27/07/2005

Motorola Q aims at Blackberry

The first no-compromises QWERTY is here: the new Q from Motorola. Featuring Microsoft's Windows Mobile software, smart, powerful, and devastatingly good-looking, the Moto Q is the ultimate power player. The world's thinnest, ...

AOL testing mobile search services

America Online Inc.announced Wednesday that it is testing a suite of new mobile search services. Once launched the service will give mobile-phone users access to AOL's Pinpoint, Shopping Search and Yellow Pages.Now available ...

The growing threat of spyware

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation -- the New Deal-era government agency designed to restore confidence in the Great Depression-shattered banking system of the United States -- is now providing guidance to banks to ...

Inventor builds human-looking android

Japanese scientists have unveiled the most human-looking robot yet devised -- a "female" called Repliee Q1, the BBC reported Wednesday.

UniS scientists to investigate the secrets of the universe

The Nuclear Physics Group at the University of Surrey has been awarded a large scale grant worth almost half a million pounds (£483k) from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)) to synthesise ...

Compact JILA System Stabilizes Laser Frequency

A compact, inexpensive method for stabilizing lasers that uses a new design to reduce sensitivity to vibration and gravity 100 times better than similar approaches has been demonstrated by scientists at JILA in Boulder, Colo. ...

Researchers Help Sort Out the Carbon Nanotube Problem

National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and university researchers report a significant step toward sorting out the nanotube “problem”—the challenge of overcoming processing obstacles so that the remarkable ...

Amazon River Cycles Carbon Faster than Thought

The rivers of South America's Amazon basin are "breathing" far harder - and cycling the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide far faster - than anyone realized. Most of the carbon being exhaled as carbon dioxide from Amazonian rivers ...

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