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Tektronix Technologies face recognition technology provides guests with perfection much advanced than the mortal eye, supports multiple attributes, periods, and complicated surroundings, and is able of producing results stationed on pall, edge, or bedded including unleashing smartphone bias, access control, furnishing accurate, fast and largely effective results to diligence.
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Tektronix Technologies face recognition technology provides guests with perfection much advanced than the mortal eye, supports multiple attributes, periods, and complicated surroundings, and is able of producing results stationed on pall, edge, or bedded including unleashing smartphone bias, access control, furnishing accurate, fast and largely effective results to diligence.
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tektronixtechnology · 4 months
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expediteiot · 4 months
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biometric access control system installation
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Visitor Management System Dubai UAE: Enhancing Security and Efficiency
Security is a top priority in both public and private companies in the modern world. The security of a facility, its occupants, and its visitors is a responsibility shared by businesses, governments, and educational institutions. Organizations in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, are investing in cutting-edge visitor management systems to do this in order to increase security and productivity.
Visitor management systems help organizations in Dubai, UAE to maintain a secure environment by identifying potential threats before they occur. The systems use a range of security measures such as ID verification, facial recognition, and biometric scanning to ensure that only authorized personnel can access restricted areas. Visitor management systems also enable security personnel to screen visitors against watchlists, alerting them to potential security threats.
Additionally, visitor management systems provide organizations with real-time information on the location of visitors, enabling security personnel to respond quickly to emergencies or security breaches. In the event of an emergency, security personnel can use the system to quickly identify visitors in the building and direct them to safety.
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dubaigamers · 6 years
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DELL Latitude 7480 Laptop (Intel Core i7-7600U 2.8 GHz, 8GB, 256GB SSD, 14-inch FHD, Intel HD, Windows 10 Pro 64-bit) | NBXDEL74WY702
Description for DELL Latitude 7480 Laptop (Intel Core i7-7600U 2.8 GHz, 8GB, 256GB SSD, 14-inch FHD, Intel HD, Windows 10 Pro 64-bit) | NBXDEL74WY702
Versatile design. Exceptional experience. This 14” business-class laptop is incredibly mobile without compromise. Featuring industry leading security, manageability and reliability.
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An amazing display that lasts all day See the difference: An optional touch-enabled, high resolution display makes it simple to view and manage your work throughout the day. Built with stunning resolution: The 14" QHD (2560x1440) screen with E2E touch display features Corning Gorilla Glass 4 for remarkable viewing all day. All-day power: Work confidently with a laptop equipped with all-day battery life and improvements to both web browsing and video playback time. Power your performance: Equipped with an Intel 7th Gen ultra-low volt (U) for increased performance and PCLe SSD for faster data transfer speeds. Processor 7th Gen Intel Core i7-7600U 2.8 GHz Processors Operating System ​ Windows 10 Pro 64-bit Memory 8 GB DDR4 Hard Drive 256 GB SSD Display 14.0 inch FHD (1920 x 1080) Anti Glare (16:9) WLED, 300 nits, Magesium Alloy LCD back Optical Drive External Options Only Ports 1 DisplayPort over USB Type C with optional Thunderbolt 3 capabi lity 1 Headset/mic combo jack 1 uSD 4.0 Memory card reader 3 USB 3.1 Gen 1 (one with PowerShare) 1 HDMI 1 RJ-45 1 External uSIM card tray option 1 Optional SmartCard Reader and Touch Fingerprint Reader 1 Noble Wedge Lock slot Slots 3 M.2 expansion slots: 1 SSD, 1 WWAN/HCA and 1 WLAN/BT/WiGig Optional Contacted SmartCard Reader and touch Fingerprint Reader Lock Slot Chassis Backup Options Dell Client Command Suite available Security Options Dell Client Command Suite Optional Dell Data Security and Management Software Dimensions 20.8 mm (0.82") x Width: 331 mm (13.03") x Depth: 220.9 mm (8.7") Weight 1.36 kg (3.01 lbs)     Free 24 Hour Delivery in UAE  We offer express delivery to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Al Ain, Sharjah, Ajman, Ras Al Khaimah, Fujairah, Umm Al Quwain, UAE for DELL Latitude 7480 Laptop (Intel Core i7-7600U 2.8 GHz, 8GB, 256GB SSD, 14-inch FHD, Intel HD, Windows 10 Pro 64-bit) | NBXDEL74WY702. Best Price Guarantee We offer the best price for DELL Latitude 7480 Laptop (Intel Core i7-7600U 2.8 GHz, 8GB, 256GB SSD, 14-inch FHD, Intel HD, Windows 10 Pro 64-bit) | NBXDEL74WY702 in Dubai, UAE. Buy now with the best price! Read the full article
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micaramel · 4 years
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Artist: Trevor Paglen
Venue: Altman Siegel, San Francisco
Exhibition Title: Territory
Date: June 25 – August 8, 2020
Click here to view slideshow
Full gallery of images, press release and link available after the jump.
