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Tag: R&D

  • Ericsson Secures NIB Loan to Boost 5G R&D

    Ericsson Secures NIB Loan to Boost 5G R&D

    Nasdaq is reporting Ericsson has secured a loan from Nordic Investment Bank (NIB) for $150 million. $98 million will be used to replace credit with the NIB that matures in 2021, with the remainder being used to invest in 5G R&D.

    The primary players in 5G equipment are Ericsson, Huawei and Nokia. With Huawei under increasing scrutiny worldwide, and many countries choosing not to use their equipment over security concerns, Ericsson has scored a number of high profile deals. According to Nasdaq, “Ericsson has reached almost 80 commercial 5G agreements with communications service providers, of which 24 are live networks.”

    The news follows an announcement a few weeks ago that Ericsson is also investing $230 million in a new 5G assembly line in Brazil.

    The additional R&D investment should help the company compete even more with Huawei, giving carriers worldwide another option. Given that many carriers have expressed concern that banning Huawei will lead to billions of dollars and years more effort to roll out 5G networks, a strong second and third option can only help.

  • Amazon Reportedly Ramping Up Its Drone Efforts

    Amazon Reportedly Ramping Up Its Drone Efforts

    It was just under a year ago that Amazon revealed Amazon Prime Air, its ambitious project that would see the online retail giant delivering packages to customers by drones. The announcement was met with a great deal of skepticism (for a variety or reasons), but Amazon has shown no signs of backing off from the goal.

    “One day, Prime Air vehicles will be as normal as seeing mail trucks on the road today,” Amazon said back then. Since then, it’s already been working on newer models of the drones. It April, CEO Jeff Bezos said the company was already working on its 7th and 8th-generation models.

    Now, Amazon is reportedly expanding its R&D efforts in Cambridge, which includes an increased focus on Amazon Prime Air. Natasha Lomas at TechCrunch reports:

    A source familiar with the company’s plans told TechCrunch it will focus on Prime Air, its autonomous delivery drones project, and on beefing up its speech tech R&D team.

    The e-commerce giant has been staffing up for Prime Air over the summer, including seeking hires in Cambridge. It has continued advertising for Prime Air positions in the U.K. university town this fall, including a Flight Operations Engineer role posted this month, a Site Leader role posted in October and a Senior Research Scientist role posted in September. The latter asks for “experience applying machine learning approaches to complex problems,” among other skills.

    According to the report, the new R&D expansion will also include work on speech technology.

    In August, rival Google introduced its own delivery drones under the name Project Wing. We haven’t heard a whole lot about that since then.

    Amazon, however, has been frequently increasing its methods of getting products to people. It’s even been testing same-day delivery by taxi.

    Image via Amazon

  • Obama Says No Google Or Facebook Without Govt.

    President Barack Obama is in full campaign mode. The one thing that he will preach to his supporters is that the Republicans are trying to gut the government. He said that under the Republican budget “the government is shrunk to the point where things that we take for granted as a society — as an advanced, responsible society — are gutted: education, science and research, early childhood education, caring for our environment, looking after our veterans, keeping up with our infrastructure, rebuilding our roads and our bridges so that they’re safe, food safety laws, our capacity to enforce basic consumer protections. All of this is shrunk to the point of near invisibility.”

    He went on to say the “vision” portrayed by the Ryan budget “is of an America where everybody is fending for themselves, a few are doing very well at the top, and everybody else is struggling to get by.” Obama obviously has a vision for how the government needs to interact with it’s citizens. His vision includes an all encompassing federal government and a diminished state government. His “European Spending” includes providing everything for it’s citizens including healthcare, jobs, and housing.

    “I believe in investing in basic research and science because I understand that all these extraordinary companies that are these enormous wealth-generators — many of them would have never been there; Google, Facebook would not exist, had it not been for investments that we made as a country in basic science and research,” Obama said. “I understand that makes us all better off.”

    What he doesn’t say, is that these technologies came from military programs, that then branched out to the private sectors. They did not come from the Federal government investing in companies that they feel push their vision of the country. This is one of the reasons that the military has had a historically massive budget, because of the fact they spend more on research and development than any other entity(govt or private) than anyone in the world. The DOD will spend $77 billion next year on R&D, the highest private company is Merck & Co Inc which will spend $10 billion. The DoD will in fact spend more on R&D than the top 10 companies put together.

    Republicans have their own ideas of what should be done with the Federal government and they say that Obama is distorting the facts while he is trying to get reelected.

    “Chairman Ryan, passed a responsible budget that would help put Americans back to work, protect our seniors, close President Obama’s massive budget deficits, and do ‘all of the above’ to address high gas prices,” House Speaker John Boehner said. “It makes the tough choices the president refuses to make to address the staggering deficits and debt that are slowing our economic recovery, costing jobs, and threatening to destroy the American dream.”

    Obama doesn’t take credit for Solyndra, failed stimulus, gas prices, economy, but he will take credit for Facebook and Google……WOW!!!(image) 14 hours ago via TweetDeck ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Facebook’s clearly made more changes than Obama.(image) 22 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    The Obama spin….Really??? and the sheep follow…Facebook Would Not Exist’ Without Government Funding http://t.co/iTBDOd0Y(image) 21 minutes ago via Tweet Button ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

  • Kinect Researchers Developing Mood Detection

    Reasearch teams at Microsoft are in the research and development stages of finding out whether or not the Kinect will be able to use a players posture and speach patterns to detect their mood. The player’s state of mind will then be integrated into the game narrative, Google+Reader”>develop is reporting.

