Name new computing technology, win $500
A $500 prize is being offered for the winning name submitted for the prototype of what may be the next generation of personal computers.
A $500 prize is being offered for the winning name submitted for the prototype of what may be the next generation of personal computers.
Other
Jun 25, 2007
0
0
Sony is bolstering its lead in the high-definition camcorder arena with the introduction of AVCHD technology-based models.
Consumer & Gadgets
Jun 25, 2007
0
0
No need to fret about your firm's problems with e-mails and attachments thanks to Xapio, a new compliance company. Xapio is a University of Utah start-up founded by inventor and entrepreneur, Stefano Foresti.
Software
Jun 25, 2007
0
0
A U.S. government study suggested anti-idling advocates are on the right track in an ongoing debate concerning school bus exhaust emissions.
Environment
Jun 25, 2007
0
0
“There is no doubt that nanotechnology has the potential to make the world a better place,” said Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies Chief Scientist Andrew Maynard. “But if consumers and other stakeholders are not ...
Bio & Medicine
Jun 25, 2007
0
0
Samsung Electronics announced that it has begun mass producing 1.8-inch solid state drives (SSD) at 64GB - the highest density SSD available today for mobile computing applications.
Hardware
Jun 25, 2007
0
0
How much do white Americans think it “costs” to be black in our society, given the problems associated with racial bias and prejudice? The answer, it appears, is not much.
Other
Jun 25, 2007
0
0
An international team of researchers, including several from MIT, has developed a computational model that helps identify relationships between proteins and the enzymes that regulate them.
Jun 25, 2007
0
0
ESA’s orbiting gamma-ray observatory, Integral, has made a pioneering unequivocal discovery of radioactive iron-60 in our galaxy that provides powerful insight into the workings of massive stars that pervade and shape it.
General Physics
Jun 25, 2007
0
0
A new study spearheaded by the University of Colorado at Boulder’s National Snow and Ice Data Center indicates wind-blown dust from drought-stricken and disturbed lands in the Southwest can shorten the duration of mountain ...
Earth Sciences
Jun 25, 2007
0
0