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Technology Review: The Authority on the Future of Technology
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
IBM's big cloud-computing plan starts with virtual desktops and software application testing.
The company will bring vehicles to market in 2012.
A new modular design could make building nuclear reactors faster and cheaper.
Francis Collins shares his thoughts on the present and future of consumer genetic medicine.
Top Stories
Monday, June 15, 2009
Hunch: A Cure for Indecision?
By Erica Naone | Web | 6 Comments
A new site provides answers to life, the universe, and just about everything.
A Two-Pronged Water-Treatment Technology
By Monica Heger | Materials | 1 Comment
Combining light and electrical current removes contaminants from water.
A Cheap Route to Robust LEDs
By Anne-Marie Corley | Materials
Chemical bonds put a new spin on quantum-dot hybrid light-emitting devices.
Friday, June 12, 2009
Driving the Volt
By Kevin Bullis | Energy | 23 Comments
The electric propulsion system for GM's new plug-in hybrid gives a silent yet powerful ride.
Antibody Drugs Customized by Genotype
By Courtney Humphries | Biomedicine
A company wants to improve monoclonal-antibody therapies by tailoring them to patients' genotypes.
Hospital to Collect Patients' Genomic Data
By Emily Singer | Biomedicine | 1 Comment
A Boston hospital aims to collect genome information from all consenting patients.
Thursday, June 11, 2009
iPhone Hackers Get a Break
By Robert Lemos | Communications
The difficulty of running nonapproved code on the iPhone has turned off security researchers--until now.
The Human Genome: Yours for $48,000
By Emily Singer | Biomedicine
A new sequencing service aims to take whole-genome sequencing mainstream.
IBM Invests in Battery Research
By Katherine Bourzac | Materials | 9 Comments
The company hopes to develop powerful, lightweight lithium-air batteries.
Social Networks Keep Privacy in the Closet
By Erica Naone | Web
Economics may explain why it's so hard to find and configure privacy settings on many social networks.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
GM Opens a Battery Research Lab for the Volt
By Kevin Bullis | Business | 13 Comments
The large facility is meant to reflect a change of direction for the bankrupt company.
Extracting Meaning from Millions of Pages
By David Talbot | Computing
University of Washington software pulls facts from 500 million Web pages.
Reinventing Cellulosic Ethanol Production
By Jennifer Chu | Energy | 3 Comments
An Israeli startup says that it has a cheap process to make biofuels from cellulosic materials.
Tuesday, June 09, 2009
Off-the-Shelf Genetic Testing On Display
By Emily Singer | Biomedicine | 1 Comment
The emerging market of direct-to-consumer genetic testing gets down to business.
Wireless Power Harvesting for Cell Phones
By Duncan Graham-Rowe | Communications | 19 Comments
Nokia hopes to create a device that could harvest enough power to keep a cell phone topped up.
All Washed Up for Jatropha?
By Phil McKenna | Energy | 8 Comments
The draught-resistant "dream" biofuel is also a water hog.
Monday, June 08, 2009
Making Fat Disappear
By Courtney Humphries | Biomedicine | 21 Comments
Engineering mice with a fat-burning strategy from bacteria keeps the animals thin.
Mining "Ice That Burns"
By Christopher Mims | Energy | 9 Comments
Newly discovered methane hydrate reserves deep in the ocean show promise for mining.
A Full-Color Screen That Bends
By Prachi Patel | Materials
A new way to mass-produce flexible OLED displays could mean affordable commercial products.
Friday, June 05, 2009
Pricing Carbon Emissions
By Kevin Bullis | Energy | 25 Comments
A bill before Congress may prove a costly way to reduce greenhouse gases.
The Display That Watches You
By Kate Greene | Computing | 3 Comments
Researchers in Germany have created a display that doubles as a camera.
Cheaper Big-Screen OLEDs
By Katherine Bourzac | Materials
New organic display materials can be printed with ink-jets.
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