|
|
|
0 members online
|
|
Stay healthy and informed while supporting antiaging medicine
|
Browse by Tags
All Tags » open source » Nanotechnology » Nano (RSS)
-
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 ...
-
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 ...
-
Small Times reports on a meeting held in Oregon among a wide variety of nanotechnology-based business participants, at which many commercialization challenges were discussed. One was difficulties encountered with the U.S. Patent office:
Start-ups expressed frustration with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). Long waits for patent ...
-
In the long term, we’ll need effective security techniques for advanced nanotechnology-based systems. This will take a while to figure out, so come help us do it at an upcoming open source conference, Penguicon:
Open Source-style Security for the Whole Physical World
Christine Peterson, Bruce Schneier
One of the biggest problems society ...
-
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 ...
-
Given our interests in both nanotechnology and open source, we are happy to see that Wikibooks has an open-contect textbook called The Opensource Handbook of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology. It includes not just text, but also demonstration experiments and media files. This online book was voted Wikibook of the Month for December 2006. [...]
-
Roger Brent, director of the Molecular Sciences Institute in Berkeley, is a leader in open source biotech:
Putting his patents where his principles are, Dr. Brent’s institute has drafted an “Open Source Policy” which commits to “[making] reagents and methods freely available to the research community.”
You can see ...
-
News from Howard Lovy, now working with Nanorex:
I wanted to make sure you saw this news item about molecular simulation
software maker Nanorex acquiring Nano-Hive, developer of a powerful open
source tool that speeds up nanoscale simulation through distributed
computing. Together, Nanorex’s NanoEngineer-1 and the renamed NanoHive-1 ...
|
|
|