Tech Xplore on MSN
Computer scientists clear a path to stream 3D 'volumetric' video
New research by Brown University computer scientists may be a key step in bringing volumetric video—video that can be viewed from virtually any perspective in a 3D scene—to computers and smart ...
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Alienware S5800 review
A mid-range powerhouse.
On Amazon, a 4TB SSD starts at $450 and 64GB of RAM starts at $700. If you were to add these yourself, you'd be paying at ...
Some folks think the only sci-fi on TV in the '80s was "Star Trek: TNG" and the declining years of the original "Doctor Who" ...
Bad CGI ages fast. Great CGI tends to survive because filmmakers know when to use it, when to hide it, and when to let practical effects do the heavy lifting. These 10 older movies did not rely on ...
After years of turmoil and uncertainty, Subnautica 2 is finally in early access but is this deep sea survival sequel worth the wait?
Business computer pioneer and the UK’s first professor of information systems ...
The combination of an age-old UFO enigma in America with the crypto world has led to the holding of Bitcoins in Roswell, the ...
The Next Generation or watching the sentient V'Ger search the cosmos for its creator in Star Trek: The Motion Picture, Gene ...
In the past several years, there have been many great dystopia sci-fi novels, each exploring different ways life as we know ...
A new method called PackUV compresses massive 3D video data into everyday video formats, potentially bringing immersive video experiences closer to home televisions and computers.
Six students across CMU’s College of Science and Engineering watched the launch while finishing their capstone project: a box designed to keep food and tools viable in the hostile environment that ...
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