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Happy Birthday, Internet! « We All In Trouble… | Dlock’s Pop Culture Ref
http://lordhelpus.wordpress.com/ The Internet turns 40 years old today! The very first interconnection between two remotely located computer systems took place on October 29th, 1969. ADARPA working on inertial-nav 'Smart Boot' tech (The Register)
Truly kick-ass precision strike at last Elite Pentagon deathnerds have just awarded a contract for development of a highly accurate inertial navigation module which will fit in the heel of a shoe.…Darpa: Heat + Energy = Brains. Now Make Us Some
The U.S. military's premiere research agency is already trying to use math to predict human behavior and neuroscience to replicate a primate's brain. The next step: Lean on the study of energy and'Boss' Wins DARPA's Urban Challenge
11 robotic cars drove, crashed (into each other and into walls) got stuck in robotic traffic jams and even passed other human driven cars as they raced towards the finish line.US troops to scatter crawling Wi-Fi mini-droids
"The idea is that the diminutive, cheap, expendable droids would be scattered about by US troops on foot. They would then link up to form a wireless voice/data network which could penetrate intoPentagon to Merge Next-Gen Binoculars With Soldiers' Brains
"In a new effort dubbed "Luke's Binoculars" -- after the high-tech binoculars Luke Skywalker uses in Star Wars -- DARPA is setting out to create its own version of this science-fictionDarpa Wants Talking "Replicator"
"Imagine if the Enterprise's on-board replicator made walkie-talkies, instead of cups of tea. That's the latest way-out idea from Darpa, the Pentagon's blue-sky research arm."For 1st Woman With Bionic Arm, a New Life Is Within Reach - washingtonpost.com
"The device [...] works by detecting the movements of a chest muscle that has been rewired to the stumps of nerves that once went to her now-missing limb." This is technology making a real dThe MiTEx Mystery: Mobile microsats make nerds nervous
Tinfoil hats at the ready! DARPA has some sneaky satellites on the move, and no-one seems to know for sure what they're for.