The latest touch-screen solution from Zytronic’s unique PCT(TM)-technology has found its way to Microsoft Corporation's Envisioning Lab where the touch-sensor is used in a multi-monitor, fully touch-enabled workstation referred to as the Lab’s Spatial Desk.
In 2009, General Dynamics was selected by the Marine Corps to provide nine Combat Operations Center (COC) Capability Set III systems as part of the government's CAC2S initial integration of the Processing and Display Subsystem.
Universal Biosensors recently declared that the OneTouch Verio from LifeScan designed with Universal’s technology is suitable for applications in self monitored blood glucose.
Future technology may put the brakes on drunk drivers and save many lives if researchers at QinetiQ North America, Waltham, Massachusetts have their way. They are developing a system that will prevent a car from starting if the driver's blood alcohol level is higher than the legal limit.
According to a report published in the New Mexico Daily Lobo late last year, scientists at the University of New Mexico have designed a sensor that will identify biological material used to manufacture weapons.
Researchers at the University of Michigan have recently found a means to measure the growth and vulnerability to drugs of a single bacterial cell without using a microscope.
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have developed a novel disposable sensor that is capable of detecting explosive products.
Cambridge-based Institute for Paediatric Innovation, a non-profit organisation operating with Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics, has been offered a $340,000 award by Philips Healthcare for advancing an adhesive medical system for use in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs).
A group of researchers from Purdue University and the National Institute of Standards and Technology have devised a novel sensing methodology for facilitating the diagnosis of cancer and other ailments instantly.
A new study reveals that the fly arranges the hair-like structures of its nervous system to feel and hear. That method now serves as a model for refining wireless sensor networks, among other computer applications.
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