Volumes & issues:
Volume 2, Issue 9
September 2007
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- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, page: 2 –2
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070911
- Type: Article
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(12 pages) - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, page: 21 –21
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070912
- Type: Article
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- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, p. 22 –23
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070913
- Type: Article
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- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, page: 24 –24
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070901
- Type: Article
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Mobile phone operators need to work together to make sure the experience of using new services lives up to users' expectations. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, p. 26 –28
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070902
- Type: Article
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Mark Sheahan is a multi award-winning innovator and world's first and only inventor-in-residence. Vitali Vitaliev talks to him about ideas, creativity and a bit of vegetation. - Author(s): C. Edwards
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, p. 30 –33
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070903
- Type: Article
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The future of mass-produced electronics might not be silicon, but ultra-cheap stuff which includes plastic displays. This paper considers the alternatives to silicon-wafer technology. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, p. 34 –36
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070904
- Type: Article
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DNA computing has been hailed as a possible alternative to semiconductor technology. DNA has a specific appeal to the medical world because it speaks the same language as living cells. This raises the intriguing possibility that DNA-based computers could operate in the bloodstream or in specific organs or tissues to diagnose and treat disease. A more advanced sort of DNA-based computer might combine logic gates with moving elements so that it could sense, compute, and move. "For treating diabetes, it might be useful to move such a DNA-based molecule into a new area which needs insulin. The researchers are developing a new way of talking about and understanding the circuit-like mechanisms that regulate critical processes in real living cells. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, p. 38 –41
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070905
- Type: Article
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Most common eyetrackers today use corneal reflections to follow and record a person's gaze while looking at something within an accuracy of 5 mm. This technology offers standard communications to the disabled community, brings new objective measures to supplement traditional qualitative tests of customer engagement, and enables all users to interact with and control a computer by eye movement alone. This article presents the principles, advances, and future applications of eyetracking technology. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, p. 42 –43
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070906
- Type: Article
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This month's spotlight is on some of the innovations in automotive technology that are set to change the way we drive. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, p. 44 –45
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070907
- Type: Article
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This month we test the environmental and style credentials of a range of electronic products. - Author(s): J. Pollard
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, page: 46 –46
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070908
- Type: Article
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Justin Pollard looks back at a famous engineering hoax. - Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, p. 49 –51
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070909
- Type: Article
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- Author(s): V. Vitaliev
- Source: Engineering & Technology, Volume 2, Issue 9, page: 64 –64
- DOI: 10.1049/et:20070910
- Type: Article
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Vitali Vitaliev tells us of the technology behind the world's wealthiest spot that he himself discovered in the Bavarian Alps.
News
Asia news
Editorial and Letters to the Editor
If you ask me: Establishing a connection
The nation's pioneer
Micro to macro [plastic electronics]
The body logic
Seeing is believing
Technology
Gadgets
Hisory: The eccentric engineer
Events
After all - how much is Bulgaria?
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