|
|||
Foresight Update 23.14: Quantum computers via molecular machines - April 2, 2009Discuss these news stories at http://foresight.org/nanodot. Top News of the WeekA nanotechnology route to quantum computers through hybrid rotaxanesA major advance in molecular machine fabrication allows the construction of rotaxane molecular shuttles in which organic and inorganic components are mechanically linked in the same molecular structure. The varied electronic configurations of inorganic elements can therefore contribute a variety of electronic, magnetic, and catalytic properties to these molecular machines, opening the way, for example, to developing faster nanotech computers… In this issue:
Foresight Events – Lectures Conference to tackle ethics of nanotechnology and human enhancementA conference organized by faculty at California Polytechnic State University, Dartmouth College, the University of Delaware, and Western Michigan University will tackle what they claim is "the single most important issue in science & society in this century." … Nanotech resurgence?…The Futurist believes nanotech, of the near-term applications-oriented kind, is about ready to pick up again. Worth a look. Early retirement — how soon?…Will "real" AI be constrained by the processing power available, and slowly come into being as allowed by Moore's Law? Moravec imagines the course of robotics over the next decades recapitulating the evolution of humans, in similar stages. Or will the discovery of the "secret sauce" of AI burst upon a world where the processing power to run a human is cheap and plentiful, collapsing a catastrophe theory-like overhang? … DNA nanotechnology builds large structures from information-rich seeds…Drs. Erik Winfree and Paul W.K. Rothemund, have extended the scaffolded DNA origami technique invented by Rothemund to use the DNA origami structures as seeds to program the construction of nanotech structures up to 100 times larger… Sustainable energyEverybody knows that the world is running out of oil. The predicted year of the peak varies from 2000 to 2100, but it is generally conceded that it won't last forever. Of course, economists know that when you have a scarce resource, it doesn't just suddenly run out: the price rises, more expensive sources or substitutes come into play, and so forth… —Nanodot posts by James Lewis and J. Storrs Hall Foresight Events – LecturesForesight LecturesMay 28-29, 2009 June 17-18, 2009 Foreseeing Future TechnologiesAdvancements in technologies such as nanotech, robotics, and biotech are promising to make major differences in our lives in the not-too-distant future, as the Industrial Revolution did to the agrarian world — to do for the physical world what the computer and Internet have done to the world of information. Since 1986, the Foresight Institute has been in the forefront of a worldwide community of visionaries who work to help shape these possibilities into a positive, beneficial reality. If you would like to help us understand the potential of these technologies, and influence their direction, please consider becoming a member of the Foresight community. With your support, Foresight will continue to educate the general public on these technologies and what they will mean to our society. To join: Contact ForesightThe Foresight Institute Weekly News Digest has merged with Foresight Update and is emailed every week to 15,000 individuals in more than 125 countries. Foresight Institute is a member-supported organization. We offer membership levels appropriate to meet the needs and interests of individuals and companies. To find out more about membership, follow this link: To join: If you would like to browse past issues of Foresight Update and the News Digest, follow this link: Foresight Institute is located in Menlo Labs, part of Menlo Business Park in the Palo Alto, California area. If you are seeking space for your nanotechnology or biotechnology company, please contact them and tell them you heard about them through Foresight. Foresight Institute If you were forwarded this email from a friend and would like to subscribe yourself, please follow this link and sign up for our free electronic membership. Thank you!
|
Home PageResources
Foresight Programs
|
Home About Foresight Blog News & Events Roadmap About Nanotechnology Resources Facebook Contact Privacy Policy Foresight materials on the Web are ©1986–2024 Foresight Institute. All rights reserved. Legal Notices. |
Web site developed by Stephan Spencer and Netconcepts; maintained by James B. Lewis Enterprises. |