Videos
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Technology Review presents our list of the 10 technologies that we think are most likely to change the way we live. |
 - Wireless Power
- Marin Soljacic, assistant professor of physics at MIT, talks about his vision for wireless power transmission.
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- Cellulytic Enzymes
- Frances Arnold, a professor of chemical engineering and biochemistry at the California Institute of Technology, talks about the challenges of creating biofuels.
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- Connectomics
- Harvard neuroscientist Jeff Lichtman talks about the fledgling field of connectomics
--an attempt to create complete wiring diagrams of different parts of the brain.
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- Reality Mining
- Alex ( Sandy ) Pentland, director of the Human Dynamics Group at MIT, describes a future in which cell phones log data about their owners' behavior.
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- Atomic Magnetometers
- Physicist John Kitching explains what his sensitive magnetic detectors do and how they work.
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- Graphene Transistors
- Walter de Heer, a professor of physics at Georgia Tech, explains how graphene can be used to make ultrafast transistors.
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- Modeling Surprise
- Eric Horvitz, head of the Adaptive Systems and Interaction group at Microsoft Research, talks about surprise modeling.
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- Nanoradio
- Alex Zettl's tiny radios, built from nanotubes, could improve everything from cell phones to medical diagnostics. See and hear the Nanotube radio.
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- Offline Web Applications
- Kevin Lynch, chief software architect at Adobe, talks about a new generation of Web applications.
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- Probabilistic Chips
- Krishna Palem thinks a little uncertainty in chips could extend battery life in mobile devices--and maybe the duration of Moore's Law, too.
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