-
In the spot with the most speed related accidents perhaps?
BBC: Speed Cameras
-
That traffic can be compared with a normal connection to the site to spot any artificial changes in speed.
FORBES: Researcher Announces N00ter, A Tool For Catching Net Neutrality Cheats
-
If a truck looms out of the blind spot during a high-speed freeway merge, for example, a driver would be better off if his phone's ringer was disabled at that moment, he says.
WSJ: Designing a Car That Takes Your Pulse, Senses If You're Ill
-
Carriers are looking to deploy picocells in dense urban hot spot areas to provide high-speed mobile data service where it is most needed.
FORBES: The Solution For The Bandwidth Shortage? Better Silicon Devices
-
Speed obliged from the spot and suddenly the game had a different complexion, with Nicolas Anelka a threat as he silkily began to find space behind the Spurs defence.
BBC: SPORT | Football | Premiership | Tottenham 4-1 Bolton
-
Undermining drivers' confidence in their ability to spot cameras, the study concluded, would reduce speed-related accidents.
ECONOMIST: Speed cameras
-
From a research station operated by the National Science Foundation called Summit Camp, a spot where the ice sheet is about 2 miles thick, GROVER will crawl at an average speed of 1.2 mph (2 kilometers per hour).
ENGADGET: NASA's GROVER eco-rover to examine Greenland's ice sheet (video)
-
The ViaSat-1 high-capacity Ka-band spot beam satellite includes coverage over North America and Hawaii, enabling a variety of new, high-speed broadband services for WildBlue in the U.S., Xplornet in Canada, and JetBlue Airways on its domestic U.S. fleet.
ENGADGET: ViaSat-1 sends its first words through the stratosphere to cooing stateside relatives
-
Ford's prototype system aims to lessen distraction by taking readouts from biometric sensors and combining the data with information from the car, including speed, steering-wheel angle, and data from radar sensors or cameras used in blind-spot obstacle detection or cruise control.
WSJ: Designing a Car That Takes Your Pulse, Senses If You're Ill