls-Royce has unveiled an EVTOL (Electric Vertical Take Off and Landing) concept that could carry four to five passengers…
Engadget RSS Feed

[TA Deals] Learn to develop on Android with Java for just $15

Android and Java development go hand in hand, and right now you can learn both with our Android Oreo and Java Developer Mastery course, which also happens to be highly discounted. The course everything you need to know, from setting up your computer to start programming to UI design and debugging your Android apps. You’ll […]

Come comment on this article: [TA Deals] Learn to develop on Android with Java for just $ 15

Visit TalkAndroid


TalkAndroid

[TA Deals] Develop your own games with the 2017 Zero to Hero Game Developer bundle

Mobile game development can be tough to break into without any help, but luckily, you can score the 2017 Zero to Hero Game Developer bundle at a big discount right now. This bundle includes 9 courses with 413 lessons and over 80 hours of content. It covers a ton of different skills, including developing in […]

Come comment on this article: [TA Deals] Develop your own games with the 2017 Zero to Hero Game Developer bundle

Visit TalkAndroid


TalkAndroid

Researchers develop a drone that swoops and lands like a bird

Watch out, birds. The drones are coming for your jobs. Researchers at BMT Defence Services (BMT) and the University of Bristol in Britain have built a fixed-wing UAV that can land as well as its avian counterparts, reports Popular Mechanics. Although…
Engadget RSS Feed

Google teams up with GSK to develop ‘bioelectronic medicines’

By forcing startups like Google X, Fiber and Nest to behave like companies and take financial accountability, Alphabet believes that its subsidiaries are more likely to invest in projects that will ultimately make it money. Being in the expensive hea…
Engadget RSS Feed

Researchers develop ‘liquid wire’ that acts like spider silk

The properties of spider silk that make it so intriguing are also what makes it so difficult to recreate in a lab, but a team of researchers now believes they have cracked one puzzle about spider silk: how does it remain taut when even when stretched…
Engadget RSS Feed

Researchers develop nanowire battery that lasts “thousands” of charges

A new nanowire-based lithium-ion battery pioneered by University of California researchers can withstand thousands more charges than most batteries currently on the market.

The post Researchers develop nanowire battery that lasts “thousands” of charges appeared first on Digital Trends.

Cool Tech–Digital Trends