Is radio the next hot industry for nanotechnology? With major university programs announcing breakthroughs in nano-scale radio devices, something is afoot. But why are researchers focusing so much attention on radio?
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CellularNews on 23rd Oct 2008 (via feeds.feedburner.com)
What has nanotechnology to do with wireless? According to IKMEC (independent nanotech research institute in Belgium) the ADRES (Architecture for Dynamically Reconfigurable Embedded Systems) "is a processor architecture designed for wireless and multimedia processing in single- and multiprocessor systems." And IMEC and toshiba have signed a licensing deal.
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NewsWireless on 14th Oct 2008 (via feeds.feedburner.com)
Scientists at the University of California, Santa Barbara have made a major contribution to this field by designing a new nanotechnology that will ultimately help make computers smaller, faster, and more efficient.
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CellularNews on 26th Sep 2008 (via feeds.feedburner.com)
Transistors are an indispensable building block in electric appliances, where they amplify weak electric currents. Now researchers have developed a new type of transistor that is 50 times more energy efficient than today's models. It is also the first to be developed using nanotechnology.
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CellularNews on 24th Apr 2008 (via cellular-news.com)
Morph is a concept that demonstrates how future mobile devices might be stretchable and flexible, allowing the user to transform their mobile device into radically different shapes.
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3Gcouk on 28th Feb 2008 (via 3g.co.uk)
A long while ago, I once thought that the ultimate stage of the mobile phone would be the complete integration with the human body, via the use of nanotechnology. No physical handset; screenless integrated vision through your eyes, biosensing of health and mood and features controlled by thought. Perhaps that was one to many Sci-Fi
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MyNokiaBlog on 27th Feb 2008 (via mynokiablog.com)
Morph is a concept demonstrating some of the possibilities nanotechnology might enable in future communication devices. Morph can sense its environment, is energy harvesting and self cleaning. See ...
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FierceWireless on 27th Feb 2008 (via fiercewireless.com)
"Nokia's Morph nanotechnology concept, developed by Nokia Research Centre, and England's University of Cambridge, has been put on display, at The Museum of Modern Art, in New York, USA. Morph is basically a concept, showing how mobile phones could be in the future – stretching, and flexing the phone into different shapes. But, ultimately, the technology inside the morph concept shows off transpare
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PDAsNews on 27th Feb 2008 (via pdasnews.com)
The handset is based on nanotechnology developments that may be realistic for future products and is split into two devices: a detachable speaker either clips to the ear as a headset or to the main...
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Funtonia on 27th Feb 2008 (via funtonia.com)