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Advanced Nanotechnology 2004

Schedule Of Events For scientists, technologists, engineers, students, including physicists, materials scientists, chemists, mechanical engineers, computer scientists    Artificial Molecular Machines Synthesizing Controlled Nanoscale Structures Building with DNA Designing Macromolecular Structures Protein Engineering Modeling Nanoscale Properties Nanoassembly and Nanorobotics Analyzing Complex Nanosystems Diamond-Based Molecular Manufacturing Programming Nanosystems Roadmap to Productive Molecular Machine Systems For strategic… Continue reading Advanced Nanotechnology 2004

Mechanical manipulation of silicon dimers on a silicon surface (video)

UK scientists use mechanical force to manipulate silicon dimers on a silicon surface as a first step toward automated atomically precise manufacture of three-dimensional nanostructures.

Foresight's student award-winners go on to great things

Foresight Research Analyst and Technical Editor James Lewis has tracked the careers of those receiving Foresight’s student award.  Here are his findings on the careers of a few of these gifted young researchers: We at Foresight find it gratifying to track the subsequent careers of those who have won our nanotechnology-related prizes and awards, in… Continue reading Foresight's student award-winners go on to great things

Singularity, part 6

This the sixth essay in a series exploring if, when, and how the Singularity will happen, why (or why not) we should care, and what, if anything, we should do about it. Part VI: The heavily-loaded takeoff The fastest software I ever used ran on some of the slowest computers I ever had. Circa 1980,… Continue reading Singularity, part 6

The nanotechnology we were promised

A response to my “Parricide” essay has been seen on IEEE’s Tech Talk blog. Dexter Johnson gives a fair summary of the positions taken to date, and says As the argument seems to go, Drexler popularized the term nanotechnology in his book Engines of Creation, and so when the general public heard that thousands of… Continue reading The nanotechnology we were promised

Drexler Calms Fears of Runaway Replicators

The IOP journal Nanotechnology has published a paper by Chris Phoenix and Eric Drexler titled "Safe exponential manufacturing" that addresses the fear of out-of-control nano-replicators, and analyzes risks, concerns, progress, misperceptions, and safety guidelines for future molecular nanotechnology (MNT) development.

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