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PC Magazine July 13, 2004 Cade Metz |
Get Out the Mote Sprinkled generously, "smart dust" wireless sensors get the message across. A form of the technology has already reached the marketplace. |
CIO September 1, 2003 Julie Hanson |
Tiny Sensors Technology observers have been touting the coming proliferation of wireless sensors that will report all sorts of data about the stuff to which they are attached. Now researchers are watching a company called Dust Inc. to see how it executes its plans to sell small electronic sensors called motes. |
InternetNews February 3, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
DOE Lowers the Lights with Wireless Mesh The Department of Energy pilots a plan to retrofit corporate lighting systems with automatic sensors to save energy. |
InternetNews November 14, 2006 Tim Scannell |
Dust Bets These 'Motes' Will Float Dust Networks takes an all-in-one approach to wireless embedded sensors. |
PC World September 28, 2006 Melissa J. Perenson |
Tech Trend: Camera Dust Busters New models of digital cameras come with multiple ways of eliminating dust particles. |
Chemistry World March 28, 2013 Emma Stoye |
London mayor accused over dust suppressants The European commission is investigating the use of dust suppressants in London following accusations that they were deliberately used around air monitoring sensors to disguise high levels of pollution. |
Popular Mechanics November 2009 Seth Porges |
How to Get Dust off a DSLR Sensor: Digital Clinic Digital SLR cameras with interchangeable lenses are highly versatile, but they have a unique vulnerability: When the lens is removed, the door is open for dust |
Popular Mechanics February 2007 Joel Johnson |
How to Cool Down Your Computer: Tech Clinic Leaving the case open while you run your computer draws more bugs in dust and outweighs any cooling benefits. |
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 February 1, 2006 |
Spontaneous Reboots Overheating, power-supply problems, or bad memory can cause a computer to spontaneously reboot. |
Chemistry World August 2006 David Walt |
Comment: Common Sense for Sensors Designing sensors for manufacturability must be performed at the outset rather than as an afterthought. Only when we develop such reproducible sensors will they become pervasive tools for improving our quality of life. |
InternetNews December 16, 2005 David Needle |
Talton Teases With Dust-Free PC Claim Startup says it's figured out how to keep PCs dust-free and prevent overheating. |
Chemistry World May 13, 2014 Patrick Walter |
Star chamber sparkles with space dust Nasa has created star dust down here on Earth. The dust was produced in a lab by simulating the conditions found in the atmosphere of a red giant star. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2006 Brian Betts |
Smart Sensors A single moment of human error can make a sensor and all the data it gathers worse than worthless. A new standard for analog sensors could save lives and money. |
Food Engineering June 4, 2007 |
Not Your Mama's Sensor More rugged, adaptable and reliable sensors are being deployed in industrial automation. And the fact they're taken for granted attests to how well they perform. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics March 2010 John Keller |
Multisensor Designs and Increasing Resolutions Are Major Trends in Infrared and Other Electro-Optical Sensors Infrared (IR) and other electro-optical sensors will see major technological breakthroughs in sensitivity, resolution, and overall ability to help military forces see through fog, smoke, dust, and the darkness of night. |
U.S. CPSC February 18, 2010 |
GE Infrastructure Sensing Recalls Commercial CO2 and Temperature Sensors Due to Fire Hazard The CO2 and temperature sensors can overheat, posing a fire hazard. |
PC World December 20, 2006 Steve Bass |
Top Tips for a Cleaner, Faster Computer Dirt and dust can damage your rig and hurt its performance. Fight back! |
CIO July 15, 2003 John Edwards |
Sensitive Sensors Get those gigs. The State University of New York at Buffalo's Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department has developed sensors that could boost hard drive capacity by a factor of 1,000 -- without also driving up price. |
Science News September 9, 2006 |
Timeline: From the September 5, 1936, issue Single plow furrow digs deep gully... Hope for saving workers exposed to silica dust... Measures temperature change in brain while it works... |
IEEE Spectrum March 2008 |
Dust-Devil Dynamo Natural electric fields can play a role in determining the amount of dust that makes it into the atmosphere, influencing weather and climate. |
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. |
The Motley Fool November 28, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
Nike Wants to Feel Your Pain For some athletic shoe makers, new sensor technology is not limited to tracking mileage. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2008 Willie D. Jones |
