FROM THE ARCHIVE We Have A Very Small Future
Nanotechnology is going to change the way we live in ways that are hard to imagine. Manipulating molecules into tiny machines and new materials is a frontier that will revolutionise manufacturing, robotics, and life in general.
Watch this space – it’s one of the most exciting things that’s happening in the second machine age.
FROM THE ARCHIVE We Have A Very Small Future
Ultra thin arrayed cameras that are biologically inspired can take high resolution images.
Stanford researchers build a particle accelerator that fits on a chip, miniaturizing a technology that can now find new applications in research and medicine Just as engineers once compressed some of the power of room-sized mainframes into desktop PCs, so too have...
It can’t be seen with a human eye. It doesn’t look anything like C-3PO or R2-D2, or even BB-8. But, nevertheless, it is a robot (all 120nm of it) and its now been deemed the Smallest Medical Robot.
Case Western Reserve University researchers make dynamic advances with new atomically thin device.
Researchers from RMIT University have developed a new artificial enzyme that uses light to kill bacteria.