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CIO May 15, 2001 John Edwards |
Upholding Moore's Law What's .03 microns long and can be turned on and off 10 billion times a second? It's a new transistor that has the potential to keep Moore's Law on the books for at least several more years...  |
Science News April 28, 2001 Janet Raloff |
Germ-killing plastic wrap Biodegradable plastic that releases germ killers provides an example of what's known as active packaging, and scientists report progress toward taking this concept to market...  |
Wired April 2001 |
Verge A coalition of 14 fusion-research institutions funded by the US Department of Energy will test whether new generation methods can make magnetic fusion an efficient, affordable source of energy...  |
Wired April 2001 |
Personal Fabrication on Demand Desktop manufacturing from easily transmitted hi-res digital files - think the MP3 explosion, in 3-D. Rapid prototyping, aka RP, has already made its way from industrial proof-of-concept to production uses...  |
Wired April 2001 Alex Markels |
The Next Wave Ships from Norway, rockets from Russia, techspertise from Seattle. Together, they slingshot satellites off a floating platform on the equator - and set the stage for a new kind of company, built on international brainpower...  |
Wired April 2001 Jennifer Kabat |
The Informalist Cecil Balmond has a simple plan to reinvent architecture: Break down the cage that separates structural engineering from design...  |
Bank Technology News April 2001 John Hackett |
Computers Are Learning The Business Advances in computer processing power open the way for wider use of so-called artificial intelligence, at the same time that the self-serve aspect of online processes has increased the need for systems that "think"...  |
Wired April 2001 Steve Silberman |
The Hot New Medium: Paper How the oldest interface in the book is redrawing the map of the networked world...  |
Wired March 2001 Emily Jenkins |
One Fast Blast The next-gen roller coaster: Get up, get down, and get off...  |
Salon.com March 2, 2001 Kieran McCarthy |
Geeks declare war on Intel Chip-heads say flaws in the Pentium 4 prove the high-tech giant is sacrificing engineering principles for marketing goals...  |
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