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hot list
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Nanotechnology Links at the Open Directory
Links on Nanotechnology from the Open Directory project.
preview:
http://dmoz.org
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hot list
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Nanotechnology Research Institute Links
A Japanese Nanotechnology Research Institute links page with websites to nanotechnlogy societies, journals, Japanese government sites, materials, etc.
preview:
http://unit.aist.go.jp
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overview
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NanoEngineering DesignTech Forum (Registration Required)
Nanoengineering Forum, from the 2003 DesignCon Conference.
preview:
http://www.iec.org
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tutorial
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How Nanotechnology Will Work
In the early 20th century, Henry Ford built a car manufacturing plant on a 2,000-acre tract of land along the Rouge River in Michigan.
Built to mass-produce automobiles more efficiently, the Rouge housed the equipment for developing each phase of a car, including blast furnaces, a steel mill and a glass plant.
preview:
http://science.howstuffworks.com
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resource
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The Nanoelectronics & Nanocomputing Home Page
Nanoelectronics is the electronics technology for a future generation of much, much smaller and more densely integrated computers.
THE Nanoelectronics Home Page provides the Internet Gateway to nanoelectronics research and development information and resources from around the world.
preview:
http://www.mitre.org
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conference
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nanoPower Forum
Ultra-low power (ULP) systems.
ULP devices are being deployed for wireless applications such as mesh networks, wireless sensor and control systems, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), radio frequency identification (RFID) devices, and so on. Energy harvesting, energy storage and power management are some of the major issues in terms of the commercial rollout of next-generation ULP systems.
Participants will have an opportunity to meet...
preview:
http://nanopower.darnell.com
date: 5/18/2009
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paper
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Nanotechnology Is BIG at NIST
Ever smaller and ever faster.
The pursuit of nanotechnology-chips, sensors, pumps, gears, lasers, novel materials, and an unending assortment of other useful 'things' with features on the scale between one-billionth of a meter (about 10 hydrogen atoms across) and 100-billionths of a meter-is driving science and engineering to extremes.
preview:
http://www.nist.gov
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