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News

Nano in
Society News (Archived)
August 2005
Wisconsin State Journal,
August 30, 2005
Teaching people about
nanotechnology: A member of a layperson's panel that studied the
technology of the tiny said she was thrilled and unnerved by its
possibilities of both fighting disease and causing it, of bettering the
environment and doing harm.
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Detroit Free Press,
August 25, 2005
A link made in heaven: Golf and nanotechnology: Your golf game soon may
get a boost from the same technology that has been used to repair nuclear
steam generator rods and armor U.S. military vehicles.
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Telegraph, August 22, 2005
How super-cows and nanotechnology will make ice cream healthier: Unilever
is employing cutting-edge science to take the fat and guilt out of its top
brands.
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Azonano.com, August 1, 2005
Social Science Issues to be Considered During the Development of
Nanotechnology: Social scientists have the capacity and willingness to
take on the issues surrounding nanotechnology and their presence can
maximize its benefits.
Read more
July 2005
Nanotech
Wire, July 30, 2005
NanoGeoPolitics: ETC Group Surveys the Political Landscape: At Gleneagles,
the G8 saw 'More Science' as the South's solution to poverty and global
warming. Behind the scenes, the leading nano nations are rushing to set
the rules for global nanotech governance.
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more
The Guardian, July
28, 2005
It's good to talk:
Cambridge University's nanotechnology department and Greenpeace are using
"Citizen's Juries" to involve the public in the fast-moving field of
nanotechnology.
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Science, July 1, 2005
Small Things and Big Changes in the Developing World: With its promise to
enhance economic development and social well-being, nanotechnology is
being embraced by developing countries. Policies enacted by the global
scientific community should be used to facilitate this process.
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June
2005
VNU,
June 14, 2005
Nanotech to turbocharge PC and mobile data: Scientists have demonstrated
for the first time that carbon nanotubes can route electrical signals on a
computer chip faster than traditional copper or aluminium wires at speeds
of up to 10GHz.
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Wired News, June 10, 2005
When Nanopants Attack: The Eddie Bauer protest highlights a growing
movement aimed at probing the potential health risks of nanotechnology,
which is finding its way into commercial products despite scant research
into its long-term effects.
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May
2005
PR Newswire, May 26, 2005
Rush to Market in Nanosensors, But Most Aren't 'Nano': Of 66 companies
claiming to offer nanosensors, only 13 actually harness the size-dependent
properties of nanomaterials, according to a new report from Lux Research
entitled "Putting the 'Nano' in Nanosensors."
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Red Nova, May 26, 2005
'Nano' Advances, Fantastic and Mundane: At the nanotechnology show in
Lower Manhattan this week, companies touted the state-of-the-art, from
quantum dots to microscopes powerful enough to see atoms. And then there
were two guys from Cleveland hawking cough syrup...
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Science Daily, May 23, 2005
Nano World: Nano could lead to new WMDs: Nanotechnology could soon enable
a new generation of chemical and biological weapons that could escape
current arms inspection schemes, experts told UPI's Nano World.
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The Guardian, May 19, 2005
Nano Jury puts technology under the microscope: An unprecedented
partnership is to seek out informed public views on nanotechnology, giving
the public the opportunity to become part of the debate as to how this
emerging and potentially revolutionary technology should develop.
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Yahoo!, May 18, 2005
PCAST Releases First Report on
Nanotechnology R&D: Report Finds U.S. to be Global Leader in
Nanotechnology Research and Development.
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Science Daily,
May 12, 2005
Nanotechnology's Miniature Answers To
Developing World's Biggest Problems: According to a new study by the
Canadian Program on Genomics and Global Health (CPGGH) at the University
of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics (JCB), a leading international
medical ethics think-tank, several nanotechnology applications will help
people in developing countries tackle their most urgent problems.
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Future Brief, May 4, 2005
War, Interdependence, and Nanotechnology (Commentary)
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Bharat Textile, May 3, 2005
JAPAN: Fabric that prevent pollen from clinging - Nanotechnology:
Textile maker Miyuki Keori Co. said on 2nd May
that it has developed a fabric it claims can prevent pollen from clinging
to it with the help of nanotechnology, which could be a boon to people
with hay fever.
Read more
April
2005
Science Daily, April 25, 2005
Nano World: Nano patents in conflict: Entrepreneurs are striving to claim
patents over as many key nanotechnologies as possible. This gold-rush
mentality could lead to a frenzy of lawsuits involving overlapping claims,
but a new report reveals unexpected opportunities exist, too.
