RESEARCHERS have managed to detect 3D shapes and the movements of human bodies in a room – using a WiFi router. Such technology may eventually replace normal cameras, researchers in the US hope.
Disclaimer: Opinions expressed below belong solely to the author. As if we didn’t have enough concerns over privacy in this digital age, scientists at Carnegie Mellon University appear to have ...
Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with content, and download exclusive resources. Randy Shoup discusses the "Velocity ...
Facebook’s A.I. researchers have now released a new report and associated whitepaper showing how they managed to teach A.I. to map human pixels from a static RGB image to a 3D surface. That is, of ...
Using artificial intelligence (AI) to analyze two WiFi routers that picture a human's 3D form and motion, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have created a low-cost method of sensing persons ...
If you thought DeepFakes, the AI that swaps celebrity faces into any video (like porn), was scary wait until you see what Facebook’s DensePose can do. Facebook’s AI research (FAIR) division last week ...
A hot potato: George Orwell's vision of Big Brother is more or less a reality. While most regions of the world do not quite fit the dystopian paradigm set in his novel '1984', you would be ...