- Why
is Sun so large?
By Mullan, D. J.
American Journal of Physics
Vol.74 (1), 2006, pp 10-13.
- Great
places to work
Businessworld
Vol. 25(37), 2006, pp29-64.
- Microphotonics:
the successor to electronics
By Narayanan, R
Electronics For You
Vol. 38(2), 2006, pp44-50.
- Breakthrough
ideas for 2006: the Harvard Business Review List
Harvard Business Review
Vol. 84 (2), 2006, pp35-67.
- Why,
what and how of management innovation
By Hamel, Gary
Harvard Business Review
Vol. 84 (2), 2006, pp72-84.
- What
executives should remember
By Drucker, Peter
Harvard Business Review
Vol. 84 (2), 2006, pp145-153.
- Dream
jobs 2006: from fine art to television, racetracks to the African bush,
these 10 technologies find surprising places to ply their trades
By Mullins, Justin
IEEE Spectrum
Vol. 43 (2), 2006, pp32- 43.
- Transistor
Laser: ultrafast transistors that output optical and electrical signal open
new computing frontier
By Holonyak, Nick and Feng,
Milton
IEEE Spectrum
Vol. 43 (2), 2006, pp 47-51.
- Copyright
laws in India and maintenance of welfare state
By Singhania, Ankita
Journal of Intellectual Property Rights
Vol. 11 (1), 2006, pp43-52.
- Cellphone
safety: answering the radiation question.
By Williams, Caroline
NewScientist
Vol 189(2537), 2006, pp8-10.
- 25
hour day: ever wished life was a little less frantic? Then teach your brain
to stretch time
By Williams, Caroline
NewScientist
Vol 189(2537), 2006, pp34-37.
- Almost
human: they walk, talk and handle objects like we do. Get ready for a new
era in robotics ( robot special article)
NewScientist
Vol 189(2537), 2006, pp38-49.
- Get
up and go
By Lawton, Graham
NewScientist
Vol. 189 ( 2539), 2006, pp34-38.
- Rethinking
the content of Physics courses
By Grayson, Diane J.
Physics Today
Vol. 59 (2), 2006, pp 31-36.
- Physics
for all? A million and counting?
By Hehn, Jack and Neuschatz,
Michael
Physics Today
Vol. 59(2), 2006, pp37-43.
- Efficient
coding of information: Huffman coding
By Sridhara, Deepak
Resonance: journal of science education
Vol. 11 (2), 2006, pp51-73.
- Cognitive
radio: smart radios and other new wireless devices will avoid transmission
bottlenecks by switching instantly to nearby frequencies that they sense are
clear
By Ashley, Steven
Scientific American
Vol. 294 (3), 2006, pp46-53.
- Limits
of reason: ideas on complexity and randomness originally suggested by
Gottfried W Leibniz in 1686, combined with modern information theory, imply
that there can never be a theory of everything for all mathematics
By Chaitin, Gregory
Scientific American
Vol. 294 (3), 2006, pp54-61.
- Internet
is broken: Net’s fundamental flaws cost companies billions, impede
innovation, and threaten national security. It is clean-slate approach
By Talbot, David
Technology Review
Vol.108 (11), 2005/2006.
- Calm
in the chaos : find inner peace, then take it outside
By Schimke, David
Utne
No. 133 January-February, 2006, pp47-55.
- 50
best Robots ever
By Capps, Robert
Wired
Vol. 14 (1), 2006, pp120-130.