Nearly 100 start-ups will exhibit this year at Eureka Park, a new area of CES designed to showcase early-stage, cutting-edge technology. We took a look at some of the products and designs, and we asked several of them about their expectations for the show.
In10did, founded in 2000 in Tampa Bay, manufactures a new style of keyboard that allocates all keystrokes of a standard keyboard to each of a user's 10 fingers. “We are introducing our technology and will make it available for sale with our "it Types" keyboard,” said president Wayne Rasanen. “Additionally, we will be showing it on a steering wheel as a possible solution to make computer input safer in vehicles.”
On May 31, 1889, the South Fork dam that held Lake Conemaugh failed, and 20 million tons of water descended upon Johnstown, Pa. The flood claimed the lives of 2,209 people and spurred...
More than 400,000 Syrians have crossed into Turkey seeking refuge from the conflict at home. Finding its resources stretched, Turkey is urgently appealing for international aid and...
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