Our Technological Future - Mixed Bag #7
Many people don't keep a lasting impression of individual articles reporting on technological breakthroughs.
That's why I collect a bunch and post them altogether. There's 36 of 'em!
Dear reader, have a look at your technological future!
300GB Holographic CD’s will be available this week
In the beginning: scientists get ready to hunt for God particle
A Quantum (Computer) Step: Study Shows It's Feasible to Read Data Stored as Nuclear 'Spins'
Stem Cell Experiment Yields Heart Valves
Kurzweil: Computers Will Enable People To Live Forever
Thinking Machines
Robot with 'human soul' explores remotely
Bionic foot for hit and run victim
Cornell robot is "conscious," adapts to injury
Teeth: a future renewable natural resource?
Ray Kurzweil: Computers Will Extend Human Lifespan
AI Seduces Stanford Students
Life at 140? Longer life spans up for debate
SKorean robot will walk the walk as well as talk the talk
Cosmic Duo Spins Matter From Light
Stem cell cure hope for back pain
Genetically engineered blood protein can be used to split water into oxygen and hydrogen
Scientists harness mysteries of the brain
Stem Cells Are Where It's At
The future of discs: 10TB CDs
Distance no worries for spooky particles
Computers that digest the news to change trading
Forget HDTV, the future is 3DTV
GM Plug-in Hybrid to Deliver 70MPG
All but Ageless, Turtles Face Their Biggest Threat: Humans (This is not directly a tech-link, but it does discuss a turtle-species that does not age. It is an example of the fact that immortality is completely natural. This is relevant to life-extension and thus relevant to this blog.)
As population ages, opportunities are born
Self-assembling Nano-ice Discovered -- Structure Resembles DNA
Is thorium the answer to our energy crisis?
Kevin Warwick: The ITWales Interview
10 Tech Concepts You Need to Know for 2007
Toronto scientists cure disease in mice
New Hope for Stem-Cell Therapy
Triple-blinded Study of StemEnhance
Welcome to the world of nano foods
More Doctoral Research Funded by the Methuselah Foundation
Hitachi Brain Interface Allows Users to Control Model Trains
No comments:
Post a Comment