Cool Stuff That's Coming

Sorry, we couldn't find any posts. Please try a different search.

Relief From Pin-Pricking May Be at Hand for Diabetics

While other non-invasive technologies have been able to read glucose levels to a rough level, Glucon’s early tests show that it reaches the same efficiency levels as blood-strip tests.

Tech Visionaries Offer Ideas for New Gadgets

"The personal computer for the rest of the world isn’t going to be the personal computer. It’s going to be the cellphone," says John Sviokla

UW scientists study strange material with communications and optics potential

What if the speed of light is a constant only most of the time? What if gravity sometimes pushed instead of pulled?

Latest buzz words in science – Robot swarms

In simulations on a computer at Frontline, teams of up to 200,000 robots were shown to be able to coordinate their activities smoothly.

Ten Things I Didn’t Know About Google

10) If you work at Google, you may end up with an untraditional job title…such as "Spam Cowboy and Porn Cookie Guy" (and that’s one employee, not two).

Visually impared can surf the web with AudioEye – "Surf by Sound"

AudioEye’s patent-pending software unites speech technologies that can verbalize computer text with digital streaming media infrastructure. Our media creation/content management software allows website owners to faithfully render Internet sites in completely audio format, combining different…

Ten Must-Read Tech Stories from Forbes Magazine

http://www.forbes.com/technology/2005/05/13/cx_pp_0513digidown.html

Nanotech printing on the way

In the future, Dimatix expects its printing technologies to be used in the life sciences, where scientists could re-create human cells by layering down DNA substrates.

Super Water Kills Bugs Dead

Chronic wound care is a multibillion-dollar market worldwide. The solution will be available to U.S. physicians in June, said Alimi. Trials are being organized for preoperative disinfectant, dental applications and burn and diabetic treatments, he said.

U.S. scientists create self-replicating robot

Scientists at the Cornell University in Ithaca, New York have created small robots that can build copies of themselves.