Read more
Ann Arbor News, April 23, 2005
U-M nanotechnology institute approved: The University of Michigan has
created a research institute that takes a new approach to treating
disease. The Michigan Nanotechnology Institute for Medicine and the
Biological Sciences was approved by the U-M Board of Regents on Thursday.
Read more
Science Daily, April 18, 2005
Nano World - Top 10 for developing world: Energy production and storage
top the list of the 10 nanotechnology applications deemed by experts to be
the most likely to benefit the developing world in the next decade.
Read more
Nano TechWire, April 16, 2005
Assessing education and training needs for nanoscience and nanotechnology:
Being a relatively new scientific discipline, many academic institutions
and public authorities are still in the process of assessing teaching and
training needs in the nanosciences.
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more
Cnet, April 10, 2005
Nanotech company aims to put paint in the past: Chemical giant DuPont is
licensing technology from a small Ohio company that could make industrial
paint a thing of the past.
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UC Davis, April 7, 2005
Nanobridges Show Way to Nano Mass Production: They look like an elegant
row of columns, tiny enough for atomic-scale hide-and-seek, but these
colonnades represent a new way to bring nanotechnology into mass
production.
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Forbes, April 6, 2005
Nanotech Vs. The Green Gang: The "Green Gang" is starting to focus on
nanotech research, and governments around the world are listening. There
are rumblings that regulations are needed. They say they want to guarantee
the safety of the technology and instill confidence in the general public.
.
Read more
The Scotsman, April 1, 2005
Speakers to talk tiny at Science Festival: Scientists and church leaders
at the Science Festival will consider how potential advances in
nanotechnology will affect the way humans think about themselves.
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March 2005
Science Daily, March 17, 2005
Nanoscience Solutions For Energy Technologies Advocated: Breakthroughs in
nanotechnology could open up the possibility of moving beyond the United
States' current alternatives for energy supply by introducing technologies
that are more efficient, inexpensive and environmentally sound, according
to a new science policy study by Rice University.
Read more
Business Wire, March 15, 2005
Three Nanotech Leaders, Ecology Coatings, NanoDynamics and MetaMateria,
Partner To Provide New High-Performance Liquid Technology: In a move that
will incorporate new nanotechnologies into staid manufacturing methods,
three leading companies in the field of nanomaterial development and
commercialization are collaborating to deliver polymer nanocomposite
coatings.
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Azonano, March 9, 2005
Nanoscience Solutions for Energy Technologies Advocated: Breakthroughs in
nanotechnology could open up the possibility of moving beyond the United
States' current alternatives for energy supply by introducing technologies
that are more efficient, inexpensive and environmentally sound, according
to a new science policy study by Rice University.
Read
more
February 2005
Scotsman, February 25, 2005
Safety Rules in Science of the Very Small: Safety and ethical
considerations will be a priority to the government in the use and
development of nanotechnology, Science Minister Lord Sainsbury said today.
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The Times Higher Education Supplement, February 22, 2005
Before you build that nanobot... A social scientist is posing
awkward questions on behalf of the public at Cambridge's new centre for
nanoresearch. Rob Doubleday has two years, at least, to put flesh
on the bones of a job description influenced by the recent Royal Society
and Royal Academy of Engineering report on nanoscience and
nanotechnologies.
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Christian Science Monitor, February 10, 2005
Small Science May Clean a Big Problem: One of the most
promising innovations right now involves microscopic iron particles. At
least four teams of researchers are using these "nanoparticles" to attack
some of the most vexing underground pollutants, including chromium-6, the
groundwater pollutant made famous in the movie "Erin Brockovich."
Read more
Electronics & Computer Science, February 3, 2005
Nano surfaces could slash cost of solar energy:
Nanotechnologies which can artificially change the optical properties of
materials to allow light to be trapped in solar cells could greatly reduce
the cost of solar energy.
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more
2004
Small Times, December 10, 2004
Survey Shows Public Can Discern
Nano's Benefits: When new technologies are introduced into the
marketplace, it is rare that they are seen as unmitigated blessings. And
in some cases, initial reservations can erupt into significant public
backlash.
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EurekAlert,
December 9, 2004
Nanotubes glow, even within biological cells: In some of the first work
documenting the uptake of carbon nanotubes by living cells, a team of
chemists and life scientists from Rice University, the University of Texas
Health Science Center at Houston and the Texas Heart Institute have
selectively detected low concentrations of nanotubes in laboratory cell
cultures.
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Etc Group, October
23, 2003
Mulch Ado
About Nothing?...Or the "Sand Witch?": Environmental use of nanotechnology
highlights regulatory inadequacies and lack of clarity in the nanotech
industry.
Read more |