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IndustryWeek December 1, 2002 Jill Jusko |
R&D Stars To Watch These researchers and engineers continue to push the boundaries of technological and scientific achievement. |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2001 Vivian Pospisil |
R&D Stars To Watch IW celebrates the contributions of individuals who drive innovation and provide the initial spark to economic growth... |
Industrial Physicist Theis & Coufal |
How IBM Sustains the Leading Edge Although we constantly focus on the market, IBM Research has also produced a remarkable string of scientific firsts in physics and in other fields of science and engineering. |
Technology Research News December 29, 2004 |
TRN's Top Picks: Technology Research Advances of 2004 Biotechnology... Communications... Computer chips... Computer interfaces... Engineering... etc. |
Industrial Physicist Feb/Mar 2003 Patrick Young |
Forum: Small focus brings big rewards Focusing on small things in innovative ways figured prominently in earning high honors for 10 researchers, the winners of six prized awards in physics. |
Industrial Physicist Apr/May 2003 Patrick Young |
Salute to new Fellows Thirteen members of the Forum on Industrial and Applied Physics were elected Fellows of the American Physical Society, an honor bestowed each year by the society on a select group of its members from industry, academia, and government. |
Wired December 2003 Brendan I. Koerner |
Intel's Tiny Hope for the Future The microprocessor giant is thinking even smaller: tiny sensor chips that network with each other -- inside everything on earth. |
InternetNews April 26, 2004 Michael Singer |
IBM Takes Nano Chip Design for a 'Spin' A collaboration between IBM and Stanford University could lead to reconfigurable logic devices, room-temperature superconductors and quantum computers. |
PC Magazine July 13, 2004 Carol Levin |
Top Ten Tech Trends Biomechatronic Man... Wireless USB... WiMAX: The Wireless Net Gets Extreme... The Service-Oriented Nation... Get Out the Mote... Self-Writing Software... High-Definition DVD... Scaling the Language Barrier... VoIP: Getting Better All the Time... Smart Skin... |
IEEE Spectrum October 2007 Bohr et al. |
The High-k Solution Microprocessors coming out this fall are the result of the first big redesign in CMOS transistors since the late 1960s. |
PC Magazine July 1, 2003 |
Future Tech: 20 Hot Technologies to Watch 20 of the most promising technologies of tomorrow. And since we're all gadget freaks, we couldn't help but show you some of the prototype products we found along the way. |
Wired October 2001 Wil McCarthy |
Ultimate Alchemy Research into artificial atoms could lead to one startling endpoint: programmable matter that changes its makeup at the flip of a switch... |
IEEE Spectrum December 2007 Joshua J Romero |
Japanese Engineers Turn High-k Dielectric Transistor Problem on Its Head One gate metal and two high-k dielectrics could mean a cheaper and easier 45-nanometer CMOS manufacturing process for transistors. |
Chemistry World February 5, 2007 Lionel Milgrom |
Hafnium Oxide Helps Make Chips Smaller and Faster Intel and IBM have announced that they will use dramatically different materials to build smaller, faster transistors for their next generation of chips. |
InternetNews January 27, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Intel Breakthrough Keeps Moore's Law on Track Intel dispenses with silicon for the first time in 40 years in its effort to make smaller, faster and less power-hungry chips. |
Bio-IT World August 13, 2002 John Dodge |
Let's get Small Nanotechnology raises the bar for semiconductors as chips near single-digit nanometer proportions. |
IndustryWeek April 1, 2008 Jill Jusko |
Engineered for Girls Web site encourages females to join engineering programs. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2006 Lauren Aaronson |
Parallel Processor How IBM engineer Sandra Johnson contributes to her field, her business, and the community. |
Industrial Physicist Feb/Mar 2003 Jennifer Oullette |
Quantum dots for sale Artificial atoms illluminate biotechnology and other fields |
IEEE Spectrum December 2008 Erico Guizzo |
The EE Gender Gap Is Widening Electrical engineering faces an age-old question: What do women want? |
BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 John Carey |
Physics: "Putting The Weirdness To Work" Scientists say quantum materials will be the basis for amazing devices, but when? |
CIO July 1, 2002 Thomas N. Theis |
Nanotech Revolution Hype aside, here's what to expect as nanotech grows up. |
Chemistry World November 27, 2006 Simon Hadlington |
Getting the Dope on a Single Atom of Dopant Scientists have successfully probed the electronic and quantum mechanical properties of a single atom of dopant in a silicon transistor. The research could provide important information necessary for the development of quantum computers. |
Food Engineering February 1, 2007 Kevin T. Higgins |
Outsourcing Engineering Refining Priorities for New Age Engineers The balancing act that engineering teams must master is outsourcing nonessential jobs while retaining the personnel and talent necessary for innovation. |
Food Engineering June 4, 2007 |
Not Your Mama's Sensor More rugged, adaptable and reliable sensors are being deployed in industrial automation. And the fact they're taken for granted attests to how well they perform. |
CIO July 15, 2003 John Edwards |
Sensitive Sensors Get those gigs. The State University of New York at Buffalo's Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department has developed sensors that could boost hard drive capacity by a factor of 1,000 -- without also driving up price. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2007 Sarah Adee |
Transistors Go Vertical The semiconductor industry fights silicon sprawl by building up, not out. Today's CMOS transistor is planar, but chip makers are exploring more power-efficient three-dimensional structures as well as a planar structure with two gates. |
Job Journal March 18, 2007 |
Career Snapshot: Mechanical Engineer Mechanical engineers have a blueprint for durable careers. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2007 Lieven Vandersypen |
Dot-to-Dot Design Researchers are connecting tiny puddles of electrons in a chip and making them compute -- the quantum way. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2006 Ron Hira & Harry Goldstein |
IBM Takes the Guesswork Out of Services Consulting Big Blue pushes a new research discipline called services science |
The Motley Fool May 2, 2005 Jack Uldrich |
Intel's "Intel Around Us" Strategy Intel's push into the realm of all things nano stretches beyond "Intel Inside" and broadens the company's long-term potential. Investors, take note. |
Job Journal May 13, 2007 |
Career Snapshot: Civil & Structural Engineers California's crumbling infrastructure adds to a growing demand for civil and structural engineers. |
PC Magazine July 13, 2004 Cade Metz |
Get Out the Mote Sprinkled generously, "smart dust" wireless sensors get the message across. A form of the technology has already reached the marketplace. |
Technology Research News September 22, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Flexible Sensors Make Robot Skin Researchers have devised pressure-sensor arrays that promise to give objects like rugs and robots the equivalent of one aspect of skin -- pressure sensitivity. |
The Motley Fool January 29, 2007 Jack Uldrich |
IBM and Intel Install a New Gatekeeper Changes to transistor components will keep Moore's Law running smoothly. Which companies stand to come out on top? Investors, take note. |
Technology Research News November 3, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Single Field Shapes Quantum Bits Researchers have recently realized that it may be possible to control the electrons in a quantum computer using a single magnetic field rather than having to produce extremely small, precisely focused magnetic fields for each electron. |
BusinessWeek August 27, 2009 Steve Hamm |
Big Blue's Global Lab IBM is forging cutting-edge partnerships around the world. |
Wired December 2003 Martha Baer |
The Ultimate on-the-fly Network How a flock of reclusive seabirds became pioneers of pervasive computing. A case study from the sensor net frontier. |