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June 14th, 2005
Big Blue's Big News
Abstract:
For its new 91-teraflops monster -- dubbed Watson Blue Gene, or BGW for short -- IBM has plenty of down-to-earth work to keep it busy. Untangling the riddle of how proteins fold to work their magic in the human body is the initial target. Two others: probing new frontiers in semiconductor physics and learning to harness nanotechnology for tomorrow'schips and materials.
Source:
sci-tech-today.com
Bookmark:
Investments/IPO's/Splits
Harris & Harris Group Notes the Sale of a Second D-Wave Quantum Computer May 16th, 2013
Nanometrics Announces Upcoming Investor Events May 14th, 2013
Nanostart-holding New Asia Investments invests in breakthrough water projects May 13th, 2013
Harris & Harris Group Reports Financial Statements as of March 31, 2013 May 10th, 2013
Announcements
Artificial Forest for Solar Water-Splitting: Berkeley Lab Researchers Report First Fully Integrated Artificial Photosynthesis Nanosystem May 17th, 2013
Moth-Inspired Nanostructures Take the Color Out of Thin Films May 17th, 2013
NIA Public Briefing: Nanotechnology and the Council of Europe May 17th, 2013
Scientists capture first direct proof of Hofstadter butterfly effect May 17th, 2013
Tools
Beautiful "flowers" self-assemble in a beaker: Elaborate nanostructures blossom from a chemical reaction perfected at Harvard May 17th, 2013
Scientists capture first direct proof of Hofstadter butterfly effect May 17th, 2013
DNA-Guided Assembly Yields Novel Ribbon-Like Nanostructures: Approach could be useful in fabricating new kinds of materials with engineered properties May 16th, 2013
RUB physicists let magnetic dipoles interact on the nanoscale for the first time: 'Of great technical interest for future hard disk drives' May 15th, 2013