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Technology Research News July 2, 2003 |
Big sites hoard links University of London researchers have uncovered another clue about the Internet's structure -- the rich-club phenomenon. Large, well-connected nodes have more links to each other than to smaller nodes, and smaller nodes have more links to the larger nodes than to each other. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2006 Ted G. Lewis |
Netwar! Recent technology infrastructure failures each posed a problem of concern for homeland security: how to guard critical infrastructure that is so vast and complex that we cannot afford to protect every part or anticipate the ultimate effects of a disruption? |
Technology Research News February 12, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Social networks sturdier than 'Net Although many types of networks, including biological networks, social networks, and the Internet, have a lot in common, when you get right down to who is connecting to whom, social networks follow different rules. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2005 Madani & Novoosel |
Getting a Grip on the Grid The findings of major electric disturbances around the world highlight the need for cross-regional grid reforms, so that the best available technology is promptly put to use, without lengthy delays arising from American legislative or regulatory processes. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2007 Suhas Sreedhar |
A New Way of Looking at the Internet The Net as a Matryoshka Doll: Scientists have constructed a new, more accurate picture of the Internet using a combination of graph-theory analysis and distributed computing. |
Technology Research News September 8, 2004 Kimberly Patch |
Simple Search Lightens Net Load Researchers working on finding better ways to search the Internet are increasingly turning to methods that require individual nodes, or servers, to know a little bit about nearby servers, but don't require servers to look much beyond their own neighborhoods. |
Industrial Physicist Eric J. Lerner |
News New ways to create circuits and other patterns at nanometer scales... Blackout clears the air... Fighting big blackouts... Bacteria stir things up... |
Reason June 2007 Jesse Walker |
Killing Internet Radio The U.S. Copyright Office recently announced a potential death sentence for thousands of Internet radio stations. Thanks to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, webcasters must pay a special performance fee each time they play a recording. |
InternetNews December 1, 2008 Henry Newman |
Tips on Storage Architecture for E-Discovery E-Discovery systems pose unique challenges for storage architects if they want to keep up with data growth, performance and backup and recovery demands. |
Entrepreneur May 2004 Amanda C. Kooser |
The Mesh Pit Taking wireless networks to the next level. |
Science News August 25, 2007 Julie J. Rehmeyer |
Math Trek: Squashing Worms A mathematician and theoretical computer scientist at Microsoft Research has mathematically analyzed the question of which computers to patch first when a mutating worm is spreading through the Internet. |
Industrial Physicist Aug/Sep 2003 Kaufman et al. |
Forum: Grid computing made simple Grid computing enables the use and pooling of computer and data resources to solve complex mathematical problems. The technique is the latest development in an evolution that earlier brought forth such advances as distributed computing, the Worldwide Web, and collaborative computing. |
Home Theater February 11, 2009 Mark Fleischmann |
Who Will Make the DTV Cut? Yesterday the Federal Communications Commission released a list of TV stations that intend go all-digital next week, cutting off analog transmissions. |
HHMI Bulletin Nov 2011 Nicole Kresge |
Bacterial -- Viral Warfare with CSF When bacteria survive a run-in with a virus or phage, they take some of the invader's DNA and integrate it into their own genome to help combat future attacks. |
Technology Research News June 29, 2005 Kimberly Patch |
Physics maps city complexity Researchers used existing biological and social networking models to analyze city streets. Area traffic was directly proportional to the ease of navigation, and street grids were complicated as areas tried to avoid getting too much traffic. |
Technology Research News March 26, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Network builds itself from scratch Drawing heavily on the chemistry of biology, researchers from Humboldt University in Germany have devised a way for electronic agents to efficiently assemble a network without having to rely on a central plan. |