Lego, Smart Play system and the Brick
Digest more
Lego Star Wars SMART Play: Darth Vader’s TIE Fighter: This set contains 473 pieces to build the TIE Fighter, an outpost, and a fueling station. It includes one Smart Brick, a Darth Vader Smart Minifigure, a TIE Fighter Smart Tag, and a standard Rebel Pilot Minifigure. It’s priced at $69.99 / £59.99 / AU$99.99.
The LEGO Group has revealed LEGO SMART Play, a new interactive platform designed to bring LEGO builds to life without the use of screens.
The Smart City approach is the favored paradigm of 2010s urban development. Smart cities are hoped to help curb greenhouse gas emissions and improve quality of life. Smart cities strive for these things with technological solutions: information technology ...
Piecing together a smart home isn’t easy — and building a smart apartment is even more challenging. Not only do you have to wade through dozens of great products, but you’ll also have to discover ones that require no hardwiring or major reconfiguring ...
ROANOKE, Va. (WDBJ) - The Build Smart Institute started in 2020 to fill the need for skilled workers in the construction industry. “He wanted to help that workforce gap that existed to just get the young people into the industry any way he could,” said ...
Amazon launched Echo Frames through its Day 1 Editions program in 2019. Now, the company is adding a new plan called Build It that allows customers to vote via preorder for which devices they'd like to see Alexa work with next. The company will ...
Everyone wants a smart home, but what does a smart home even solve in a time where we're all walking around with handheld devices that have more computing power than an entire bank of vintage NASA supercomputers? When your phone can stream media, play ...
At its most basic, a smart city is a city that uses information and communications technology — including traditional IT and advanced Internet of Things (IoT) technologies — to improve not only the way it operates, but also the services it delivers to ...
Lego’s Smart Bricks differ from earlier tech-enabled Lego products by using wireless charging pads (avoiding disposable batteries) and boasting batteries that will still perform after years of inactivity.
Much promotion of smart cities assumes that municipalities will take a proactive, top-down, technology-first approach to urban progress. Thus far, these initiatives look for some forward-thinking city official (or immensely deep-pocketed private investor ...