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Florida man kills father, wounds mother after father told him to stop playing video games, get a job

FOX News

Joseph Voigt, 23, fled after leaving Marvin Voigt, 63, dead and Susan Voigt, 58, with a gunshot wound to the head. Police responded to the scene after Susan Voigt reported the incident at around 11:20 p.m. on Saturday. The Bartow Police Department said they arrived to find Marvin Voigt dead in the driveway from apparent gunshot wounds and Susan Voigt inside the home suffering from a serious gunshot wound. She was taken to a hospital in critical condition. "They found the mother sitting up on the couch," police chief Stephen Walker told reporters, according to Fox 13. "She was alive. She had been shot in the head once."


Resume - Christian Voigt

#artificialintelligence

Not every remix is an innovation: A network perspective on the 3d-printing community. Is the Maker Movement Contributing to Sustainability? Makers' ambitions to do socially valuable things. An empirically informed taxonomy for the Maker movement. Dobner, S.; Voigt, C. (2015) Crowdsourcing Accessibility Information: An Exploration of Categorization Challenges.


5G Race Pits Ford, BMW Against GM, Toyota

WSJ.com: WSJD - Technology

But Ford Motor Co. F 1.43%, BMW AG BMW -0.65% and other auto makers are pressing the Trump administration to allow them to leapfrog that system by fast-tracking fifth-generation cellular broadband in automobiles. Known as 5G, it transmits data at up to 10 times the speed of current broadband and improves reliability by potentially shrinking a self-driving car's ability to stop to one inch, from one yard with today's network. The showdown between the Wi-Fi-based and cellular-based standards for connected cars echoes winner-take-all format wars in other industries, and is a sign of how software is emerging as a new battleground for auto makers. The stakes are high as U.S. motor-vehicle deaths have risen in recent years. Car makers say vehicle-to-vehicle communication will ease congestion and improve safety.


The tech world's new key to productivity? A 5,900 chair

Los Angeles Times

Che Voigt believes his company has solved problems that have plagued the working world since the advent of typing. It's a solution to hunched backs, stiff necks and tight shoulders. It's a workstation that, with a push of a button, transitions from a standing desk to a seated table to a fully reclined platform like a dentist's chair. Its seat expands and retracts, supporting the whole body from head to heels. There's a screen and mouse and keyboard that follows the user's eyes and hands.