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Readers take stock of our March “Tech and Finance 2005” package.
Turbine technology looms large.
The argument for open-access journals.
Inktomi’s founder wants wireless for all.
Helicos BioSciences and sequencing.
Video games are a growing market.
Transplant pioneer Thomas Starzl.
Short items of interest.
The next Fed chief should study what Greenspan got right.
Alternative electricity sources are ready; Washington is not.
Digitization of print could reduce today’s libraries to musty archives.
Wireless devices can easily wreak electronic havoc.
From the world of information technology, here are the latest publications, experiments, and breakthroughs, and what they mean.
From the world of biotechnology, here are the latest publications, experiments, and breakthroughs, and what they mean.
From the world of nanotechnology, here are the latest publications, experiments, and breakthroughs, and what they mean.
These six men oversee more than $120 billion in research and technology investments in the United States.
BAE Systems and WPP Group advance.
We need to save the diversity of the individual.
Why the metric system may never rule.
Alan Greenspan avoided the mistakes of his Federal Reserve predecessor.
A collection of research papers touts the promise of neuroeconomics.
Michael Crichton’s new novel fingers the wrong villains in global warming.
Two search veterans want to do it again.
Transmeta was to be a market-grabbing pioneer in chips.
IBM builds services-based R&D.
Julius Axelrod’s research helped launch the multibillion-dollar antidepressant market.