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Lest You Miss!
April 2006
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Telephony’e next act : moving from circuit- switched networks to the
Internet will be the biggest challenge phone systems have ever faced.
By Mockapetris, Paul V.
IEEE Spectrum
Vol 43 (4), 2006 pp18-22
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Vegas 911: a sin city programmer busted some of the biggest swindlers
of all time. Now he is helping the Feds nail terrorists.
By Kushner, David
IEEE Spectrum
Vol 43 (4), 2006 pp34-39.
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Smart Sensors: new standards could save lives and money.
By Betts, Brian
IEEE Spectrum
Vol 43 (4), 2006 pp40-43.
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India and Ozone- commitments fulfilled
By Panigrahi, Srikanta K
Invention Intelligence
Vol. 41 (2), 2006 pp5-12
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Collaboration of Indian scientists in patenting.
By Gupta, V. K.
Invention Intelligence
Vol. 41 (2), 2006 pp17-22
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Mr. Hawking’s flexiverse
By Gefter, Amanda
New Scientist
Vol. 190 (2548), 2006 pp 28-32
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20 incredible inventions that are set to change your world.
Popular Science
Vol. 268 (6), 2006 pp41-51
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First few microseconds: in recent experiments, physicists have
replicated conditions of the infant universe-with startling results.
By Riordan, Michael and Zijc, William A.
Scientific American
Vol.294 (5) 2006 pp24A -31
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Bringing DNA computers to life: tapping the computing power of
biological molecules gives rise to tiny machines that can speak
directly to living cells.
By Shapiro, Ehud and Benenson, Yaakov.
Scientific American
Vol.294 (5) 2006 pp33-39
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When slide rules ruled: before electronic calculators, the mechanical
slide rule dominated scientific and engineering computation.
By Stoll, Cliff.
Scientific American
Vol.294 (5) 2006 pp68-75
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Dependable software by design.
By Daniel Jackson
Scientific American
Vol. 294 (6) June 2006pp59-65
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Engineering life. Building a fab for biology: Principles and practices
learned from engineering successes can help transform biotechnology
from a specialized craft in to a mature industry.
By Bio Fab Group
Scientific American
Vol. 294 (6), 2006 pp34-39
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Science behind SUDOKU: solving a Sudoku puzzle requires no amth, not
even arithemetic. Even so, the game poses a number of intriguing
mathematical problems.
By Delahaye, Jean-Paul
Scientific American
Vol. 294 (6)June 2006pp71-77

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