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Videos

TR10 Technology Review presents our list of the 10 technologies that we think are most likely to change the way we live.
Wireless Power
Wireless Power
Marin Soljacic, assistant professor of physics at MIT, talks about his vision for wireless power transmission.
Cellulytic Enzymes
Cellulytic Enzymes
Frances Arnold, a professor of chemical engineering and biochemistry at the California Institute of Technology, talks about the challenges of creating biofuels.
Connectomics
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.
Reality Mining
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.
Atomic Magnetometers
Atomic Magnetometers
Physicist John Kitching explains what his sensitive magnetic detectors do and how they work.
Graphene Transistors
Graphene Transistors
Walter de Heer, a professor of physics at Georgia Tech, explains how graphene can be used to make ultrafast transistors.
Modeling Surprise
Modeling Surprise
Eric Horvitz, head of the Adaptive Systems and Interaction group at Microsoft Research, talks about surprise modeling.
Nanoradio
Nanoradio
Alex Zettl's tiny radios, built from nanotubes, could improve everything from cell phones to medical diagnostics. See and hear the Nanotube radio.
Offline Web Applications
Offline Web Applications
Kevin Lynch, chief software architect at Adobe, talks about a new generation of Web applications.
Probabilistic Chips
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.

Infotech Videos

Microsoft's Shiny New Toy
Microsoft's Shiny New Toy
Photosynth offers an immersive way to view photos of a given thing or place.
Art Games
Art Games
Digital artists are using game technologies to create bold new works.
Amazon Kindle
Amazon Kindle
Technology Review correspondent Daniel Turner demonstrates the Amazon Kindle e-reader.
The Building, Digitally Remastered
The Building, Digitally Remastered
See how computer modeling has revolutionized building design and construction.

Biotech Videos

Growing New Hearts from Old
Growing New Hearts from Old
Footage from the University of Minnesota shows researcher Doris Taylor and her team engineering new hearts.
A Wiring Diagram of the Brain
A Wiring Diagram of the Brain
Watch a 3-D reconstruction of a piece of rabbit retina.

Nanotech Videos

Expandable Silicon
A new chip design could lead to far cheaper large-area electronics.
• Large-Scale Rewritable Holograms
By Kevin Bullis
• No More Thumbprints
By Kevin Bullis
• Superstrong Carbon-Nanotube Fibers
By Mason Inman

Energy Videos

Ethanol from Garbage and Old Tires
Coskata's president and CEO and one of the company's main investors describe the benefits of its technology.
• Harvesting Power from the Ocean
By Kevin Bullis
• David Berry on Novel Biofuels
By Upland Productions
• Lithium-Ion Motorcycles
By Kevin Bullis

Biztech Videos

The Next Generation of iPhone Hacks
Shinya Kasatani developed software called pocketguitar that lets a person play a guitar by pressing and strumming the phone's screen.
• Intelligent, Chatty Machines
By Kate Greene
• A New Perspective on the Virtual World
By Erica Naone
• Printing without Ink
By Kate Greene

Letters from the Editor

How to Stay Young
The easy part is understanding a new technology; what's harder is to think creatively about it.
• The Geography of Innovation
Jan/Feb 2008
• Oppenheimer's Ghost
Nov/Dec 2007
• Whom Should We Reward?
Sept/Oct 2007

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» Biotech

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» Energy

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Technology Review May/June 2008
An Electrifying Startup
A new lithium-ion battery from A123 Systems could help electric cars and hybrids come to dominate the roads.
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