Images:
Images courtesy of Altman Siegel, San Francisco
Press Release:
Altman Siegel is pleased to present a body of new work by artist Trevor Paglen. This will be his fifth exhibition at the gallery. Trevor Paglen’s new photographs position the origins of computer vision, facial recognition, and artificial intelligence in the tradition of landscape photography of the American West. Examining histories of seeing in relation to technological advancements, Paglen reveals underlying structures of power and the changing role of the image.
Capturing dramatic vistas shot around Yosemite, Black Canyon, the California Coast, and other iconic landscapes, Paglen refers to classic works by Muybridge, O’Sullivan, Watkins, Hillers, and other 19th century “frontier” photographers. While we often encounter these historical referents in a museum setting today, many of these seminal images were originally produced for the US Department of War on military “reconnaissance” surveys and are embedded with the colonial narratives of Western Expansion. What would a contemporary iteration of frontier photography reveal about our current structures of power?
With the advent of computer vision and artificial intelligence, the role of images and photographs has changed dramatically. From industrial fabrication and self-driving cars to facial recognition and biometric surveillance, computer vision algorithms are working invisibly in our daily lives. Paglen investigates the formal and conceptual logics of computer vision and AI by using modified machine vision software to produce images revealing the internal mechanisms of the algorithms. Returning to the western landscapes captured by his predecessors, Paglen translates his 8×10 negatives into digital files that can be read by AI. He then overlays lines, circles and strokes that signify how computer vision algorithms attempt to “see” by creating mathematical abstractions from images.
For many of the photographs, Paglen employs printing methods of the 19th century. Each edition is processed by hand using sunlight per traditional albumen and carbon printing techniques. The resulting photographs resemble their historical precedents, while revealing the changing face of image culture as it is increasingly interpreted by machine vision.
Where the landscapes refer to the history of western photography as an aspect of territorial control, so we find another form of extraction and coercion embedded in a new series of portraits. Photographs in the series They Took the Faces from the Accused and the Dead are based on National Institute of Standards and Technology’s Special Database 18, a collection of 3248 mug shots that constitute a standard database for the promotion of research into facial recognition. To create facial-recognition software, computer scientists and software engineers need large collections of faces as “training images.” Before the advent of social media, a common source of faces for this research came from these mug shots of accused criminals. In a very real sense, facial-recognition software is built upon the faces of prisoners.
Paglen mines the history of photography, both for its physical production and its subject matter, to construct questions around seeing. Concerns about surveillance and privacy, freedom and servitude continue to resonate as the two series of works, western landscapes and mug shots create a contemporary questioning and retelling of the archetypal story of the ‘Old West.’
I think that for me what unites the works in this exhibition it’s something to do with the relationship between photography, computer vision, and extraction.
