Archive for March, 2010
Posted by Christine Peterson on March 29th, 2010
Once again, the Society of Manufacturing Engineers has donated one free pass to their Nanomanufacturing Conference to Foresight: April 14-15, 2010 — SME Nanomanufacturing Conference Hilton Phoenix East in Mesa, Arizona http://www.sme.org/cgi-bin/get-event.pl?–001875-000007-nhome–SME- This includes free admission to one of the pre-conference workshops on April 13, including Understanding Nanotechnology, taught by Foresight Senior Associate Tihamer “Tee” [...]
Posted in About Foresight, Foresight News, Meetings & Conferences, Nano, Nanotech, Nanotechnology | No Comments »
Posted by Christine Peterson on March 23rd, 2010
In the mailbag today: A new fiction book Beyond Guilty by Richard Brawer, who got help on it from Robert Freitas, winner of the 2009 Foresight Institute Feynman Prize for Theory. Brawer wrote, “Robert A. Freitas Jr., Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Molecular Manufacturing, has graciously edited the references to nanomanufacturing and nanomedicine [...]
Posted in Future Medicine, Health & longevity, Memetics, Nano, Nanotech, Nanotechnology, Opinion, Science Fiction | No Comments »
Posted by Christine Peterson on March 22nd, 2010
If you appreciate the mind-boggling abilities of today’s nanoscale probes and microscopes, and/or want to move your career in the direction of nanotechnology, consider joining the Center for Probing the Nanoscale gang at Stanford’s 6th Annual Nanoprobes Workshop on May 14, 2010. Registration accepted until May 7. Fees range from $100 for industry to free for [...]
Posted in Meetings & Conferences, Nano, Nanotech, Nanotechnology, Research | No Comments »
Posted by Christine Peterson on March 18th, 2010
The March 2010 issue of IEEE Spectrum has an article on cryonics, a method of suspended animation, featuring Dr. Ralph Merkle. Ralph is described as a nanotechnology expert; apparently the issue went to press just before he was also named as a co-winner of the 2010 IEEE Haming Medal. As a long-time IEEE member, I [...]
Posted in Future Medicine, Health & longevity, Life extension, Machine Intelligence, Nanomedicine | No Comments »
Posted by Christine Peterson on March 16th, 2010
One way to reach molecular machine systems is to get really, really good at protein engineering. If that’s your goal, you’ll want to be in Boston on May 17-21 for PEGS 2010, “the essential protein engineering summit”. Not sure if this is your pathway? Just reading the talk titles is educational. And they have great [...]
Posted in Artificial Molecular Machines, Bionanotechnology, Meetings & Conferences, Nano, NanoEducation, Nanobiotechnology, Nanotech, Nanotechnology | 2 Comments »
Posted by J. Storrs Hall on March 15th, 2010
In case anyone wonders where I’ve gone, I’m resigning from Foresight for medical reasons (adhesive capsulitis — long and painful course of therapy) and to concentrate my few remaining neurons on my AI research. I really wish nanomedicine had advanced further in the interim
Posted in Foresight News | 15 Comments »
Posted by Christine Peterson on March 11th, 2010
Wondering how U.S. federal nanotech tax dollars are spent? Obama’s first President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) review will be webcast live tomorrow, March 12. This review only occurs every two years so this is your big chance to see what the current administration thinks of the NNI. Thirty minutes are set [...]
Posted in Government programs, Nano, Nanotech, Nanotechnology, Nanotechnology Politics, Public participation | No Comments »
Posted by J. Storrs Hall on March 3rd, 2010
I’m on my way to AGI-10, the general AI conference, in Lugano. If any readers are attending, let’s get together. Among other things, we’ll be unveiling a preliminary take on the AGI Roadmap (of which Foresight is a sponsor).
Posted in Foresight News, Machine Intelligence | 4 Comments »
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