Research into the future of storage has allowed scientists to produce a stop-motion film composed of individual atoms
News Science
Cambridge Graphene Research Centre To Open Doors In 2013
The £25 million project could bring the wonderful material to the mass market
UK Falling Behind In Graphene Patent Race
While British researchers first identified graphene, its exploitation is shifting to the US and Asia, according to new patent figures
Microsoft Research: Beyond Kinect, And Open Source Robots
Scanners, sensors and a football-playing chair – just another day at Microsoft Research Cambridge
Number Of STEM A-Levels Up 3.1 Percent
IT skills gap seems to be getting narrower
IBM’s Waltzing Electrons Promise Spintronics Memory Breakthrough
Electron spins could last long enough to store data, IBM finds
UK Government Details Solar Storm Preparations
Government discusses space weather and EMP weapons of the future
US Scientists Plan On-Demand Robots
A team from MIT wants anyone to be able to go to a shop, get a design and print their own cybernetic machines
Nanoscale Wiring Technology May Open Doors To Quantum Computing
New microscopic wires could help microchips to keep shrinking and have applications in quantum computing
No Link Found Between Mobiles and Tumours
Large study fails to find a link between tumour development and mobile phone use
HP Reveals Memristor Breakthrough
HP scientists said they have uncovered the chemistry of what happens inside a memristor while it is being deployed
Budget: Science And Tech Key To Growth
New funding, taxation and incentives announced today are designed to help the UK play economic catch-up
Space Shuttle Discovery Set For Final Mission
The space shuttle Discovery is prepared to set off for the International Space Station this week
World’s Data Storage Capacity Reaches 295 Exabytes
A study has found that the world has access to enough data-storage capacity to hold 295 exabytes of information
Researchers Develop ‘E-Skin’
New materials could be used to build electronic skin that can sense and respond to a very light touch