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Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Biomedicine | By Emily Singer | 12 Comments
The FDA is poised to decide whether biotech animals should be sold as food.
A new transport method involving ice crystals could make it practical to get natural gas from remote areas, with no worries about explosions.
Much like Netflix can suggest movies, an Internet recommendation engine called Wings points you toward dating prospects.
A scale model is further proof that beamed-energy propulsion works.
Friday, September 03, 2010
Video App Offers Guidance While You Shoot
NudgeCam encourages good footage by tracking faces and assessing sound quality.
How Websites Make You Spill Your Secrets
People divulge more sensitive information on sites that look less safe.
Thursday, September 02, 2010
Sept • Oct Issue
To Market: Our Latest List of Cool New Products
A Charger for the Smart Grid, Low-Cost Solar, Touch Screen Touch-up, Designing Genes, Disposable EEG, Boss on Wheels, Body Tracker, Into the Clouds, Watch the Hand, and Desktop Cancer Check.
Robotic Storm Tracker Gets a Big Test with Earl
The largest-ever storm monitoring mission is now gathering scientific data that was previously impossible to get.
Transplanting Gut Microbes to Treat Disease
Scientists examine new ways to manipulate the microorganisms within us.
Counting Down to Commercial Space Launches
The next few years will see at least two new commercial spacecraft put into orbit.
Wednesday, September 01, 2010
Sept • Oct Issue
Living Data
The three-story-high Allosphere creates unique visualizations.
Nano Switches that Store More Data Head to Market
Products featuring memristors could appear in 2013.
Sept • Oct Issue
Down the Tubes
How free streaming video threatens the porn industry.
Tiny Needles to Fight Cancer
Researchers inject quantum dots into the skin using plastic microneedles, potentially providing a way to diagnose and treat diseases.
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Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Sept • Oct Issue
How to Remake Life
Venter Institute researchers have made the first viable cell with a synthetic genome.
Sept • Oct Issue
Cash for Infrastructure
What happens after the federal stimulus funding for energy runs out?
Web iTunes? Don't Believe the Hype
Online music streaming services are altering the way people find, buy, and share songs--when will iTunes join the fun?
Bringing Cell-Phone Location-Sensing Indoors
App pinpoints people inside shops without requiring them to "check in."
Monday, August 30, 2010
Sept • Oct Issue
Taking Over a Car
Researchers "break in" with software and a laptop.
New Court Ruling Could Cripple Stem-Cell Research
Once again, federal funding restrictions cast uncertainty over the field.
A Simple Filter Could Make LCDs More Efficient
The new approach wastes far less light, saving energy.
The Office of the Future
Sponsored by
The Office of the Future
New technologies are changing the old ways of doing business. What are the innovations that organizations are exploring to better manage their operations and make them more competitive?
Follow the Smart Phones
Mining cell phone data could help target ads and rank local services.

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Fuels
Even with the push for renewable energy, demand for fossil fuels is still growing.

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Spotlight on Hurricane Season

Advanced Hurricane Forecasting
Scientists believe their new forecasting model will make more-accurate predictions, thereby saving lives.
By Brittany Sauser
A Model for Hurricane Evacuation
Software developed at MIT could save lives and money by improving hurricane planning.
By Brittany Sauser
The Gulf Coast: A Victim of Global Warming?
North Atlantic hurricanes are growing worse, but an MIT climatologist says it would be 'absurd' to attribute Katrina or Rita to long-term climate change.
By Wade Roush

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Technology Review September/October 2010

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  • carbonmind

    carbonmind | Thompsonville, MA

    Judge denies request to lift the injunction on stem cell research http://bit.ly/asxhJb  09/07/2010 07:57 PM

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    Technology Review

    Ryan Chin of MIT Media Lab, to show off the “Car of the Future” at #emtech http://cities.media.mit.edu/projects/citycar.html  09/07/2010 05:46 PM

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    willknight | Cambridge, MA

    New book by Clifford Nass explains how human-computer-interaction can improve you human-to-human-interaction skills http://bit.ly/ch7rP5  09/07/2010 11:49 AM

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