$50 off Foresight@Google Conference for Nanodot readers

Foresight is having our 25th anniversary conference and celebration at Google, and we want you there! Use code NANODOT for $50 off on: FORESIGHT@GOOGLE 25th Anniversary Conference Celebration & Reunion Weekend Google HQ in Mountain View, CA June 25-26, 2011 https://foresight.org/reunion Topics are emerging tech with special emphasis on transformative nanotech. A rockstar lineup of… Continue reading $50 off Foresight@Google Conference for Nanodot readers

Nanotechnology provides patch to regenerate heart tissue

Carbon nanofibers and a polymer were combined to create a composite to regenerate natural heart tissue.

Intensive one-day course on nanomaterials for aerospace and defense

The CANEUS International Organization on “Micro-Nano Technologies for Aerospace Applications” will hold an intensive one-day course “Nanomaterials for Aerospace and Defense: Applications, Issues, Trends and Practices”

TODAY is the last day for early rate on Foresight@Google

Midnight tonight Pacific time is the deadline for the early registration rate on Foresight@Google, our 25th Anniversary Conference and Celebration. Check it out here: https://foresight.org/reunion Past participants haveĀ said: “This is mind candy for my soul. Having attended for two years now, this event stands alone in my mind as an opportunity to explore new horizons,… Continue reading TODAY is the last day for early rate on Foresight@Google

A modular molecular composite nanosystem for solar power

A bacterial virus called M13 was genetically engineered to control the arrangement of carbon nanotubes, improving solar-cell efficiency by nearly one-third.

New software aids design of 3-D DNA structures

New software for scaffolded DNA origami makes it easier to predict what shape will result from a given DNA template.

Medical nanorobots win poll on engineering's Next Big Thing

A poll of NewScientist readers selected medical nanorobots as the technology that will have the biggest impact on human life in the next 30 years.

Protein, RNA, DNA: Nanotechnology finds a multitude of paths to attack cancer cells

Protein, RNA, DNA provide very different molecular architectures for nanotechnology to adopt to deliver drugs to cancer cells while sparing healthy cells.

Promise and challenge on the road to practical graphene electronics

Smaller, faster, cooler: graphene transistors show promise for practical analog signal processors, for magnetic memory devices, and for self-cooling electronic circuits.

'Good Cholesterol' nanoparticles silence cancer-promoting genes and destroy cancer cells

‘Good Cholesterol’ nanoparticles are non-toxic and use the need of cancer cells for HDL cholesterol to deliver RNA molecules to silence the expression of cancer-promoting genes.

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