Study lists nanotech as potential growth sector for "Chicagoland"

from the "Chicagoland"? dept.
A report issued by the office of Chicago Mayor Richard Daley examines options to help the Chicago region ("Chicagoland" — who thinks these things up?) retain its position as a leading economic center in the United States. The Mayor's Council of Technology Advisors engaged a consulting firm to help develop an economic growth strategy for Chicagoland; the report identifies nanotechnology as a potential growth option, and notes local strengths that would allow the region to develop a leading role in the nanotechnology sector. The report ("A New Economy Growth Strategy for Chicagoland") is available online as an Adobe Acrobat PDF file (about 2.2 MB) at the Chicago Technology Today website.

A commentary on the plan that appeared in the Chicago Sun-Times ("How Chicago can seize the New Economy future", by H. Wolinsky, 19 July 2001) is available on the SmallTimes website.

Examining the legal implications of nanotech

from the future-tense dept.
An interesting and wide-ranging article on the legal and ethical implications of molecular nanotechnology ("At nanoscale, the laws of humans may not apply", by Michael Becker, 30 July 2001) appears on the SmallTimes website. The article includes extensive quotes from Robert A. Freitas Jr., author of Nanomedicine and a research scientist at Zyvex Corp.; and Glenn Reynolds, a Foresight Institute Director and professor of law at the University of Tennessee. The piece raises some of the thorny issues on regulating new technologies, intellectual property, open source development models, and others.

France funds nanotech incubator in Grenoble

from the World-Watch dept.
According to a report in Tornado-InsiderThe Renaissance of Minatecì, by D. Coviello, 23 July 2001), funding has been secured for Minatec, the new research and incubation center for microtechnology and nanotechnology startups in Grenoble, France. Minatec operates under the French Commissariat de líEnergie Atomique (CEA) Laboratoire díélectronique, technologie et instrumentation (LETI; website is in French), based in Grenoble. The financing plan would provide 122 million euros (about U.S. $106 million). About half of the funds will come from nearby regions, towns, councils and departments, with the remainder provided by private institutions and the CEA. According to the report, Minatec aims to build a 60,000-square-meter center for 3,500 entrepreneurs, students, professors and researchers in the field of microelectronics and nanotechnology to work on developing products and launching start-up companies. It is expected to be completed by 2004.
If you read French, you can find more information at the Minatec website.

Zyvex garners media attention

from the deep-in-the-heart-of-Texas dept.
A profile of Zyvex Corp. appeared in Darwin Magazine ("Small is Beautiful", by Emelie Rutherford, 27 July 2001), focusing on the companyís efforts to develop replicating systems. "It would take forever to produce something that can be seen with the naked eye one molecule at a time," explains Rocky Angelucci, a technical representative at Zyvex, "so these mechanisms will duplicate themselves until there's a big enough array of them to produce building blocks for products." (And, once again, we see another example of the endless inability of the media to verify the correct spelling of the name of Zyvex President and CEO, Jim Von Ehr.)

Von Ehr was also named one of "The Top 25 High Tech Leaders in Dallas" by D Magazine in July.

Chinese nanotech researcher urges a "cool-headed attitude"

from the No-more-nano-washing-machines,-please dept.
A leading Chinese nanotechnology researcher has called for a more realistic attitude toward nanotechnology in the face of increasing hype and misdirection about the field, according to a report in the Business Weekly ("Nanotech shrouded in doubt", by Liang Yu, 17 July 2001). Despite being a promising prospect, nanotechnology still has a long way to go in China before it can bring about any fundamental changes to people's lives, cautioned Li Minqian, senior researcher at the Shanghai Institute of Nuclear Research under the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Li is also director of the Shanghai Joint Centre for Nanotechnology. "What the sector really needs now is a cool-headed attitude," noted Li.

Researchers, economists worry about lack of new U.S. science talent

from the priming-the-pump dept.
According to a report in the San Jose Mercury News ("Tech talent alarm sounded", by Tia OíBrien, 21 July 2001), foreign countries, not the United States, are increasingly producing the engineers and scientists driving high-tech innovations. The report says the shortage threatens to further slow the U.S. economy and high-tech innovation, as well as the U.S. position as a world technology leader. The article quotes Stanley Williams of Hewlett-Packard Labs and a leading molecular electronics researcher: "Everyone over the age of 45 in my lab was born in the United States. No one under the age of 45 in my lab is from the United States." Williams spoke at the New Democrat Network's fifth annual retreat, which brings Democratic members of Congress west to learn more about Silicon Valley's needs. Many of the legislators present back measures to provide additional funding to U.S. universities to encourage students in science and technology fields.

Similar concerns about a lack of native U.S. scientific talent were raised by the U.S. military in June 2001.

S. Korea approves funding for nanotech program

from the World-Watch dept.
The South Korean government has approved initial funding for the countryís ambitious new nanotechnology research program, according to the Korean Chosun newspaper ("W1.4 Trillion Earmarked for Nano-Technology", 18 July 2001). In a meeting of National Science and Technology Committee on 18 July 2001, presided over by President Kim Dae-jung, the government decided to inject a total of 1.485 trillion won (about US $1.148 billion), including W983 billion from the state sector and W501.5 billion from the private sector, into the nanotechnology sector over the next five years to bring the country's technical status in the sector to the level of advanced countries. The funding will go to the fostering the required manpower in the field for a total of 12,600 experts in the next ten years.

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NCI official envisions medical nanotechnology

from the The-vision-thing dept.
The medical applications of nanotechnology will change the shape of medicine, said Dr. Carol Dahl, director of the Office of Technology and Industrial Relations at the U.S. National Cancer Institute, according to a report from United Press International ("Nanomedicine: The new frontier", by K. Samson, 23 July 2001). Dahl spoke during a special briefing, titled ìThe Promise of Nanotechnology: The Coming Revolution in Medicine,î presented at the National Health Council on 23 July 2001.

Read more for details and links to additional coverage of the event.

U of Pennsylvania will establish nanotech center

The U.S. National Science Foundation has awarded $1.45 million to scientists at the University of Pennsylvania, establishing a new Nanotechnology Science and Engineering Center that will seek out the building blocks of next-generation nanostructures. The four-year grant will fund research on how simple biological molecules organize themselves into complex structures and the development of synthetic self-assembling molecules. Details are available in this press release from 24 July 2001.

Red Herring features nanotechnology

Several articles from the special report on nanotechnology that appeared in Red Herring magazine in early July 2001 are now available online ("Nanotech grows up", 15 June/1 July 2001).

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