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Quota Time: Connecticut Troopers May Have Faked 1000s of Citations

The Truth About Cars

For bringing this shameful practice to light, it seems we can thank one Ken Barone, a person who toils as an associate director at the University of Connecticut. It’s no secret that those holding the levers of power sometimes look to such statistics when planning new roadways or adjusting speed limits, for example.

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Inexpensive 3D-Printed Microscope Can Spot Coronavirus in Blood

Cars That Think

He is the director of the Multidimensional Optical Sensing and Imaging Systems Lab at the University of Connecticut in Storrs. The light emitted from the laser diode illuminates the red blood cells, which is then magnified by the microscope objective lens. A number of diseases can modify a person's red blood cells.

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Xerox Parc’s Engineers on How They Invented the Future—and How Xerox Lost It

Cars That Think

Networks that link personal computers in offices. A later version of that tester, based on an Alto personal computer, also developed at PARC, ended up being used by Intel itself on its production line. If it was a personal computer, you had to be able to build 100.” Colorful weather maps on TV news programs. Laser printers.

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