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Wired December 2003 David Diamond |
The Love Machine Building computers that care. |
Wired December 2003 Brendan I. Koerner |
Intel's Tiny Hope for the Future The microprocessor giant is thinking even smaller: tiny sensor chips that network with each other -- inside everything on earth. |
Technology Research News November 19, 2003 Smalley & Patch |
Segway robot opens doors Researchers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology have crossed a robotic arm with the bottom half of a Segway to make a robot named Cardea that can traverse hallways and open doors. |
CFO November 17, 2003 Peter Krass |
Nanotech What do you get when you mix chemistry, biology, physics, and computing? Something small, and huge. Nanotechnology is the science of manipulating individual atoms and molecules to create materials, devices, and systems with enhanced physical properties. |
Fast Company December 2003 Scott Kirsner |
5 Tech Innovators From developing pocket-sized fuel cells to studying a worm that may hold the key to longer human life, the innovations of these five visionaries make them wizards to watch. |
PC Magazine November 5, 2003 |
RFID: Promise and Peril If you're wearing or carrying anything with an embedded RFID tag, you could conceivably be tracked wherever you go. |
PC Magazine November 4, 2003 |
Paging Dr. Robot The Johns Hopkins Hospital's latest physician addition, Dr. Robot, isn't a real doctor. He's a five-foot-tall robot -- a swiveling video camera and computer screen mounted on a mechanical base that allows doctors in remote locations to examine patients. |
PC Magazine November 4, 2003 |
The Thin-Air Display One display being tested is the Heliodisplay, invented by MIT researcher Chad Dyner and being developed by IO2 Technology. It projects a video image -- or any standard computer image -- that appears to float in midair. No special goggles are required. |
Fast Company November 2003 Ian Wylie |
Innovation for Whom? New technology for our homes might make our lives easier without making them any better. |
BusinessWeek November 3, 2003 Faith Arner |
Computing That Only Looks Like Child's Play Can MIT replace keyboards with pinwheels, globes, and what resembles a hockey game? |
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