Carbon nanotube radio hints at future wireless
A radio that uses carbon nanotubes so tiny it can fit on a grain of sand has shown how the technology could be used to make more efficient electronic devices
A radio that uses carbon nanotubes so tiny it can fit on a grain of sand has shown how the technology could be used to make more efficient electronic devices
2007 saw millions of innovations shoot from the minds of tech heads into the world of reality -- here are a few ZDNet Australia thought were pretty cool.
A team of Israeli researchers has grown self-organizing networks of rat brain cells by binding them to carbon nanotubes. And these neural networks are remarkably stable, surviving for almost three months in the lab. These hybrid networks could be used in future biological sensors by identify poisons for example.