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Iran Loads Up On High-Tech Chinese Riot-Control Trucks

Today marks the 31st anniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Iran. And in anticipation of Green Movement protests today, Iran has a new fleet of scary, high-tech riot-control trucks. Made in China,...

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Windows Phone Series 7 Takes Aim at iPhone, Android

Gadget lovers are nothing if not fickle, always ditching their older tech for pretty young things. And recently, all the attention on the iPhone and Google’s Android OS has made Microsoft seem a bit...

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Changing the Language of DNA: Altered Cells Taught To Read 4-Base-Pair Codons

Much like your four-year-old nephew, RNA can only read three-letter combinations. Called codons, these three DNA-base-pair groups form the phrases that RNA translates into the 21 amino acids that...

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Breakthrough Danish Enzymes to Lower Biofuel Price Point To Petroleum Levels

Producing a biofuel cheap enough to compete at the pump with oil has remained as elusive as a ghost on the walls of Elsinore castle. But this week, two Danish companies announced they had developed...

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Video: Half-Kilometer-Long Explosive Whip Clears IEDs The Explode-y Way

Clearing battlefield obstacles has pitted trapper against sapper since Roman times. But whereas the minefields and dragon teeth of previous conflicts merely slowed advancing armies, the IEDs favored...

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NASA Tests Handy-Man Space Robots For Orbital Repairs

With cuts in the manned space program and the impending retirement of the Space Shuttle, NASA will soon face the need to repair satellites without the ability to send any astronauts to do it....

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MIT Stumbles on a Way to Print Flexible Coatings Made of Micromachines

Microelectromechanical devices (MEMS) have the potential to enable a wide range of nanomachines. Unfortunately, MEMS suffer from the critical drawbacks of an expensive manufacturing process, a high...

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Noses Beat Eyes as a Biometric Identification Marker

While retina scans still give a James Bond feel to security, and finger prints have a bit of retro charm, the cutting edge of biometric identification has moved to a new body part: the nose. According...

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New Brain Scan Quantifies The Formerly Subjective Feeling of Pain

The seemingly subjective nature of pain always proves problematic for doctors, who have to use a woefully imprecise chart to gauge a patient’s suffering. But by using a new interpretation of fMRI...

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Nanoelectromechanical Sensor Can Instantly Detect Pathogens And Toxins

Tests for toxins or pathogens generally rely on chemical reactions. But a team of researchers at Cornell University have created a sensor that detects the presence of chemicals based on the mechanical...

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FCC Broadband Plan Promises High-Speed Internet For 100 Million More...

Today the Federal Communications Commission unveiled its plan to expand broadband Internet access to 100 million more Americans within the next five years. The plan calls both for the expansion of...

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Nanoribbons Moved by Light: Could Propel Cell-Sized Submarines, Create...

The ability of matter to move light underpins such common phenomena as transparency, refraction, and reflection. But light moving matter? That’s a bit rarer. So rare, in fact, that University of...

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Nintendo’s 3DS Will Take the DS Experience into Three Dimensions, Somehow

With Avatar, the highest-grossing movie of all time, and the World Cup, the most-watched TV broadcast, both in 3-D, it was only a matter of time until Nintendo, the most popular video game maker in...

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Autonomous Submarinebot Heads Down on Deepest-Ever Undersea Search For...

While some scientists resort to undersea drilling to find undiscovered forms of life, a new group of researchers has decided that piloting a robotic submarine into a submerged volcano was the way to...

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Insanely Hi-Res Z-Contrast Photos Can Determine Which Atoms Are Which

And you thought the macros on your camera was good because you got a sweet close up of a flower? Well, the scientists over at Oak Ridge National Laboratory zoom in so tight they can distinguish atoms...

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US District Court Says No To Patenting Human Genes

In a move that could significantly alter the future of genetic medicine and the industry around it, a US District Court judge invalidated seven patents for human genes linked to breast and ovarian...

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Electrical Nerve Hacking Restores Movement To Paralyzed Limbs

When Matthew Schiefer, a neural engineer at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, first managed to stimulate the leg of an unconscious volunteer by wrapping an electrode around a nerve...

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NASA Radar Developed for Mars Could Find Water Hiding Deep Beneath Earth Deserts

With 884 million people lacking a reliable source of clean drinking water, droughts throughout Africa and the Middle East exacerbating already tense situations, and global warming only making those...

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Finland Launching National Pilot Program To Open and Scan All Snail Mail

In an effort to increase efficiency, cut carbon emissions, and reduce costs, Finland has begun a pilot program wherein snail-mail letters are converted into PDFs and made viewable online by their...

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NYPD And NYFD Super Boats To Replace Half-Century-Old Clunkers Patrolling New...

After years of patrolling New York City’s water ways in antiquated, decades-old boats, the New York Fire and Police Departments are upgrading to some of the most technologically advanced vessels this...

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