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A MacArthur Elementary School student works on a project during a robotics club meeting at the Mesa school
Teacher Erik Vonburg of MacArthur Elementary School in Mesa works with students during a robotics club meeting.
Rhodes Jr. High student A.J. Gilbert uses an iPad and computer equipment during a class on the Mesa campus.
(From left) Nusrat Nijum, Sara Perez Luna and Olivia Barrera work with an iPad and other enhanced technology during a class at Rhodes Jr. High School in Mesa.
Ty Pattison works with a Chandler & Price hand-fed letterpress. (SHNS photo by J. Miles Cary / Knoxville News Sentinel)
A Mesa police officer displays a camera above his ear that patrol officers will wear to record their interactions with the public. A small hard drive records video and audio. Police are also testing a hand-held scanner that takes suspects’ fingerprints and remotely checks the information with a statewide database of 2 million prints. [Tim Hacker/Tribune]
A Mesa police officer displays a camera above his ear that patrol officers will wear to record their interactions with the public. A small hard drive records video and audio. Police are also testing a hand-held scanner that takes suspects’ fingerprints and remotely checks the information with a statewide database of 2 million prints. [Tim Hacker/Tribune]
A Mesa police officer displays a camera above his ear that patrol officers will wear to record their interactions with the public. A small hard drive records video and audio. Police are also testing a hand-held scanner that takes suspects’ fingerprints and remotely checks the information with a statewide database of 2 million prints. [Tim Hacker/Tribune]
A Mesa police officer displays a camera above his ear that patrol officers will wear to record their interactions with the public. A small hard drive records video and audio. Police are also testing a hand-held scanner that takes suspects’ fingerprints and remotely checks the information with a statewide database of 2 million prints. [Tim Hacker/Tribune]
A Mesa police officer displays a camera above his ear that patrol officers will wear to record their interactions with the public. A small hard drive records video and audio. Police are also testing a hand-held scanner that takes suspects’ fingerprints and remotely checks the information with a statewide database of 2 million prints. [Tim Hacker/Tribune]
A Mesa police officer displays a camera above his ear that patrol officers will wear to record their interactions with the public. A small hard drive records video and audio. Police are also testing a hand-held scanner that takes suspects’ fingerprints and remotely checks the information with a statewide database of 2 million prints. [Tim Hacker/Tribune]
A Mesa police officer displays a camera above his ear that patrol officers will wear to record their interactions with the public. A small hard drive records video and audio. Police are also testing a hand-held scanner that takes suspects’ fingerprints and remotely checks the information with a statewide database of 2 million prints. [Tim Hacker/Tribune]
A new plan to fill in the gaps in SBInet calls for a mix of technologies – fixed towers, mobile systems, handheld devices and more – that would better fit needs on particular stretches of the border, but the GAO is questioning the numbers behind the plan. (Cronkite News Service photo by Aldo Vazquez)
The Strategic Border Initiative (SBInet) was supposed to line the Southwest border with towers collecting radar and camera information, but the project was dropped early this year after repeated delays, cost overruns and technical problems. (Cronkite News Service photo by Aldo Vazquez)
Many of us are familiar with keyless entry -- where a vehicle recognizes when you get close to your car, and unlocks the door.
By just about any standard, Microchip Technology has been a business success story. Sales by the Chandler-based semiconductor firm have risen from about $78 million in 1990 to more than $1 billion in the current fiscal year.
Chandler-Gilbert Community College celebrated the opening of the Environmental Technology Center, an outdoor learning center incorporating a garden, shaded area, and ramada with solar panels donated by Salt River Project (pictured), at the college’s Pecos campus Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2012. [Stacie Spring/Tribune]
The seven-story, 293,000-square-foot Interdiscipinary Science and Technology Building IV contains 166 laboratories, a rooftop laboratory, a 250 seat auditorium, public space, offices, collaboration spaces and meeting rooms. [Tim Hacker/Special to AFN]
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
Guest Commentary by Bill Richardson
Guest Commentary by Shawn Thiele
By Mark Heller, Tribune
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