Month: May 2019

Startup predicts weather using cell phone signals

Boston-based startup ClimaCell is using cell phone signals and street cameras to create weather forecasts. The company says they’re more accurate too: as much as 60 percent better than existing providers such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. ClimaCell analyses the radar signals used by other forecasters and complements them with signals from millions…

By jrtrombold@gmail.com May 31, 2019 Off

NavVis Cloud turns laser scanner data into 3D buildings

Munich-based NavVis has launched NavVis Cloud, a cloud-based platform that gives laser scanning professionals access to its NavVis IndoorViewer. The web-based application transforms data captured by laser scanners into immersive 3D buildings. The software allows scanned data to automatically be structured into a basic model of the building. [embedded content] The building is displayed as…

By jrtrombold@gmail.com May 31, 2019 Off

Top Takeaways From the 2019 World Retail Congress

James Bidwell, Chair of Springwise, Co-founder of the innovation consultancy Re_Set and author of Disrupt! 100 Lessons in Business Innovation, shares his thoughts on this year’s World Retail Congress in Amsterdam.  The 2019 World Retail Congress in Amsterdam demonstrated that the world of retail continues to face an existential crisis on many levels. The difference between the massive…

By jrtrombold@gmail.com May 29, 2019 Off

Tech Explained: Cinematic Reality

In 2014, an unknown startup named Magic Leap raised just over half a billion US dollars to develop a technology called “cinematic reality” or cinematic virtual reality (CVR). While Magic Leap has yet to release a consumer product, the idea of cinematic reality is catching on in a broader way. So, what is cinematic reality…

By jrtrombold@gmail.com May 29, 2019 Off

Transparent solar panels make any object an energy collector

Spotted: Developed by a team of researchers at Michigan State University, the transparent luminescent solar concentrator absorbs nonvisible wavelengths of light. The transparency allows for the concentrator’s use on almost any surface, potentially transforming architecture and screen-based technology. The luminescent panel absorbs ultraviolet and near-infrared light and then guides it to the edge of the…

By jrtrombold@gmail.com May 29, 2019 Off