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  • Meet the Nubot: DNA nanotechnology robots

    Aharia Nair brings to our attention the new term Nubot, for Nucleic Acid Robots. Wikipedia explains: Nubot is an abbreviation for “Nucleic Acid Robots.” Nubots are synthetic robotics devices at the nanoscale. Representative nubots include the several DNA walkers reported by Ned Seeman’s group at NYU, Niles Pierce’s group ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 11, 2007
  • Meet the Nubot: DNA nanotechnology robots

    Aharia Nair brings to our attention the new term Nubot, for Nucleic Acid Robots. Wikipedia explains: Nubot is an abbreviation for “Nucleic Acid Robots.” Nubots are synthetic robotics devices at the nanoscale. Representative nubots include the several DNA walkers reported by Ned Seeman’s group at NYU, Niles Pierce’s group ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 11, 2007
  • Nanotechnology Roadmap launch: Productive Nanosystems Conference, Oct 9-10

    Foresight, Battelle, and Working Group members have been working away on our Technology Roadmap for Productive Nanosystems since late 2005. Now the Society of Manufacturing Engineers is pitching in on co-sponsoring the launch conference. Below is the press release; we hope to see you at the conference! —Christine Technology Roadmap for ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on May 8, 2007
  • Nanotechnology @ home: Design your own molecular machines

    Tom Moore has set up the Machine Phase blog to chronicle his nanotechnology adventures designing molecular machines using the NanoEngineer-1 software from Nanorex. Read the whole thing starting on March 3 in the archives. Some of the images are still shots; others turn into animations when you click on them. It’s [...]
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on March 22, 2007
  • Windows Vista: potential negative impact on nanotechnology

    John Walker brings to our attention an apparently distressing set of concerning regarding the new version of Windows, known as Vista, written up by Peter Gutman as A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection. Excerpts: The only way to protect the HFS [Hardware Functionality Scan] process therefore is to not release any technical details ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on February 12, 2007
  • Sun’s nanotechnology vision paying off

    Those of you who have tracked nanotechnology for a long time know that Sun Microsystems was one of the first corporations to take an interest in the field, e.g., sponsoring the Foresight Conferences over the years, and more recently helping to fund the Technology Roadmap for Productive Nanosystems. Now that foresight, combined with their [...]
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on January 30, 2007
  • U.K. nanotechnology project causing U.S. nanoenvy

    In addition to the experimental project described here yesterday, there are now two more posted on the U.K. Software Control of Matter Ideas Factory blog which are very likely to be funded — the first experimental, the second theoretical: Directed Reconfigurable Nanomachines We propose a scheme to revolutionise the synthesis of nanodevices, ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on January 17, 2007
  • How a molecular nanotechnology bearing will actually move

    Will Ware, whom you may remember from NanoCAD, has done the most accurate simulation and animation of a molecular bearing design to date. He explains: Using NanoEngineer-1 (see http://www.nanoengineer-1.com) and other open-source software, I have created an animated simulation of the molecular bearing design on page 298 of Nanosystems by Eric ...
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on December 7, 2006
  • How to save $149,850 per nanotechnology experiment

    Atomistix has just expanded to the U.S. at the Innovation Center Denmark in Palo Alto, not far from Foresight. I missed their open house on September 28, but I see that their CEO Thomas Magnussen explained the value of computational modeling in nanotechnology: Over time, the price of nanotechnology experimentation has gone up while the [...]
    Posted to News (Weblog) by Anonymous on October 12, 2006
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