NIST
Engineers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have developed inexpensive electronic memory chips that can bend or twist, from readily available materials. Processing the characteristics of the memristor, a device that allows.
Related Stories
Most Recent
Most Popular
Most Commented
All Stories
Most Recent
Most Popular
Most Commented
MRI, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, which has long been used for the purposes of studying the brain, bones, and other internal organs, can now be used for more advanced...
made popular Jun 20 2008
Imagine a mechanical Pelé or David Beckham six times smaller than an amoeba playing with a “soccer ball” no wider than a human hair on a field that can fit on a...
made popular May 27 2008
It is enthralling to see how alternative energy is being developed into smart and cheap way to make it commercially viable. We keep on updating you about such...
made popular Oct 11 2007
Researchers at the NIST have developed a new miniature device that can separate proteins, amino acids and other chemical mixtures.
Earlier researchers used...
made popular Jan 20 2007
Today the challenge in front of the global community is to increase the storage capacity of a hard disk without increasing the size of the disks.
Though the challenge...
made popular Jan 20 2007
Related Tags
bendable device Flexible electronic flexible memory chips flexible memory device HDD health lab on a chip Labs Memristor MEMS Molecular Imaging MRI Nanodots nanosoccer Nanotechnology National Institute of Standards and Technology Personalized Medicine RoboCup Robots Technology
Home

RSS












