Ohio

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  • Apple's AirTags 4-pack falls back to $89

    Proposed Ohio legislation would criminalize AirTag stalking

    by 
    Igor Bonifacic
    Igor Bonifacic
    05.14.2022

    A group of bipartisan lawmakers in Ohio has introduced a bill to criminalize AirTag stalking.

  • Intel

    Intel is spending $20 billion to build a massive chip-making facility in Ohio

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    01.21.2022

    Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is expecting it to become "the largest silicon manufacturing location on the planet."

  • LOS ANGELES, CALIF. - NOV. 24, 2021. Traffic streams along the San Bernardino Freeway in downtown Los Angeles on Thanksgiving getaway day on Wednesday, Nov. 24, 2021. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

    Honda is piloting a road-monitoring system to spot faded lane markers

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    12.14.2021

    A new pilot program from Honda Research Institute USA could one day help local highway and traffic departments keep a closer eye on the state of the roads in their care, using the cars travelling upon them.

  • Hyoung Chang/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images via Getty Images

    EasyMile forced to suspend autonomous shuttle rides in 10 US states

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    02.26.2020

    US vehicle safety regulators have suspended operations for autonomous shuttle company EasyMile after a passenger in Ohio was injured in a braking incident last week. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the battery-powered bus service will be halted in 10 US states while it investigates "safety issues related to both vehicle technology and operations."

  • Google News Initiative

    Google’s plan to improve local news will start in Youngstown, Ohio

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    07.18.2019

    Today, Google announced that Youngstown, Ohio, will be the first city in its Compass Experiment, a joint venture with newspaper publishing company McClatchy to revive local news. The announcement couldn't be more timely, as Youngstown's long standing publication The Vindicator will close its doors on August 31st.

  • AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

    Google will have offices and data centers in 24 states by the end of 2019

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    02.13.2019

    Google is still closely associated with California to many people (and to a lesser degree New York), but it's determined to change that reputation. The company is launching a $13 billion expansion in 2019 that will give it a total US footprint of 24 states, including "major expansions" in 14 states. The growth includes its first data center in Nevada, a new office in Georgia, and multi-facility expansions in places like Texas and Virginia. This is on top of known projects like its future New York City campus.

  • Smart Columbus

    Ohio's first self-driving shuttle service begins on December 10th

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    12.04.2018

    Ohio wants to be a haven for self-driving cars, and it's already acting on those plans... if slowly. Smart Columbus and DriveOhio have announced that the state's first autonomous shuttle service, Smart Circuit, will launch in Columbus on December 10th. It's not a terribly ambitious route. Three May Mobility vehicles will cover a 1.5-mile loop around the Scioto Mile between 6AM and 10PM, with departures from each of the four stops every 10 minutes. There's a human backup driver onboard, too. However, rides are free. So long as you're not in a hurry (the shuttles drive at a modest 25MPH) and can take one of the four available seats, it won't hurt to hop aboard.

  • Matthew Horwood/Getty Images

    Ohio is the first state to accept bitcoin for paying business taxes

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    11.25.2018

    There's a lot of legal uncertainty in the US surrounding cryptocurrency, but Ohio is pressing forward. As of this week, it'll be the first state to accept bitcoin for paying tax bills. The Wall Street Journal notes this will be limited to businesses purposes and isn't going directly into Ohio's coffers (an Atlanta firm, BitPay, converts the virtual cash to dollars first). However, it could still be much more convenient for shops that take bitcoin and would rather not exchange the format just to cover their sales tax payments.

  • AP Photo/Mark Duncan

    VW's Electrify America to install EV chargers along the Ohio Turnpike

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    10.23.2018

    If electric cars are going to become a staple of American roads, they're going to need chargers near prominent routes. And VW's Electrify America is about to address that. The company has revealed plans to install the first EV charging stations along the Ohio Turnpike, a 241-mile toll road meant to speed up trips in the state's northern corridor. This deployment will be modest, with four-dispenser units at Genoa's Blue Heron and Wyandot Services Plazas as well as West Unity's Indian Meadow and Tiffin River Services Plazas. However, the chargers will be fast -- each unit will offer between 150kW to 350kW, so it might take just minutes to top up your next-generation EV.

  • Andy Cross/The Denver Post via Getty Images

    Ohio approves self-driving car tests on public roads

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    05.09.2018

    Expect to see driverless cars roaming around the Buckeye State in the near future. Ohio Governor John Kasich has issued an executive order permitting self-driving car tests on public roads, adding to a small but growing list of autonomous-friendly states that includes Arizona, California and Michigan. There are conditions, of course, although they're not extremely strict at first glance.

  • Getty Images/iStockphoto

    Watson is helping heal America's broken criminal-sentencing system

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    08.25.2017

    The American criminal-justice system's sentencing system is among the fairest and most equitable in the world ... assuming you're wealthy, white and male. Everybody else is generally SOL. During the past three decades, America's prison population has quadrupled to more than 2.3 million people. Of those incarcerated, 58 percent are either black or Latino (despite those groups constituting barely a quarter of the general US population). The racial disparity in America's justice system is both obvious and endemic, which is why some courts have started looking for technological solutions. But can an artificial intelligence really make better sentencing recommendations than the people who designed it? We're about to find out.

