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The Tech Helping Refugees

The tech addressing refugees’ needs; Silicon Valley tech aims to disrupt Nobel Prize; Tremor absorbing software; What your choice of mobile phone say about you

How might technology be harnessed to help refugees? Click talks to Tom Hayton from Techfugees about the hackathon challenge that flagged up the tech benefits from ideas that arose from a new competition.

Silicon Valley Tech Aims to Disrupt Nobel Prize
The Silicon Valley tech world has hosted its version of the Nobel Prize Ceremony, conferring big prizes ($3 million/each) for breakthroughs that will change the world and inspire a new generation of technology pioneers. Click’s Alison van Diggelen reports from the ceremony.

Tremor Absorbing Software
Researchers have developed special software for people with tremors like those who suffer from Cerebral Palsy and Parkinson’s disease and who find it all but impossible to use smart phones and other devices that require touch or swipe. Click talks to the computer scientist, Aviva Dayan, about the revolutionary tremor absorbing software.

Digital Traces
Researchers at Lancaster University in the UK suggest that iPhone users are younger and more extraverted than people who use Android phones. Click talks to the psychologist, David Ellis, about the research that flags up how people choose technology.

(Photo caption: Iraqi refugees charge their mobile phones at an electricity point at the Khazir refugee camp near a Kurdish checkpoint Β© Thomas Coex/AFP/Getty Images)

Producer: Colin Grant

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Wed 14 Dec 2016 07:32GMT

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  • Tue 13 Dec 2016 19:32GMT
  • Tue 13 Dec 2016 20:32GMT
  • Tue 13 Dec 2016 21:32GMT
  • Wed 14 Dec 2016 02:32GMT
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  • Wed 14 Dec 2016 07:32GMT

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