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replicate: search

Scientists replicate diseases in the lab with new stem cell lines

A set of new stem cell lines will make it possible for researchers to explore ten different genetic disorders—including muscular dystrophy, juvenile diabetes, and Parkinson's disease—in a variety of cell and tissue types as they develop in laboratory cultures.

Scientists replicate diseases in the lab with new stem cell lines

A set of new stem cell lines will make it possible for researchers to explore ten different genetic disorders—including muscular dystrophy, juvenile diabetes, and Parkinson's disease—in a variety of cell and tissue types as they develop in laboratory cultures.

How do you replicate big-box retailers online? Mashery has an answer

Offline, vendors recognize the importance of moving products as close to the would-be consumer as possible. Retailers, fast food chains, and other vendors therefore build physical locations all over the world, seeking to be physically proximate to potential customers.

Albany NanoTech makes big push in cleantech

Seeking to replicate its success in semiconductors, Albany NanoTech and its parent organization are bringing its collaboration model over to clean technology. As part of its major efforts in clean technology, Albany NanoTech is quietly putting together a solar-cell consortium that involves undisclosed panel, equipment and material vendors. The Albany, N.Y.-based organization is also looking to launch at least two new and separate R&D initiatives in the arena, including a test farm and the so-called Zero-Energy Nano Building (ZEN). Both initiatives will conduct research in fuel cells, power management, solar cells, ultracapacitors and other technologies. Slated to open in early 2009, the test farm will conduct the initial R&D in clean technology.

Albany NanoTech makes big push in cleantech

Seeking to replicate its success in semiconductors, Albany NanoTech and its parent organization are bringing its collaboration model over to clean technology.

Dental robotic testing simulator invented

A dental robotic testing simulator has been invented to replicate human chewing in order to test dental materials.

Science: Kiwi Physicist Looking Forward To Particle Demolition Derby

Professor of physics Tony Signal is on the international team working to replicate the “big bang” that created the Universe. More >>

Mimicking Photosynthesis To Split Water

plantsdoitsocanwe writes "An international team of researchers led by Monash University has used chemicals found in plants to replicate a key process in photosynthesis, paving the way to a new approach that uses sunlight to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. The breakthrough could revolutionize the renewable energy industry by making hydrogen — touted as the clean, green fuel of the future — cheaper and easier to produce on a commercial scale." This was a laboratory demonstration only and the researchers say they need to bring up the efficiency.

Bionic Humans: Top 10 Technologies

Scientists are getting closer to creating a bionic human, or at least a $6 million one. Today, we can replicate or restore more organs and various sundry body parts than ever before. From giving sight to the blind to creating a tongue more accurate than any human taste bud, gentlemen, we have the technology. -- Maggie Koerth-Baker

Getting dropped was blessing in disguise - Ramdin

Denesh Ramdin: "My confidence is a bit low and it is just for me to remember what I did in those good innings and go out there and try to replicate that"

Nigeria: How this Country Can Become Tourist Centre for African Arts - Prof Diawara

Manthia Diawara is the chairman of the Africana Studies Department at New York University. A native of Mali, Professor Diawara received his education in France and later traveled to the United States for his university studies. He is interested in the material conditions of Black people in the Americas in order not to replicate the British formulations.

Leipzig: First impressions of LittleBigPlanet

Quite how this indie-looking platform game from an unproven developer has come to represent the PlayStation 3’s greatest mainstream hope this autumn is difficult to fathom. The on-trend, vibrant visuals certainly make the average videogame look like a pudgy uncle trying to throw down with the kids at a wedding disco. But can a platform game creation toolset really expand the PlayStation 3 audience and replicate the success of content-creation and sharing websites such as Youtube and Flickr?

Big bang test

he world, a la Eliot, may very well end with a whimper, but did it start with a bang? An international band of scientists, currently engaged in a path-breaking experiment to establish the truth or falsity of concepts that have so far been in the realm of hypothesis, might soon come up with an answer. The Large Hadron Collider, which cost around two and a half billion pounds to build, has been designed to replicate the conditions that existed just after the presumed ‘big bang’, the gargantuan explosion that is thought to have created the universe. Scientists involved in the project, sponsored by twenty nations under the banner of European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN), hope that the LHC would prove to be a key to unlock the secrets of the origin of the universe.

Rosetta Disk Designed For 2,000 Years Archive

Hugh Pickens writes "Kevin Kelly has an interesting post about an archive designed with an estimated lifespan of 2,000 -10,000 years to serve future generations as a modern Rosetta Stone. The Rosetta disk contains analog 'human-readable' scans of scripts, text, and diagrams using nickel deposited on an etched silicon disk and includes 15,000 microetched pages of language documentation in 1,500 different languages, including versions of Genesis 1-3, a universal list of the words common for each language, and pronunciation guides. Produced by the Long Now Foundation, the plan is to replicate the disk promiscuously and distribute them around the world in nondescript locations so at least one will survive their 2,000-year lifespan. 'This is one of the most fascinating objects on earth,' says Oliver Wilke.


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