    In an interview with MCV, Kinect executive Kudo Tsunoda talks about making people more “like actors within the game’s narrative.” If the Kinect can hone in on the players mood, they can use that to change how characters within the game react to them.

    “We want to get to the stage where not only can Kinect detect what you’re saying but also tone of voice and body stance, and work that into the narrative,” Tsunoda said. “There are some really compelling experiences to be gained from that”

    Since release a couple years ago, Kinect researchers and game developers have been expanding the uses for the device, making it more sensitive to players movements, and allowing them to scan objects into the game. “We’ve done so much work just with software to enhance Kinect’s abilities over time. Since it came out, we’ve been able to do a lot more seated play, let people scan in objects and have the game recreate them. Even Kinect Rush scans in players and turns them into Pixar characters, which is awesome.”

    Tsunoda talks about how Mass Effect 3 is the beginning stage of this process, integrating the Kinect into the roleplaying aspect of the game. “Mass Effect 3 does a great job of integrating Kinect in a unique way that’s different from other titles and in a way that really pays off for its fans.”

    “It’s been great to see how people are using Kinect in ways that we would never have thought of. I’m continually surprised by the stuff we see from Kinect’s development community on a daily basis. That’s what I’m most excited about: how much room there is to invent new things with Kinect.”

  • Google Announces App Engine Research Awards

    Google’s App Engine is used for a lot of different web applications. While it can be used for business applications, the more interesting uses come from the scientific and research fields. Google is now going to reward those who use app engine in the most interesting ways.

    Google announced today the creation of the Google+App+Engine+Blog%29″>App Engine Research Awards. These awards will go to support 15 projects that use App Engine to push scientific and academic research into new areas. The winners will each receive App Engine credits in the amount of $60,000 for one year to help continue their research. As an added bonus, Google Cloud storage will also be coming to these projects as part of the program.

    Some of the suggestions Google gives as projects they’re interested in are “social or economic experiments, developing academic aids, analysis of gene sequence data, or using App Engine MapReduce in ways we hadn’t even discovered.” They also say that if your research “has the potential to advance discovery, generates heavy data loads or is in need of an easy-to-use, easy-to-scale platform, we encourage you to submit your proposal.”

    Well, you heard them. If your research project could use some funding to continue the research on App Engine, you have until May 11 to submit your proposal. I’m sure Google would just love it if you could figure out how to power a megalomaniacal AI with a potato.

    DISCLAIMER: Google will not fund projects such as this:

    Google Announces App Engine Research Awards

  • Facebook Spends Very Little On R&D

    Facebook Spends Very Little On R&D

    Facebook is a big company. The company recently filed the largest tech IPO ever and is sitting on mountains of cash. It might be surprising then to hear that they only spend about 10 percent of its sales on research and development each year.

    A report from Bloomberg says that Facebook is sticking to a business model that is akin to Apple – spend only what you need on R&D and let the third-party developers fill in the rest. While that sounds like a lazy approach, it’s actually quite genius and is a win for both parties.

    Apple and Facebook both create platforms that have extensive amounts of R&D put into them. They develop the platform to provide the basic needs their users want. At a point where they’re happy with the platform, they open it up to third-party developers to fill in the rest. This lets Facebook focus more on the infrastructure and new additions while the third-party developers fill in the gaps with new technologies and experiences.

    One company mentioned by name in the report is Zynga. They are one of the best examples of a third-party developer taking the tools given to them by Facebook and expanding it into a business all of its own. Coincidentally, this business is exceedingly important to Facebook. The social network relies on Zynga and other game makers to create the unique experiences that keeps users on Facebook.

    The analysts speaking to Bloomberg also point to a Facebook that doesn’t expand much beyond its core business. They aren’t like Google who must be spending a fortune in R&D on stuff like HUD-glasses and driverless cars. Sticking to its guns, Facebook is able to keep its development costs low and profits high.

    Of course, Facebook does have the manpower and the resources to expand into other fields. Would you buy a Facebook developed operating system or phone? What if Facebook entered into hardware and began directly competing with Google? This is all just pure conjecture and fantasy at this point. Spending so little on R&D allows Facebook to keep making new features like Timeline that everybody seems to “love.”

    I think it still must be asked though. Would you buy into Facebook developed hardware? It would obviously be focused on social connectivity, but through a hardware angle. What form would such a technology take? Do you think Facebook would ever jump into making hardware? Let us know in the comments.

  • Intel and Nokia Collaborate on 3D Mobile UIs

    Intel and Nokia announced that they have created a joint laboratory at the University of Oulu aimed at creating new user interfaces and experiences. It’s called the Intel and Nokia Joint Innovation Center, and will employ about two-dozen R&D professionals.

    Intel says the lab will initially conduct research for mobile user experiences that could leverage the rapidly increasing capabilities of mobile devices. They’re looking for an experience that does for mobile what 3-D graphics have done for movies.

    "The University of Oulu’s focus on future telecommunications solutions as well as electronics and photonics made it the perfect location for the Intel and Nokia Joint Innovation Center," says Justin Rattner, Intel’s chief technology officer and director of Intel Labs.

    Intel and Nokia Collaborate on 3D R&D

    "3-D technology could change the way we use our mobile devices and make our experiences with them much more immersive," said Rich Green, SVP and chief technical officer at Nokia. "Our new joint laboratory with Intel draws on the Oulu research community’s 3-D interface expertise, and over time will lay down some important foundations for future mobile experiences."

    Intel says the lab is well aligned with the MeeGo open source platform recently launched by Intel and Nokia.