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NEWS

June 2009

STORIES ELSEWHERE

Stories about the SID 2009 paper Active-Matrix PHOLED Displays on Temporary Bonded Polyethylene Naphthalate Substrates with 180°C a-Si:H TFTs:

A Full-Color Screen That Bends, Technology Review

Stories about the Nature Materials paper Stretchable active-matrix organic light-emitting diode display using printable elastic conductors:

Stretchable Displays, Technology Review
Researchers tout bendable, stretchable OLED displays, TechSpot.com

Stories about the Nature papers Self-assembly of a nanoscale DNA box with a controllable lid and Self-assembly of DNA into nanoscale three-dimensional shapes:

A Lockbox Built from DNA, Technology Review
Nanoscale origami folds DNA into 'medicine cabinet', New Scientist
DNA In Another Dimension, Chemical & Engineering News

Stories about the Nano Letters paper Nanoscale Reversible Mass Transport for Archival Memory:

A Billion-Year Hard Drive, ScienceNOW
Billion-year ultra-dense memory chip developed, ZDNet
US team create carbon nanotube ultra-memory, The Register
Carbon nanotubes promise billion year memory storage, Electronics Weekly

Story about the Nature Photonics paper Electrofluidic displays using Young–Laplace transposition of brilliant pigment dispersions:

A New E-Paper Competitor, Technology Review



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RESEARCH WATCH

January 14, 2009
Citizen science in the age of connectedness
A nice column in the New York Times by biologist Aaron E. Hirsh explains the rise of Big Science — massive, centralized projects with large staffs and expensive equipment — and the emerging trend of distributed citizen science. [more]

"Physics is to the rest of science what machine tools are to engineering. A corollary is that science places power in our hands which can be used for good or ill. Technology has been abused in this way throughout the ages from gunpowder to atomic bombs."
- John Pendry, Imperial College London


Thanks to Kevin from
GoldBamboo.com
for technical support
 
 
 

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