For this week's Keep Reinventing segment brought to you by HP we are taking a look at a new product that upgrades the way people capture selfies. Hypno's Eye is a handheld, selfie ball which can be tossed into a crowd. Hypno Co-Founder Champ Bennett explains how this product is reinventing the selfie game.
"It takes the selfie out of selfie," says Bennett. "We realized it would be much more interesting to just take the camera to the party and the people itself."
Brands that utilize this product for events and experiences include Nike, Michael Kors, Samsung, and the artist Diplo. More than two million faces have been captured at over 3,500 events using Hypno's camera platform to date.
Visa is hoping to hand your credit card to an artificial intelligence “agent” that can find and buy clothes, groceries, airplane tickets and other items on your behalf.
Shares of Deliveroo, the food delivery service based in London, are hitting three-year highs on Monday after it received a $3.6 billion proposed takeover offer from DoorDash.
X, the social media platform owned by Trump adviser Elon Musk, is challenging the constitutionality of a Minnesota ban on using deepfakes to influence elections and harm candidates.
Elon Musk intends to focus more on his job as Tesla CEO, but it’s unclear if the billionaire will be able to solve a big problem of his own making.
The State Bar of California has disclosed that some multiple-choice questions in a problem-plagued bar exam were developed with the aid of artificial intelligence.
Instagram is expanding its use of artificial intelligence to determine if kids are lying about their ages on the app.
Google is confronting an existential threat as the U.S. government tries to break up the company as punishment for being a monopoly.
As Big Tech kicks off its quarterly earnings season this week, the industry’s bellwether companies have been thrust into a cauldron of uncertainty.
Google has been branded an abusive monopolist by a federal judge for the second time in less than a year.
Seafood lovers know the fatty marbling is what makes tuna sashimi and sushi so tasty, but now a computer can assess it too.
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