0
    0
    Your Cart
    Your cart is emptyReturn to Shop

        Nanotech-specific search engine

        from the find-all-things-nano dept.
        Pat Delany writes "Nanospot.org is a new web search engine just for nanotechnology. We target the contents of over 240 nanotech websites, including academic papers, opinion pieces, research/industrial equipment spec sheets, experiment results, researchers' cv's, general nano overviews, etc., to provide easy access to the best nanotechnology information on the web." ChrisPeterson writes "When you're looking for info on molecular nanotechnology, you may want to use this new nanotech-only search engine. Why? The big engines are weeks or months out of date. This one searches lots of nanotech websites and does it more often than the big engines can. It worked well when I tested it on a common nanotech search term."

        DoD Funding Nanotechnology

        from the nano's-real-it-has-a-military-acronym dept.
        Steven C. Vetter alerts us to the new Defense University Research Initiative on Nanotechnology (DURINT) "to enhance universities' capabilities to perform basic science and engineering research and related education in nanotechnology critical to national defense…The DoD expects the DURINT program will promote nanotechnology research, primarily for defense but also for civilian applications." Areas include Nanoscale Machines and Motors, Nano-System Energetics, and Characterization of Nanoscale Elements, Devices, and Systems. Read More for the official announcement.

        Big discussion of Foresight Guidelines on nanotech safety

        from the other-dot-talks-nano dept.
        Our parent website, Slashdot, has a discussion of the Foresight Guidelines for nanotech safety. There are some useful comments embedded in it. To read the highest-rated comments first, do what you do on this site: use the pull-down menu to change "Oldest First" to "Highest Scores First", then press the "change" button. See also Jeffrey Soreff's and others' comments on the original item here on nanodot.

        Coarse-Grained Agoric Computing

        from the I-will-gladly-pay-you-Tuesday-for-a-megaflop-today dept.
        Yahoo has the story about a distributed computing project that pays you for those otherwise-unused cycles. Australian company ProcessTree Network plans to implement a scheme to pay money toward users' ISP bills in exchange for running a SETI@home-like distributed-computing client. (Windows-only for now…)

        Gene Scientists bet on size of Human Genome

        from the is-that-what-they-mean-by-a-gene-pool? dept.
        A New York Times article (forwarded by Robin Hanson) describes a betting pool among geneticists on the number of genes of the human genome. The mean of the 228 bets so far cast is 62,598 genes, with a high of 200,000 and a low of 27,462. By comparison, 19,099 genes are apparently required to run the C. elegans roundworm and 13,601 genes for the Drosophila fruit fly, the only two animals whose full genomes have so far been decoded.

        Courtney Love at Digital Hollywood

        from the ain't-gonna-work-on-Sony's-farm-no-more dept.
        Rock musician Courtney Love presented a brilliant talk (now available in its entirety on Salon) at the Digital Hollywood conference talking about Napster, intellectual property, the RIAA, and the economics of music. Ms. Love demonstrates clearly that she Gets It — incentive structures, the frictionlessness of digital information, the economic relationship between artist and audience, and the free rider problem. (She even quotes Neal Stephenson.)

        Nanotech safety guidelines released

        from the thank-you-Neil dept.
        Yakira Heyman writes "Foresight has issued the first public release of our guidelines for the safe and responsible development of nanotechnology. Included are specific development principles and initial guidelines for device design." The linked page has the press release, guideline text, and background on the process by which the guidelines were produced. Also available are instructions on how to endorse the guidelines.

        To make suggestions for improvement, comment below or you can annotate the text directly.

        Nanotech conference abstracts due ASAP

        from the hurry-up! dept.
        If you plan to present your work at this fall's Foresight Conference on Molecular Nanotechnology in Bethesda, MD, you'll need to get your abstract in immediately. The formal deadline is June 16, but if you get it in by Monday, June 19, you'll be okay. After that, there's still a chance, but it decreases over time.

        National Post: Intellectual property is doomed

        from the information-wants-to-be-frictionless dept.
        Found on Slashdot: The Canadian National Post features an editorial on the dwindling power of intellectual property laws in a digital world.

        How do you find a nanotechnologist now?

        from the get-a-nanojob dept.
        Phil Wolff writes "Should our community operate a career site for people working in MNT and related science, business, or policy? Possibly something to complement this and sister sites? Couldn't hurt. But do you think this would be interesting or useful? Please chime in."

        Privacy Overview

        This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.