Top Financial Web Site Penny Stock Detectives Releases Report on Sensors Reshaping Technology
In a recent Penny Stock Detectives article, editor Danny Esposito argues that regardless of the economic environment.
(prHWY.com) July 13, 2012 - New York, NY -- In a recent Penny Stock Detectives article, editor Danny Esposito argues that regardless of the economic environment, investors will always have an appetite for technology stocks that create the latest innovations to improve our lives. Esposito claims that sensors have the potential to revolutionize how road repair, operations, and driving will be conducted in the future.
"Normally a costly, labor-intensive, but necessary function, sensors within a completely automated system could revolutionize how roads are repaired in the near future," observes Esposito.
He continues to explain that the sensor works through a camera, which scans the portion of the road it is on. It accurately maps out the cracks in the road and sends the information to a computer, which determines how much road filler is required. It then sprays the road and fills all of the cracks, leaving a perfectly smooth surface. This is a completely automated process. The key, of course, is to be able to mass produce the road-repair unit, notes Esposito.
Surgeons lose a lot of time scrubbing in and out of a sterile operating room to review scans and/or real-time X-rays while a patient lies waiting. Sometimes a surgeon will use an assistant and attempt to verbally explain how he/she wants the image viewed so that he/she can remain by the patient, but this can be a frustrating process, Esposito points out.
Now technology firms have devised a device with sensors that are controlled by the image of the surgeon's hands. When an X-ray or CT scan is taken, the surgeon waves his/her hand in front of the device--without touching it--and directs the device to rotate, enlarge, or zoom in on the image. The surgeon maintains better concentration because he/she never has to leave the patient's side, which should increase the success rate of operations, in Esposito's opinion.
Ford is using sensors to test a Traffic Jam Assistant for possible use in its cars, Esposito reports. When a motorist is caught in a traffic jam, he/she presses this function, which brings the multiple sensors to life. These sensors keep the car at a specific distance from the cars in front and to the sides of it, and follows at whatever low speed the traffic is moving. The motorist can lie down, stretch, close their eyes, or even read while the automated system slowly grinds its way through traffic, thanks to this latest innovation, he explains. When traffic clears and the car reaches a certain speed, it beeps to tell the driver that he/she must retake control of the car.
"It seems there truly is no limit to the innovations we can create. Technology stocks are always attempting to better our lives, and so increase their revenues and profits in turn," notes Esposito. "Investor sentiment always has a watchful eye on technology stocks making the greatest impact, because their bottom lines will grow the most. Technology stocks that focus on sensors compose one of those areas."
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