New Sensor Shows Electric Nature of Dust Devils Electric field sensor could help in climate studies and electronics manufacturing too. |
InternetNews March 6, 2006 Clint Boulton |
From Sun Labs: Remote Sensors, on The SPOT Sun Microsystems's Lab today will introduce Project Sun Small Programmable Object Technology, a remote control gadget that creates sensor-oriented applications for wireless sensor networks and consumer electronics. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2006 |
LabVIEW Drivers for Wireless Sensor Networks National Instruments announced LabVIEW drivers for wireless sensor networks, giving engineers and scientists working with these devices the ability to fully integrate their wireless sensors into a graphical development environment. |
PC World October 30, 2002 Sean Captain |
Future Gear: Tiny Chips, Everywhere With petite sensors and radio transmitters, every object can have an identity and even think for itself. |
Chemistry World December 10, 2012 Andrew Turley |
Pfizer's lost gold A stash of gold dust bought for $700,000 last year has gone missing from a Pfizer lab in St Louis, Missouri. |
Chemistry World June 9, 2011 Harriet Brewerton |
Sensitive sugar sensor US scientists have designed a calorimetric sensor as a point-of-care diagnostic instrument that can detect low levels of glucose compared to similar sensors. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics December 2004 |
Air Force Eyes Combination Infrared Camera and Communications Device U.S. Air Force scientists are looking to Sensors Unlimited Inc. to develop a smart, multifunction, dual-wavelength combination video camera and communications tool for night-vision surveillance and reconnaissance applications. |
Technology Research News December 31, 2003 |
Shape key to strong sensors Researchers have found a possible explanation for why a pair of semiconducting compounds -- mixes of silver and selenium or tellurium -- are strong magnetic sensors over a wide range of magnetic field strengths. |
IndustryWeek April 1, 2007 Jonathan Katz |
Sensing Change In Wireless Sensor technology is expected to drive wireless growth in manufacturing. |
CFO August 1, 2005 John Edwards |
Sensors Working Overtime Wireless tracking devices are radically transforming how businesses monitor vital equipment. |
Technology Research News June 2, 2004 |
Sensors Track Martial Arts Blows Researchers from Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), Stanford University, and Impact Measurement have brought computers into a martial arts sparring ring with a system that senses the force of a hit. |
CFO November 1, 2010 David McCann |
Sensors, Sensors Everywhere Embedding sensors and communications capabilities into any and every object imaginable can facilitate previously unattainable levels of data analysis and, in some cases, response. |
Technology Research News October 6, 2004 |
Gas flow makes electricity Gas flows at speeds as low as a few meters per second over semiconductor materials and carbon nanotubes have produced electricity. The phenomenon could lead to small, inexpensive, accurate gas flow sensors in less than two years, according to the researchers. |
Fast Company June 2009 Tim McKeough |
SensFloor Makes Sidewalks Smarter German company Future-Shape has developed SensFloor, a layer of textile sensors that monitors human movement and can be installed underneath almost any type of flooring. |
Technology Research News July 30, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Eyes off, screen off Giving computers the ability to discern where you are looking means, among other possibilities, setting screens to go dormant when they don't have your attention. The trick to making it practical is keeping the energy-saving mechanism from using more energy than it saves. |
CIO April 26, 2012 Agam Shah |
Intel Researchers Plot a Smarter, Personalized Cloud Intel researchers hope to combine sensors and cloud to deliver more accurate weather, air quality information |
Home Toys December 2002 David Steele |
Driveway And Entry Annunciators For Home Automation Driveway and entry annunciators have been around for many years. To add them to your home automation and security system can add a whole new meaning to convenience. They can provide you not only with being alerted when a visitor approaches, but also turn on lights for safety and convenience. |
Wired July 2004 Brendan I. Koerner |
The Seismic Underground It's the sweet spot of the San Andreas fault, the perfect place to build the ultimate earthquake science lab. It's also 2 miles straight down. |
Popular Mechanics August 21, 2008 Emily Gertz |
Desert Storm Watch: Scientists Observe Saharan Dust to Predict the Next Big Hurricane Season A University of Wisconsin researcher and his team have connected the dry, windswept plains of the Sahara to the intensity of the Atlantic hurricane season. |