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Chemistry World July 13, 2010 Mike Brown |
NMR: Nobel work if you can get it There are plenty of practicing chemists who are grateful for Richard Ernst's work to develop what the Nobel committee described as 'perhaps the most important instrumental measuring technique within chemistry.' |
National Defense August 2010 Eric Beidel |
An Off-the-Shelf Soldier Suit That Can Change Parts Many countries, including the United States, have their own programs for developing soldier devices. But they can take two or three years to come to fruition, and the cost goes up the longer it takes. |
National Defense August 2010 Grace V. Jean |
Look Ma, No Glasses: Moving to 3-D Television and Beyond In the future, military robot operators may search for roadside bombs in 3-D. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 Richard P. Mislan |
Cellphone Crime Solvers Could the murder victim's BlackBerry lead to her killer? Increasingly, the answer is yes |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 David Patterson |
The Trouble With Multicore Chipmakers are busy designing microprocessors that most programmers can't handle |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 Neil Savage |
Hynix Makes No-Capacitor DRAM Z-RAM memory design might find a spot in the competitive DRAM market |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 Anne-Marie Corley |
The Danger-Sensing Driver's Seat A haptic car seat pokes you in the ribs when an accident looms |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 |
The Robot Baby Reality Matrix Some robot babies look real. Some act real. A few do both |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 Mark Anderson |
WiMax for Smart Grids The wireless network is unpopular in smartphones but could succeed with smart grids |
IEEE Spectrum July 2010 David Schneider |
Home-Built Radio Rules The FCC's treatment of home-built devices could stand an update |
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