If we look at real-life forms of computer vision, let’s ask what they’re designed to do. We might say “oh they’re for navigating cars, or for doing quality control for manufacturing, or for recognizing objects or whatever” – I think to that I’d say: no, these forms of “seeing” are mostly about doing one of two things, often in tandem. First, making money. Second, increasing the efficiency of centralized forms of power, for example the police or the military. And that this has a long history – that the 19th Century photos I reference in this body of work were part of efforts led by the Department of War to map the west and to figure out how to mine it and settle it. The photographs of prisoners were meant to make policing more effective and more powerful.
This body of work for me is about trying to see how photography and power were coupled together in the past, and to think about how those couplings might be taking place now in the age of computer vision and AI.
-Trevor Paglen
Trevor Paglen has exhibited in numerous international museums, galleries and institutions including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Tate Modern, London; Whitechapel Gallery, London; The Barbican Centre, London; Prada Foundation Osservatorio, Milan; Nam June Paik Art Center, Korea; Museo Tamayo, Mexico City; Lentos Kunstmuseum Linz, Austria; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.; The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo; ZKM, Karlsruhe; Kunstverein Hannover; Kunsthalle Winterthur; Frankfurter Kunstverein; The Walker Arts Center, Minneapolis; The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; The MCA Chicago and many others. He has also been included in the 2008 Taipei Biennial; the 2009 Istanbul Biennial; the 2012 Liverpool Biennial; the 2016 Venice Biennial of Architecture; the 9th Berlin Biennial; Manifesta: The European Biennial of Contemporary Art 2016, Zurich; The Gwangju Biennale, 2016 and 2018; and the 2019 Art Encounters Biennial, Timișoara, Romania. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, Artforum, Frieze, The Guardian, The Atlantic, Bomb, October, Wired and The New Inquiry in addition to many other publications. Paglen was the recipient of the 2016 Deutsche Borse Prize, 2018 Nam June Paik Art Center Prize and was named a MacArthur Fellow in 2017. He holds a B.A. from U.C. Berkeley, an M.F.A. from the Art Institute of Chicago, and a Ph.D. in Geography from U.C. Berkeley. Paglen’s work is concurrently on view in Uncanny Valley: Being Human in the Age of AI at the de Young Museum, San Francisco and Art in the Age of Anxiety at the Sharjah Art Foundation.
Link: Trevor Paglen at Altman Siegel
from Contemporary Art Daily https://bit.ly/3hxtoJY
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jobs-in-dubai-uae · 7 years
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Dubai, UAE: Computer science and technology students busily attached wires to a sensor that would prevent a wheelchair from crashing into a wall, across the room, a group of students were building a robotic feeding arm, others were fixing a hydraulic system to gently elevate a chair and another team coded software to turn sign language to speech. This was the region’s first hackathon where more than 80 college students and professionals from various sectors came together to create devices to help people with disabilities work and communicate at the Al Noor Training Centre this week. “We are hoping we can help people with muscular dystrophy, those whose muscles are too weak to move, also the elderly and people with arthritis with our adult stroller so they don’t need to ask anyone for help,” said Shilpa Sujith a student from the American University of Sharjah, part of the Blue Cohort team of students and professionals from the beverage industry and special needs sector. Participants were shortlisted from hundreds of applications from around the country and divided into 16 teams for the project. The ground work began more than a month ago when teams were linked with a person with special needs and their family to gain an understanding of the unique challenge each individual faced. Workshops on robotics and assistive technology were organised by Microsoft for participants to grasp advances in assistive technology from basic solutions such as cutlery with firm hand grips to eye gaze technology that can shift a cursor on the screen. To adapt a chair that would gently push a woman with muscular dystrophy into a standing position, the Blue Cohort team scoured garage sales in Al Quoz and shops in Dragon Mart to build a hydraulic system. With the press of a button, a motor gradually pushes up the seat while the user holds onto a detachable rod for support. “The lady can walk but she asks colleagues for help to stand because the muscles in her arms and hips are too weak to support her into a standing position. This is just the first prototype but if it can be customised and help people do tasks on their own, it would be great,” said Mohit Saraswat, an employee with a consumer goods firm. Engineering students from BITS Pilani, Dubai welded together a gadget that can be attached to a wheelchair to help a teenager with cerebral palsy move within his home. The teenager currently