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Best of the Week: Sunday, March 21, 2010

Materials | By Prachi Patel | 5 Comments
Plastic cells are lighter than silicon ones, but they're not as efficient--one company aims to fix that.
Algae could provide a cheaper, easier method for manufacturing drugs.
A new lighting system uses network cables, instead of electrical wires, to supply power and carry data.
An IBM project promises cheaper network management.
Ford and the University of Michigan are developing social networking apps.
Friday, March 19, 2010
Increasing Yield from Gasification
A new process can make more fuel from biomass.
A Cheap, Portable Wound-Healing Device
After the Haiti earthquake, physicians tested a vacuum pump meant to speed healing.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Tough Coatings for Airplanes
A strong material inspired by abalone shells could be applied over large areas.
Searching for Another Earth
A new discovery advances the hunt for Earthlike planets beyond our solar system.
An Intelligent Live Web Listing
Startup will track live events, including streaming video, auctions, and competitions.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Data Mining for Dodgy Machines
A study highlights efforts to take down ISPs that allow malicious activity.
Startups Aim to Reinvent
Local Advertising
Automatically tailored display ads could attract small businesses.
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Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Fingertip Bacteria:
A Promising
Forensic Tool
The genetic makeup of microbes on a person's skin could provide crime scene evidence.
Monday, March 15, 2010
Turning Gas Flares into Fuel
Microreactor developers race to turn troublesome gas into usable crude oil.
Smarter Chargers for Electric Vehicles
The devices could help stabilize the grid, and make charging electric cars cheaper.
Startups Focus on AI at South by Southwest
A new crop of startups aims to bring artificial intelligence to the masses.

Briefings

Personalized Medicine

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Transportation

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Cloud Computing

Personalized Medicine
We look at how cheap, fast genomic sequencing is beginning to yield medicines tailored to your genes.
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Spotlight on the Current Issue

Searching for Biofuels' Sweet Spot
California-based Amyris has used breakthroughs in synthetic biology to reinvent biofuels. To turn its technology into an industrial process, it has headed to the land of sugar: Brazil.
By Antonio Regalado
The Evolution of Innovation
How companies develop new products and how the companies themselves develop in the process.
By Matt Mahoney
Q&A: Bill Gross
Can a veteran dot-com investor make solar power as cheap as coal?
By Jason Pontin

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