  • Ohio drunk drivers ordered to install Uber or Lyft

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    06.14.2017

    Drunk drivers may have a new consequence for getting behind the wheel while intoxicated. They'll still face stiff penalties like fines, mandatory driver's prevention programs and possible jail time, of course. However, according to The News-Herald, Ohio Municipal Court Judge Michael A. Cicconetti has been ordering those convicted of Operating a Vehicle Impaired (OVI) to download ride-sharing apps like Uber or Lyft as part of his sentencing. They must also enter their credit cards into the app as a condition of probation.

  • Chesky_W via Getty Images

    It takes a smart city to make cars truly autonomous

    by 
    Roberto Baldwin
    Roberto Baldwin
    06.14.2017

    Artificial intelligence is driving the autonomous car. Coupled with robust computers, automobiles of the future will be more powerful than any other device we own. But they'll only be as powerful as their surrounding allows. If your vehicle doesn't know about a traffic jam along its route, like its human counterparts, it'll get stuck in gridlock. That's where connectivity comes in. When self-driving cars hit the road, they'll not only be computing juggernauts but also sharing data with everything all the time.

  • Shutterstock

    Self-driving cars to prove their mettle on an Ohio highway

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.07.2017

    When you think of American states that are crucial to the future of transportation, you probably think of California, Michigan and maybe Nevada. Ohio, however, is determined to put itself on the map. Thanks to a mix of federal and local funds, the state is wiring a 35-mile portion of Route 33 for vehicle-to-infrastructure communication tests. Ideally, this will solve traffic issues by helping connected and self-driving cars talk to both highway systems and each other. With enough test data, these smarter cars could both take better advantage of the available lanes and drive in closely-packed platoons.

  • shutterstock

    Crafty prisoners hid DIY computers, committed identity theft

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    04.12.2017

    In what sounds like a plot line from Orange is the New Black, a pair of Ohio prison inmates took decommissioned computers, used them for nefarious purposes and hid them from guards by stashing the machines in a ceiling. According to regional news site Cleveland the two inmates, Adam Johnston and Scott Spriggs, pilfered computers that were supposed to be torn down and recycled and instead used them to connect to Ohio's Department of Rehabilitation and Correction network. They then created access cards for restricted areas.

  • Raymond Boyd via Getty Images

    Community group: AT&T 'digitally redlines' poor neighborhoods

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    03.10.2017

    Cleveland-based community groups have issued a report accusing AT&T of engaging in a process known as "digital redlining" with regards to its broadband service in the city. The groups, Connect Your Community and the National Digital Inclusion Alliance (NDIA), allege that AT&T has purposefully and "systematically discriminated against lower-income Cleveland neighborhoods in its deployment of home Internet and video technologies over the past decade."

  • Timothy J. Seppala, Engadget

    The charity that wants video game karts in every hospital

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    02.27.2017

    In many ways, Jonathan Watson is like other 11-year-olds. He does his homework, dreams of becoming a doctor and plays video games when he can. Depending on the day, his favorite is either Minecraft or The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim. Unlike most kids his age, though, Jonathan is at the hospital every three weeks for blood transfusions -- a procedure that can take up to six hours at a time. When I visited him at Mott Children's Hospital in Ann Arbor, Michigan, he wasn't slaying dragons or building a pixelated fortress; he was replaying the opening levels of Rayman Legends on a kart that had just been wheeled in. The kart was donated by a local Eagle Scout who raised funds through the Gamers Outreach Foundation (GO), a nationwide charity that puts medical-grade gaming equipment in hospitals around the country. The "GO Kart" Jonathan was using included everything needed to play video games: a modest Samsung television, an Xbox 360 (though any console will fit) and a pair of gamepads. The kit itself is hardly revolutionary, but anyone who's schlepped their gear to a LAN party can appreciate the simplicity of this rolling, self-contained setup. At Mott and 19 other hospitals around the country, they're the most popular "toy" available. And when you're a kid with a medical condition like Watson's, it's easy to see why.

  • Man's pacemaker data leads to arson and insurance fraud charges

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    02.07.2017

    Authorities from Ohio arrested a man named Ross Compton and charged him with arson and insurance fraud based on his pacemaker data. Compton told the police that when he saw his house burning on September 19th last year, he packed his suitcases, threw them out his bedroom window and carried them to his car. However, since has a serious heart condition and other medical issues that would have made it extremely difficult for him to do all those, the cops were able to secure a search warrant for his pacemaker data.

  • Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Teen indicted for Periscoping her friend's sexual assault

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    04.14.2016

    An Ohio woman used Periscope to livestream her friend's rape. According to a report by local NBC affiliate KXAN, in February 18-year-old Marina Lonina and her 17-year-old friend were hanging out with 29-year-old Raymond Boyd Gates when after an indeterminate period of time, Gates allegedly began sexually assaulting the victim. From another state, one of Lonina's friends watching the stream reported it to the proper authorities. A grand jury has recently indicted Lonina and Gates with charges for one count of kidnapping, two of rape, one of sexual battery and three counts of pandering sexually-oriented material involving a minor.

  • Cleveland Clinic

    Cleveland Clinic performs first uterus transplant in the US

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    02.26.2016

    Doctors in Cleveland have performed the first successful uterus transplant in the United States. But, once the 26 year-old recipient has one or two babies, the womb will be removed so she can stop taking medications that prevent her body from rejecting the foreign organ -- a very real risk that's haunted the procedure in the past. Her previously impossible pregnancy will rely on in vitro fertilization, using her eggs (harvested prior to the transplant) that've been fertilized with her husband's sperm and then frozen, according to The New York Times.