The New York Times 2001 Ian Austen - Abstracts

The New York Times 2001 Ian Austen
TitleSubjectAuthors
Input devices call on a little muscle; a computer embedded in something that people already wear.(Technology Information)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
Inside the virtual laboratory, ideas percolate faster than rivalries.(Circuits)(Technology Information)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
Labelers that whir rather than click.(Dymo LetraTag, $29.99; the Brother P-Touch Home and Hobby Model PT-65, $49.99; the Stanley Heavy Duty Labeler ST-1150, $99.95; and the Dymo LabelWriter EL60, $199.95)(Statistical Data Included)(Evaluation)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
Learning to speak their minds: for some dyslexics, voice recognition may help in getting thoughts on paper.(Technology Information)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
Making a still point in a turning world.(special effects using using camera arrays to freeze action while motion continues all around)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
Motion sensors may let everyday appliances do more; researchers look for cheaper ways to make devices that measure motion.(Technology Information)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
Quantum computers: using light instead of moving atoms.(Technology Information)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
To store data, a hologram 'picture' is worth a million bits.(Technology Information)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
You can never be too thin (or cheap).(new flat-panel lliquid crystal display monitors)(Product Information)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
You clocked what? For marathon runners, it's gun vs. chip; digital timers have shown that marathon winners in some categories have not had the fastest times.(Technology Information)News, opinion and commentaryIan Austen
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