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Lest You Miss!
September 2004
Undisciplined science
By Brian Hayes
American Scientist
Vol. 92 (4), 2004, pp306-310.
State support for Industrial R and D in developing economies: Telecom equipment industry in India and China
By Biswatosh Saha
Economic and Political Weekly
Vol.39 (35), 2004, pp3915 - 3925.
Technology Quarterly: innovative technologies
Economist
Vol. 372 (8393), 2004 (special supplement).
Cybercon
By Lea Goldman
Forbes Global
Vol. 7 (16), 2004, pp30-38
Phone with keyboards: How smart?
By Stephen Manes
Forbes Global
Vol. 7 (16), 2004, pp42-43.
Broadband wonderland: nearly everyone in South Korea has Internet access that puts American to shame. Result: This little nation could have a giant influence on the digital future
Fortune International
Vol.150 (5), 2004, pp51-55.
Stop wasting valuable time
By Micahel C Mankins
Harvard Business Review
Vol. 82 (9), 2004, pp58-65.
Emerging designers make their mark
By David Womack
ID: International Design Magazine
Vol. 51 (6), 2004, pp48-88.
Wake-up call for IT sector
By Paul A P
Indian Management
Vol. 43 (10), 2004, pp84-90.
Every village a knowledge Centre
By Geeta Sharma
I4d
Vol. 2 (9), 2004, pp28-31.
Mysteries of life: New Scientist’s Top 10, plus the expert’s choice
New Scientist
Vol. 182 (2463), 2004, pp24-33.
In the laps the Gos: is randomness real or merely the invention of our superstitious minds?
By Ian Stewart
New Scientist
Vol. 183 (2466), 2004, pp28-37.
Do you believe in miracles? Maverick researchers claim to be saving people’s lives with stem cell therapy that medical text books say can’t exist
By Andy Coghlan
New Scientist
Vol. 184 (2468), 2004, pp36-40.
What you do not know about fat
By Anne Underwood and Jerry Adler
Newsweek
20th September 2004, pp48-54.
Seeds of invention: These are boom time for Asian R&D. But can Chinese and Indian scientists get their ideas into the market place?
By Sudip Mazumdar and Melinda Liu
Newsweek
11th October 2004, pp37-49.
Got juice? Not for long, you don’t
By Steve Morgenstern
Popular Science
Vol. 265 (4), 2004, pp58-65.
Worst job in Science: The sequel
By William Speed Weed
Popular Science
Vol. 265 (5), 2004, pp70-80.
Every step you take… every move you make… my GPS unit will be watching you
By Michael Rosenwald
Popular Science
Vol. 265 (5), 2004, pp87-94, 133.
Internet of things: Principles that gave rise to the Internet are now leading to a new kind of network of everyday devices, an “Internet-0”
By Neil Gershenfeld et.al.
Scientific American
Vol. 291 (4), 2004, pp46-51.
Gadget envy: all-in-one cell phones can do just about anything
By Mark Alpert
Scientific American
Vol. 291 (4), 2004, pp74-76.
Many audiences, one formula for success
IEEE-USA Today's Engineer
September 2004. In http://www.todaysengineer.org/aug04/presentations.asp
India's engineering students use ancient math to gain competitive edge
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,64575,00.html/
PDF Version of Lest You Miss!
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