requires the help of his parents or a caregiver. The Mediators team produced a device that once fixed to a wheelchair will automatically move it to the washroom or hall area by pushing a button. This is linked to sensors controlled by a smartphone application they designed. “We needed a kit that could transport someone safely between rooms so a wheelchair does not crash into a wall but stays a safe distance away. It needed to be simple so we have just two big buttons on the iPad to sync with the device,” said Rewant Verma, an engineering student. “This could be used in hospitals or retirement homes to help people safely navigate indoors without assistance.” Some teams used facial recognition with robotics to develop a feeding arm, others built sensory devices that through texture and touch can measure temperature and heart rate, and the desire for food and water of people who cannot communicate. Another group created a specially-designed cushion with flexible straps and winch to easily move a person from a wheelchair to the bed. The creations impressed experts such as Tanya Rudd, philanthropies lead at Microsoft Gulf. “The teams quickly realized that the real issue they were addressing wasn’t just one of speech, text or interaction; the issue they were solving was that of inclusion and independence,” she said. “The hackathon showed us that we have amazing talent around that is willing to offer their support. It also shows us that if you think beyond the obvious you will get some completely new solutions that you were not aware were even possible before. This hackathon created an environment of innovation, and showed us that more disruption will come from future innovations which will, hopefully, not only bring great solutions to the market, but at a cost that is easily affordable.” © The National via Edarabia.com
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edarabia · 7 years
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Dubai, UAE: Computer science and technology students busily attached wires to a sensor that would prevent a wheelchair from crashing into a wall, across the room, a group of students were building a robotic feeding arm, others were fixing a hydraulic system to gently elevate a chair and another team coded software to turn sign language to speech. This was the region’s first hackathon where more than 80 college students and professionals from various sectors came together to create devices to help people with disabilities work and communicate at the Al Noor Training Centre this week. “We are hoping we can help people with muscular dystrophy, those whose muscles are too weak to move, also the elderly and people with arthritis with our adult stroller so they don’t need to ask anyone for help,” said Shilpa Sujith a student from the American University of Sharjah, part of the Blue Cohort team of students and professionals from the beverage industry and special needs sector. Participants were shortlisted from hundreds of applications from around the country and divided into 16 teams for the project. The ground work began more than a month ago when teams were linked with a person with special needs and their family to gain an understanding of the unique challenge each individual faced. Workshops on robotics and assistive technology were organised by Microsoft for participants to grasp advances in assistive technology from basic solutions such as cutlery with firm hand grips to eye gaze technology that can shift a cursor on the screen. To adapt a chair that would gently push a woman with muscular dystrophy into a standing position, the Blue Cohort team scoured garage sales in Al Quoz and shops in Dragon Mart to build a hydraulic system. With the press of a button, a motor gradually pushes up the seat while the user holds onto a detachable rod for support. “The lady can walk but she asks colleagues for help to stand because the muscles in her arms and hips are too weak to support her into a standing position. This is just the first prototype but if it can be customised and help people do tasks on their own, it would be great,” said Mohit Saraswat, an employee with a consumer goods firm. Engineering students from BITS Pilani, Dubai welded together a gadget that can be attached to a wheelchair to help a teenager with cerebral palsy move within his home. The teenager currently requires the help of his parents or a caregiver. The Mediators team produced a device that once fixed to a wheelchair will automatically move it to the washroom or hall area by pushing a button. This is linked to sensors controlled by a smartphone application they designed. “We needed a kit that could transport someone safely between rooms so a wheelchair does not crash into a wall but stays a safe distance away. It needed to be simple so we have just two big buttons on the iPad to sync with the device,” said Rewant Verma, an engineering student. “This could be used in hospitals or retirement homes to help people safely navigate indoors without assistance.” Some teams used facial recognition with robotics to develop a feeding arm, others built sensory devices that through texture and touch can measure temperature and heart rate, and the desire for food and water of people who cannot communicate. Another