| Old Articles: <Older 2901-2910 Newer> |
 |
Popular Mechanics April 2009 Erin McCarthy |
The Tech Behind 3D's Big Revival What has convinced Hollywood that 3D is finally ready for its closeup? The short answer may be that technology has caught up with the concept.  |
Popular Mechanics March 31, 2009 Allie Townsend |
Rube Goldberg Machines Go Green at Indiana-Based Contest College engineering and science students make new machines in the spirit of Rube Goldberg cartoons.  |
Popular Mechanics March 30, 2009 Seth Porges |
How To Make Your Television Play Anything in 3D Manufacturers often don't state whether their sets come loaded with 3D capability. Still, a surprising number of sets do.  |
Popular Mechanics March 27, 2009 Mike Allen |
Why Water Won't Improve Your MPG: A PM and Dateline NBC Investigation Over the years, I've tested plenty of gadgets that purport to reduce fuel consumption. None of them worked. None.  |
IEEE Spectrum March 2009 |
Why Plug-Ins Will Make (Dollars and) Sense Q&A with the electric power research institute's Mark Duvall.  |
Popular Mechanics April 2009 Glenn Derene |
How Vulnerable is U.S. Infrastructure to a Major Cyber Attack? The next world war might not start with a bang, but with a blackout.  |
IEEE Spectrum March 2009 Prachi Patel |
Laser-Heated Hard Drives Could Break Data Density Barrier Scientists at Seagate Technology show that heat-assisted magnetic recording could break the looming terabit-per-square-inch data limit  |
Popular Mechanics April 2009 |
Solar Racer Test Drive: Inside the U. Mich's Sun-Powered Car The car I'm sitting in is so futuristic and so technically advanced that it would cost nearly a million dollars to duplicate.  |
Chemistry World March 20, 2009 Jon Cartwright |
Medical Probes Get Easy to Spot Scientists in the US have created nano-scale medical probes that are visible via both magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and optical microscopy.  |
IEEE Spectrum March 2009 Neil Savage |
Superstrong Artificial Muscles and More From New Nanotube Material Sheets of carbon nanotubes could make strong, stretchy artificial muscles with amazing properties  |
| <Older 2901-2910 Newer> Return to current articles. |