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- Northern lights: Count Anchorage among one of the latest LED cities
- Northern lights: Count Anchorage among one of the latest LED citieswait one minute!they are spending 2.2 million to save 360,000 a year. Just some quick math here... 2.2 / 360,000 ~ 6 years! How long do the lights last?Very longLEDs last [i]much[/i] longer than traditional fluorescence or incandescent...
- Tags: Engineering, light-emitting diode, Count Anchorage, LED City, Northern Lights
- Discussion threads 2008-08-06
- 3-D imaging with FINCH
- Holography offers a way of creating complete 3-D images of samples, but requires mechanical scanning of laser beams. But two researchers have invented a new technology called FINCH (short for 'Fresnel incoherent correlation holography.' According to them, FINCH can make 3-D imaging quicker and more accurate. Their FINCHSCOPE, a 3-D...
- Tags: 3D, Imaging, FINCH, Holography, Document Management, Enterprise Software, Software, Finance, Managerial Accounting, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2008-02-21
- Building 3-D particles with light
- Engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT have used ultraviolet light to create mass-producing 3-D microparticles that could be used for medical diagnostics and tissue engineering. 'For example, they could be designed to act as probes to detect certain molecules, such as DNA, or to release drugs or nutrients.'...
- Tags: 3D, Massachusetts Institute Of Technology, Particle, Biotechnology, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2007-12-04
- Philips SPC-900NC Webcam
- The Philips SPC 900NC is a serviceable Webcam, but it can't match up to the Logitech QuickCam Pro 9000, which lists for the same $99. What this Philips cam has going for it is the ability to capture smooth video at up to 60 frames per second, the best face-tracking...
- Tags: Corporate communications, Philips Electronics N.V., camera, VLounge, VLounge app, video, Webcam
- Product reviews 2007-11-16
- GMOs down to the chromosome level
- If don't like the concept of 'Frankenfoods,' I have bad news for you. U.S. researchers have developed an artificial chromosome for corn plants. The Chicago Tribune reports that researchers can now make chromosomes to order. These artificial chromosomes are accepted as natural by the plants and passed through generations. As...
- Tags: Gene, University Of Chicago, Chromosome, Cell, Preuss, C/C++, Biotechnology, Programming Languages, Software Development, Software/Web Development, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2007-10-20
- Filming nanotubes inside living animals
- A team of researchers at Rice University has filmed carbon nanotubes inside living animals. They've used a custom-built microscope and a technique called near-infrared fluorescent imaging to detect DNA-sized nanotubes inside living fruit flies. But more importantly, they've compared a group of fruit fly larvae fed with a yeast paste...
- Tags: Nanotube, Larva, Carbon Nanotube, Fruit Fly, Nanotechnology, Emerging Technologies, Roland Piquepaille
- Blog posts 2007-09-25
- A new nanowire light source
- Californian researchers have created a bio-friendly nano-sized light source capable of emitting coherent light across the visible spectrum. According to the researchers, this is 'the first electrode-free, continuously tunable coherent visible light source that's compatible with physiological environments.' When the technology becomes available, maybe in 10 years, our computers might...
- Tags: Science &, Nature, Nanotechnology, Engineering &, Innovation, Energy &, Environment
- Blog posts 2007-07-02
- An autonomous anti-cancer drug
- As you probably know, researchers have been working for a while to find more efficient ways to deliver anti-cancer drugs directly to their targets. But instead of finding a new drug carrier, why not focusing on a drug that knows its path to the target and which delivers itself to...
- Tags: HPPH, cell
- Blog posts 2007-03-16
- New bedside diagnostics tools
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT chemists have developed a high-throughput and inexpensive method for the multiplexed detection of biomolecules by using multifunctional particles. This method could be used to screen for millions of different biomolecules and lead to new and low-cost clinical bedside diagnostics: no more need to wait a...
- Tags: tool, particle, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Blog posts 2007-03-12
- Shiny nanoparticles for new sensors
- Every other week, some scientists say that they have found the perfect sensors to be used to detect environmental pollution or contamination of food products. Today, researchers at UC Davis say they have created luminescent nanoparticles that could also be used for medical diagnostics. These nanoparticles are coated in a...
- Tags: Defense &, Security, Nanotechnology, Science &, Nature, Engineering &, Innovation, nanoparticle
- Blog posts 2007-01-26
- The moleculator gets a keypad lock
- For your information, a moleculator is simply a molecular scale calculator, or a molecular system which can perform logic and arithmetic operations. Now, LiveScience reports in a brief article that chemists at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel have developed a molecule-size keypad lock. This lock is based on...
- Tags: Defense &, Security, Science &, Nature, keypad, lock
- Blog posts 2006-12-31
- A terabyte of data on a regular DVD?
- This is the promise of the 3-D Optical Data Storage system developed at the University of Central Florida UCF. This technology allows to record and store at least 1,000 GB of data on multiple layers of a single disc. The system uses lasers to compact large amounts of information onto...
- Tags: laser, wavelength, Engineering &, Innovation, Computers &, Internet
- Blog posts 2006-12-07
- Bacteria can build nanowires
- Researchers at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory PNNL have discovered that under certain conditions, some very common bacteria can form nanowires. These bacteria were able to produce nanowires as small as 10 nanometers in diameter, but which can reach hundreds of microns in length. What is interesting here is that...
- Tags: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, bacteria
- Blog posts 2006-07-11
- Non-spherical 'armored' gas bubbles
- Gas bubbles are perfectly spherical because this shape offers a minimal surface for any given volume. Even when two bubbles are merging, the results is a larger sphere. But now, researchers from Harvard University have found a way to build stable 'armored' bubbles with non-spherical shapes. They can obtain peapod-,...
- Tags: bubble, particle
- Blog posts 2005-12-15
- Quantum dots to detect DNA
- Detection of DNA is critical in diagnosing genetic diseases, but current approaches are somewhat cumbersome and time-consuming. So engineers from Johns Hopkins University have developed a new ultrasensitive, quick and easy technique to detect DNA. This system is the first one to use quantum dots to detect DNA. The device,...
- Tags: DNA
- Blog posts 2005-12-06
- Holograms to help nanotechnology
- In a very short but intriguing article, Technology Research News TRN writes that researchers from Harvard University and New York University have found a way to use holographic optical traps HOTs to manipulate semiconductor nanowires. As this holographic approach to nano-assembly can allow for simultaneous independent manipulation of multiple nanowires,...
- Tags: nanowire, semiconductor, holographic optical trap
- Blog posts 2005-11-10
- Diamond Calculator (EXE)
- Diamonds Calculator software is a must for all Jewelry Professionals, Jewelers, Pawnbrokers, Refineries, Laymen, Investors and Consumers. Diamonds Calculator takes over where the Rap Sheet leaves off. Computes both Mounted and Unmounted Diamonds. No Diamond scale, No Problem. Adjusts and Corrects the Market price with deductions in several different categories...
- Tags: Diamonds Calculator, Storage, Databases, Hardware, Enterprise Software, Software, Data Management
- Software downloads 2005-07-01
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