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CIO August 15, 2001 Daniel Sweeney |
New Memory Flash provided the technical foundation for today's PDAs and smart phones, but it is relatively slow compared with volatile memory and consumes considerable energy. Three next-generation technologies are currently vying for the huge Flash market...  |
Entrepreneur August 2001 Michelle Prather |
Suit Up! Sick and tired of bruised hip bones and ugly surf gear, these two surfer chicks became hip-bone-saving wet-suit designers and heroines of water-sports-loving women everywhere...  |
CIO July 15, 2001 Jenna Kinghorn |
The Power to Choose New technologies keep the electricity flowing for IT...  |
Wired July 2001 |
Verge Sandia National Laboratories's Extreme Ultraviolet Engineering Test Stand develops and tests extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL) techniques, with which chip makers hope to overcome the limitations of current production methods...  |
Wired July 2001 Carl Hoffman |
The X Wars Boeing and Lockheed are battling head-to-head to build the strike fighter of the future, a sleek, smart aircraft that will carry tomorrow's Air Force, Navy, and Marines -- if it can fight its way out of the Pentagon...  |
Wired July 2001 Evan Ratliff |
Born to Run Microchips promise to make artificial legs as good as new. Fast-forward amputees are remaking life and limb on their own. The race is on...  |
eCFO June 2001 John Edwards |
Absolutely Fab 3D printing, also known as desktop fabrication, is already being used by engineering and manufacturing companies to create detailed prototypes. And a variety of organizations, including the US Army, are attempting to push 3D printer technology to the next level...  |
Wired July 2001 Steve Silberman |
The Energy Web The best minds in electricity R&D have a plan: Every node in the power network of the future will be awake, responsive, adaptive, price-smart, eco-sensitive, real-time, flexible, humming -- and interconnected with everything else...  |
Wired May 2001 |
Verge Ford hopes a $10 million study - with its first full-motion driving simulator - will help improve the design of human-vehicle interfaces, test the relative safety of voice-activated and display technology, and resolve how and when to deliver email...  |
Wired May 2001 Josh McHugh |
The n-Dimensional Superswitch Larry Roberts has a next-gen router he says will kick Cisco's ass - oh yeah, and reinvent the Internet...  |
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