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Chemistry World Jon Cartwright |
Rollerball Writes Electronics Straight to Paper Electronic circuits can be fiddly to make: engineers have to snap components onto a board or etch designs onto a copper surface. Now a US group of researchers has demonstrated that all you really need is a pen and some paper. |
Technology Research News May 21, 2003 Eric Smalley |
Flexible display slims down Researchers from E Ink Corp. have produced a high-resolution electronic display that is 0.3 millimeters thick. |
Technology Research News August 13, 2003 |
Video keys off human heat Researchers from the University of Tokyo have developed a method for segmenting out the human parts of a video stream that does not require a particular background. |
Popular Mechanics January 2007 Joel Johnson |
Physics Card Not Worth The Trouble: Tech Clinic There are now "physics cards" that are supposed to boost the gaming experience. Is this redundant with the functionality of a graphics card? |
Chemistry World April 25, 2012 Simon Hadlington |
Near-Infrared Spectroscopy Illuminates Medieval Art Using infrared spectroscopy researchers discovered that the painter of this manuscript had an idiosyncratic style using pigment binders normally associated with frescoes. |
Technology Research News February 11, 2004 |
All-plastic display demoed Researchers from Philips Research in the Netherlands have demonstrated a fast, flexible computer display that is nearly as thin as paper. |
InternetNews May 18, 2011 |
Google Android Hit With Security Flaw Google's client login protocol gets a bad rap from security researchers for being insecure. |
Chemistry World September 15, 2009 Rajendrani Mukhopadhyay |
Renaissance artworks analysed Researchers have combined two ion-beam analysis techniques to obtain more detailed information about the composition of paints used in Renaissance works of art. |
TIME Asia October 3, 2011 Hillary Brenhouse |
Brush with Modernity Though he came to the archaic tradition of Chinese ink painting by painfully slow and patient degrees, Shanghai-born Zheng Chongbin quickly left the old teachings behind. |
InternetNews August 3, 2010 |
Tech Firms Split on Paying for Security Flaws Some major IT firms have made it a standard practice to pay security researchers for bringing vulnerabilities to their attention, while others have a strict prohibition against it. What accounts for the divide? |
Technology Research News July 14, 2004 |
E-ink drawing pad closer to paper The device could eventually be used for freehand computer input, including cartoon drawing and adding annotation to documents. |
Chemistry World June 5, 2009 Nina Notman |
Color e-books just over the page E Ink Corporation is to be brought by Prime View International in Taiwan for approximately $215 million. The companies say this should speed to market the colored ink devices that are currently being trialled. |
PC Magazine August 3, 2005 John R. Quain |
Physics Chips Computing how a car should crash through a wall or how a wave should break can stymie any CPU. To help, Ageia Technologies is readying what it claims is the first ever physics processing unit that will improve the computerized gaming experience. |
Chemistry World September 2, 2007 Lewis Brindley |
Nanoparticles Paint a Finer Picture Swiss scientists have developed a process that can print detailed images using nanoparticles as 'ink', while maintaining their catalytic and optical properties. |