group created a specially-designed cushion with flexible straps and winch to easily move a person from a wheelchair to the bed. The creations impressed experts such as Tanya Rudd, philanthropies lead at Microsoft Gulf. “The teams quickly realized that the real issue they were addressing wasn’t just one of speech, text or interaction; the issue they were solving was that of inclusion and independence,” she said. “The hackathon showed us that we have amazing talent around that is willing to offer their support. It also shows us that if you think beyond the obvious you will get some completely new solutions that you were not aware were even possible before. This hackathon created an environment of innovation, and showed us that more disruption will come from future innovations which will, hopefully, not only bring great solutions to the market, but at a cost that is easily affordable.” © The National
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Access Control Solution comes to your rescue for any access control or security related issues in Dubai Abu Dhabi Saudi Arabia. We provide a wide variety of services to help you handle the various aspects of your business. Our capabilities include Data Center Security, Corporate Security, High Tech Surveillance Systems and much more. If you’re feeling overwhelmed by the thought of managing multiple access control systems, Access Control Solution can help you bring them together into one easy-to-use platform that reduces costs while increasing productivity and safety at work.
https://tektronixllc.ae/facial-recognition-dubai/
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tektronixtechnology · 8 months
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Biometric & Time Attendance System in Dubai, UAE
Tektronix Technology presents facial recognition software in Dubai Abu Dhabi
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tektronixtechnology · 9 months
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Face Recognition technology presents many advantages. Here are the main ones.
Improved Secure and Authentication.
Facial recognition technology stands out among traditional methods in its ability to increase security and authenticity, offering improved protection. Facial recognition offers much stronger safeguards - it ensures only those authorized gain access, thus decreasing any chance of security breach and denial for anyone else.
Efficient and convenient face recognition technology gives users a smooth and effortless experience. Simply by looking into a camera, users have access to their accounts without physical interactions like swipe cards or entering PIN codes - saving both time and equipment requirements when controlling access control.
Avoidance of Physical Access Cards
Face recognition technology eliminates the need for physical access cards, drastically cutting both costs and maintenance time for creating or replacing them. Furthermore, this reduces theft or lost cards falling into unwanted hands; making this method of entry both reliable and safe. Face recognition offers an effective and safe alternative to more conventional access methods.
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tektronixtechnology · 9 months
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Unlocking the Efficiency: Turnstile Speed Gate Solutions in Abu Dhabi
Turnstile speed gates have emerged as a prominent solution to meet these demands, ensuring seamless access management for a wide range of facilities. In this article, we will delve into the world of Turnstile Speed Gate solutions in Abu Dhabi, exploring their benefits, applications, and why they have become indispensable in the capital city.
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Unveiling the Future: Tektronix Technology's Facial Recognition Device in Dubai and Abu Dhabi
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technology, facial recognition has emerged as a groundbreaking innovation, revolutionizing various industries and sectors. One of the pioneers in this field is Tektronix Technology, a leading provider of cutting-edge solutions. This article dives deep into Tektronix Technology's remarkable facial recognition device and its transformative impact in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.
The Evolution of Facial Recognition Technology
Over the past decade, facial recognition technology has evolved from a futuristic concept into a tangible reality. Tektronix Technology has been at the forefront of this evolution, consistently pushing boundaries and redefining possibilities. The company's dedication to research and development has led to the creation of a state-of-the-art facial recognition device that is both innovative and reliable.
Tektronix Technology's Facial Recognition Device :
Tektronix Technology's facial recognition device is a marvel of engineering and artificial intelligence. Combining advanced hardware with sophisticated algorithms, the device is capable of accurately identifying individuals based on their unique facial features. This technology has far-reaching implications, from enhancing security protocols to streamlining user experiences across various platforms.
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