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Technology Research News October 31, 2005 Eric Smalley |
GMU's Harry Wechsler Harry Wechsler, Director of the Distributed and Intelligent Computation Center, talks about trends of pattern recognition in computing and his personal feelings about social views on science and technology. |
Technology Research News February 9, 2005 |
Herve Gallaire: Xerox CTO and Innovation Group president Gallaire is responsible for Xerox's research and technology organizations and $800 million annual investment in research and development. In this e-mail interview, he tells what he sees as important or significant trends in science and technology research, and more. |
Science News August 26, 2006 Ivars Peterson |
Making Sense of the Web's Structure Pioneering studies of social networks and the Web's structure lead to a prestigious mathematics prize. |
Technology Research News October 3, 2005 Eric Smally |
USC's Michael Arbib The Fletcher Jones Professor of Computer Science shares his views on trends in science and technology, his work, and the links between technology, neuroscience, and behavior. |
Technology Research News September 12, 2005 |
Georgia Tech's Ronald Arkin The Director of the Mobile Robot Laboratory talks about trends and issues surrounding the integration of robots into society. |
Technology Research News July 14, 2004 Kimberly Patch |
Messenger taps social nets Researchers improve instant messenging to bring those with the questions and those with the answers closer together. |
Technology Research News May 15, 2006 Eric Smalley |
ICL's John Pendry An interview with the condensed matter theorist who has conducted extensive research on the interaction of electrons and photons with surfaces. |
Technology Research News August 22, 2005 |
CMU's Brad Myers Computer science professor Brad Myers discusses cell phones, remotes, difficult software, email triage, anti-intellectualism and a future where we're all managers. |
Technology Research News July 28, 2004 Eric Smalley & Kimberly Patch |
Online popularity tracked Researchers analyzing how this effect plays out on the Internet have developed a metric, or batting average, for an item's popularity. |
Wired August 2005 John Battelle |
The Birth of Google Larry thought Sergey was arrogant. Sergey thought Larry was obnoxious. In spite of this, Sergey was drawn to Larry's computer project when it reached a certain complexity. Their experiences are recounted as their efforts produced the search engine named Google. |
Technology Research News February 26, 2003 |
Word bursts reveal hot topics Cornell University researcher Jon Kleinberg has shown that you can learn a lot about what topics are becoming important at any given time by analyzing large collections of documents for sudden changes in content. |