From solar panels to electric circuitry, the next big thing may be really tiny. Global leaders in nanotechnology — the science of the very, very small — spent two...Nanotechwire.com From ACM News | June 26, 2009
IBM and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology are building the Aquasar, a new supercomputer that will use water to keep the system cool and will recycle some...Wired News From ACM TechNews | June 23, 2009
University of California, San Diego (UCSD) computer scientists Amin Vahdat and Geoffrey Voelker are two of the 60 professors that will receive awards as part of...CSD News From ACM TechNews | June 23, 2009
Researchers at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) have made a discovery that could lead to smaller, faster, more powerful, and more...Oak Ridge National Laboratory From ACM TechNews | June 22, 2009
Imperial College London professor of cognitive robotics Murray Shanahan is using graphics processing technology originally developed for the gaming industry to...The Engineer (United Kingdom) From ACM TechNews | June 19, 2009
Physicists at the U.S. Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and Stanford University have discovered that the compound bismuth telluride acts...SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory From ACM TechNews | June 19, 2009
In a groundbreaking study, scientists at FAU have created a "hybrid" system to examine real-time interactions between humans and machines (virtual partners). By...Florida Atlantic University From ACM News | June 16, 2009
IBM scientists have succeeded in measuring the charge state of individual atoms using non-contact atomic force microscopy, which could have a major impact on molecular...eWeek From ACM TechNews | June 16, 2009
Technologies that exploit the unique weirdness of quantum mechanics could debut in the very near future, thanks to the groundbreaking work of a huge European research...ICT Results From ICT Results | June 15, 2009
A huge consortium of European researchers is solving some of the fundamental obstacles blocking real quantum computing applications in the short term. At the same...ICT Results From ICT Results | June 12, 2009
Scientists are on the verge of understanding and controlling the colossal magnetoresistance effect (CMR), a phenomenon that is potentially up to a thousand times...Carnegie Institution for Science From ACM TechNews | June 11, 2009
Researchers at the University of Chicago and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have developed an "electronic glue" that could accelerate advances in semiconductor...The niversity of Chicago From ACM News | June 11, 2009
Ola Agren, a Ph.D. candidate at Umea University in Sweden, has developed an algorithm that will make search engines faster and return more relevant results. Search...The Swedish Research Council From ACM TechNews | June 5, 2009
Scientists from the Institute of Spectroscopy at the Russian Academy of Sciences have developed a method of nanofabrication that uses an atom pinhole camera to...PhysOrg.com From ACM TechNews | June 3, 2009
Superfast lasers could potentially be used to make storage and retrieval of data on hard disks up to 100,000 times faster, according to French physicists. A team...Agence France Presse (France) From ACM TechNews | June 3, 2009
Electronic memory chips may soon gain the ability to bend and twist as a result of work by engineers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)...National Institute of Standards and Technology From ACM News | June 4, 2009
In 1974 Ari Aviram and Mark Ratner from the IBM Thomas J Watson Research Center in New York suggested using molecules themselves as electronic components. In the...Physics World From ACM News | June 4, 2009
Cornell University computer science researchers have developed new algorithms to simulate the sounds of water to correspond with images. Cornell professor Doug...Cornell Chronicle Online From ACM TechNews | June 3, 2009
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) engineers have uncovered a flaw in the understanding of transistor noise, a phenomenon affecting the electronic...NIST Tech Beat From ACM TechNews | May 22, 2009
Researchers are improving unmanned helicopters' capabilities to address regulatory requirements and commercial uses.Gregory Goth From Communications of the ACM | June 1, 2009