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Lest You Miss!
October 2005
Group Theory in the Bedroom
By Hayes, Brian
American Scientist
Vol. 93 (5), 2005, pp395-399.
Judging Einstein
By Fernie, J Donald
American Scientist
Vol. 93 (5), 2005, pp404-407.
The dragon and the elephant: comparative analysis of innovation capability in the telecom industry of China and India
By Mani, Sunil
Economic and Political Weekly
Vol. 50 (39), 2005, pp4271-4283.
Information technology and the Board of Directors
By Nolan, Richard and McFarlan, Warren
Harvard Business Review
Vol. 83 (10), 2005, pp96-106.
Management of intellectual property rights in information technology
By Saha, R
IETE Technical Review
Vol. 22 (5), 2005, pp333-340.
ICT: a new horizon in Indian agriculture
By Nehra, Vijay and Nehra, Kiran
IETE Technical Review
Vol. 22 (5), 2005, pp395-400.
Creating innovating organizations: the experience of the IT industry in India
By Ojha, Abhoy
IIMB Management Review
Vol. 17 (3), 2005, pp17-31.
Leapfrogging in to the knowledge era: use of ICT for development
By Prakash, Gyan
IIMB Management Review
Vol. 17 (3), 2005, pp47-56.
How business schools lost their way
By Bennis, Warren G and O’Toole, James
Indian Management
Vol. 44 (9), 2005, pp84-98.
M-Commerce: moment of truth
By Sahu, Subrat and Parikh, Darshan
Indian Management
Vol. 44 (9), 2005, pp156-164.
Roots of project management
Indian Management
Vol. 44 (9), 2005, pp190-194.
After Einstein: oh, for a theory of every thing
By Battersby, Stephen
New Scientist
Vol. 187 (2518), 2005, pp6-9.
Human 2.0: the new version is coming sooner than you think, says the inventor and futurist
By Kurzweil, Ray
New Scientist
Vol. 187 (2518), 2005, pp32-37.
Demon drink espresso, cappuccino, latte: However you like your caffeine fix, it tastes and feels so good it’s got to be bad for you…hasn’t it?
By Lovett, Richard
New Scientist
Vol. 187 (2518), 2005, pp38-41.
How to get close to nanotech
By Durrani Matin
Physics World
Vol. 18 (9), 2005, pp52-54.
Slimming for slackers: imagine being able to eat exactly what you liked and stay magically svelte. A new set of bugs living in your digestive system might do the trick
By Trivedi, Bijal
New Scientist
Vol. 188 (2519), 2005, pp38-41.
The mind of an inventor: he built his first computer as a child. In his 20s, he had moved on to supercomputers. Now Danny Hills is thinking bigger things
By Levy, Steven
Newsweek
Oct. 10, 2005, pp40-45.
Some big ideas: scientists and researchers are always looking for new ways to fight disease, to make complex tasks easier, to make life better
Newsweek
Oct. 10, 2005, pp46-47.
Forgotten era of brain chips
By Horgan, John
Scientific American
Vol. 293 (4), 2005, pp48-55.
Better than a dog: search is on for a sensor that bests a canine at detecting explosives
By Stix, Gary
Scientific American
Vol. 293 (4), 2005, pp56-59.
Smart Wi-Fi: Wireless access to the Internet via Wi-Fi is increasingly popular, so the technology is being upgraded to ensure that the users get prompt, reliable service
By Hills, Alex
Scientific American
Vol. 293 (4), 2005, pp68-75.
Tim O’Reilly: the trend spotter
By Levy, Steven
Wired
Vol. 13 (10), 2005, pp112-120.
R is for Robot: what bots can teach tots (and vice versa)
By Gallagher, Larry
Wired
Vol. 13 (10), 2005, pp144-149.
PDF Version of Lest You Miss!
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