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IndustryWeek December 1, 2002 Jill Jusko |
R&D Stars To Watch These researchers and engineers continue to push the boundaries of technological and scientific achievement. |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2003 |
R&D Stars Shine Past accomplishments and promising futures characterize these researchers and engineers who continue to push the boundaries of technical and scientific achievement. |
Wired July 2000 Rick Overton |
Molecular Electronics Will Change Everything The Next Big Thing is very, very small. Picture trillions of transistors, processors so fast their speed is measured in terahertz, infinite capacity, zero cost. It's the dawn of a new technological revolution - and the death of silicon. Can you say Thiophene Ethynylene Valley? |
IEEE Spectrum July 2005 Michael Riordan |
The End of AT&T In 1974 AT&T was the world's largest corporation and research arm Bell Labs provided a constant flow of technological break-throughs due to long-term stable funding. There is no comparable situation today. |
PC Magazine July 1, 2003 |
Future Tech: 20 Hot Technologies to Watch 20 of the most promising technologies of tomorrow. And since we're all gadget freaks, we couldn't help but show you some of the prototype products we found along the way. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2006 Tekla S. Perry |
Wizard of Watts James D. Meindl, professor of microelectronics at the Georgia Institute of Technology, caught the low-power semiconductor wave when it was barely a ripple and brought generations of graduate students along for an exciting ride. |
Technology Research News December 29, 2004 |
TRN's Top Picks: Technology Research Advances of 2004 Biotechnology... Communications... Computer chips... Computer interfaces... Engineering... etc. |
Chemistry World July 6, 2012 |
Protein power Tom Muir, professor of chemistry and molecular biology, Princeton University, US, is an expert in protein engineering and its application to studying cellular signalling networks. |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2002 Patricia Panchak |
Technologies Of The Year -- Molecular Electronics Hewlett-Packard breakthrough could extend limits of silicon chips. |
Industrial Physicist Theis & Coufal |
How IBM Sustains the Leading Edge Although we constantly focus on the market, IBM Research has also produced a remarkable string of scientific firsts in physics and in other fields of science and engineering. |
Salon.com September 16, 2002 Leonard Cassuto |
Big trouble in the world of "Big Physics" Six months ago, Jan Hendrik Schon seemed like a slam dunk nominee for a Nobel prize. Then some of his colleagues started to take a closer look at his research. |
BusinessWeek August 27, 2009 Adrian Slywotzky |
How Science Can Create Millions of New Jobs Reigniting basic research can repair the broken U.S. business model and put Americans back to work. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2005 Justin Mullins |
Shedding Light On Organic Transistors The first single-crystal organic transistor that can be switched on and off by light is giving physicists a unique peek into the way photons interact with organic semiconductors. The new device could have a major impact on the way OLED displays are manufactured. |
Technology Research News June 4, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Plastic transistors go vertical Researchers from the University of Cambridge in England have brought inexpensive, practical organic transistors a step closer to your grocery cart by devising a pair of processes that form small, vertical transistors from layers of printed polymer. |
Bio-IT World August 15, 2005 Kevin Davies |
Hood Hails 'Century of Biology' Leroy Hood won the 2005 Bio-IT World President's Award for his work on the synthesis of DNA and protein, and on the genome project. |