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3,633 articles from Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories
- title
- Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories
- tags
- description
- Technology Review exists to promote the understanding of emerging technologies and their impact.
- last updated
- January 16, 2012 (22:07)
- homepage
- http://www.technologyreview.com
- feed url
- http://www.technologyreview.com/rss/rss.aspx
- date added
- November 26, 2007 (12:38)
- meta
- alexa, technorati, rojo
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SATURDAY 20. NOVEMBER, 2010
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The best of the rest from the Physics arXiv this week

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FRIDAY 19. NOVEMBER, 2010
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Palladium can absorb vast quantities of hydrogen but materials scientists have now discovered that this process has an extraordinary effect on the metal
Here's a curious experiment involving palladium, the rare silvery metal well known for its ability to absorb hydrogen. When it is saturated, the ratio of hydrogen to palladium can be as high 0.6, which is why the metal is used to filter and even store hydrogen.
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Etymotic's BlastPLG earplugs are designed to safeguard troops from long-term hearing damage without compromising their "situational awareness."
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A new imaging method developed at Stanford reveals the complex array of synapses in the cortex.
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THURSDAY 18. NOVEMBER, 2010
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Beijing wants to lead the world in cloud computing, but does it make sense in a country without widespread broadband?
In October, Beijing announced that it would spend 50 billion yuan ($7.5 billion) to become "the largest cloud computing center in China and even the world,"

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The Electrolytic Fluid Antenna has a range of 30 miles and could be used on sea or land.
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The discovery of an unrecorded crater raises the possibility that the biblical mountain was struck by a meteorite, say physicists
Mount Ararat is an ancient, isolated volcano in eastern Turkey near the borders with Iran and Armenia. According to the Bible, the mountain is the final resting place of Noah's Ark. Many an expedition has tried and failed to find the Ark's remains.
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Hybrid rocket engines are rare, but a clever technique could make them more common.
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WEDNESDAY 17. NOVEMBER, 2010
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With ARmonica, two players bounce virtual balls off musical note bars using Wii remotes.
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The Bloom notebook computer is designed to combat rampant e-waste.
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The latest simulations show that black holes can fragment into several pieces during a supernova, say astrophysicists
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TUESDAY 16. NOVEMBER, 2010
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You don't have to be rich like Tom Cruise to rock a gestural interface.
Gestural computing: ever since

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The secret behind the beautiful songs that birds sing has been decoded and reproduced for the first time
One of the great challenges in neuroscience is to explain how collections of neural circuits produce the complex sequences of signals that result in behaviours such as animal communication, birdsong and human speech.
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MONDAY 15. NOVEMBER, 2010
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Watch this space to find out.
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The founder of search engine Duck Duck Go just pledged 10 percent of the site's income--will anyone follow suit?
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SATURDAY 13. NOVEMBER, 2010
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The best of the rest from the Physics arXiv this week

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FRIDAY 12. NOVEMBER, 2010
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Could paper airplanes and helium balloons be cheaper solutions for space photography?
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Twitter's founder talks about his new business, and getting people to share details of their purchases online.
Of all the things than happen in our lives, credit card transactions might seem like the last thing anyone would volunteer to share openly. But that doesn't mean it won't happen. Eventually our credit cards may be connected with social apps like Twitter and Facebook.
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It's a minor miracle that computer scientists reached the petascale. What comes next is anyone's guess.
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Citizen scientists are being asked to hunt for supernovas in the latest incarnation of the Galaxy Zoo project
A few years ago, astronomers found themselves burdened with a tricky problem. Having surveyed the night skies in a project known as the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, they were faced with the giant task of analysing the images of the million or so galaxies that the survey had spotted.
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Technology Review reporter, Lauren Cox, tests the zipcar app, which lets drivers find the nearest available car in 55 cities, on the iPhone. The mobile-phone app lets customer be more spontaneous about renting a vehicle for an hour or so.
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THURSDAY 11. NOVEMBER, 2010
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Optoelectronics engineers have discovered how to make gold of any colour by carving tiny shapes onto its surface
When it comes to metal, you can have any colour as long as its silver. That's because the sea of electrons within most metals absorbs and emits light over the entire optical range. Rather than silver, metals are actually colourless.
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WEDNESDAY 10. NOVEMBER, 2010
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In China, blackouts and fuel shortages accompany efforts to meet a greenhouse gas target.
Efforts to reduce carbon dioxide emissions in China may be backfiring--at least in the short term.
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High value categories have become dominated by link spam, says CEO of rival search engine Blekko.
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Computer scientists reveal a new class of malware that attacks specific processors rather than the operating system that runs on them
Computer malware is insidious and dangerous but there are well known limits to the kinds of attacks that it can be used to mount. One of the most obvious is that the malware has to be targeted at a weakness in a specific operating system.
Naposledy aktualizované zdroje
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PhysOrg (dnes, 21:24)
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Guardian Unlimited Science (dnes, 21:21)
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Yahoo! (dnes, 21:15)
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NYT > Science (dnes, 19:55)
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ScienceNOW (dnes, 19:55)
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ScienceDaily (dnes, 19:34)
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CBC - Technology & Science News (dnes, 18:39)
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Discovery (dnes, 18:32)
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Sci-Tech Today (dnes, 17:29)
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BBC Science/Nature (dnes, 17:15)
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National Geographic News (dnes, 17:01)
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TIME (dnes, 11:10)
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EurekAlert (dnes, 06:00)
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NASA (2. 2, 21:27)
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Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (16. 1, 22:07)

