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Technology Review: March/April 2008

The 10 Emerging Technologies of 2008
Technology Review presents its annual list of the 10 most exciting technologies.
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From the Editor

How to Stay Young
The easy part is understanding a new technology; what's harder is to think creatively about it.
By Jason Pontin

Letters

Letters
Letters from our readers.

Notebooks

Network Warfare
New military technologies require new organizations.
By John Arquilla
What's Wrong with the Kindle
The market for electronic readers like Amazon's will be limited.
By Jason Epstein
Mining Pathways for Biofuels
Exciting new ways to make fuels are emerging.
By Vinod Khosla

Forward

Capturing Protein Interactions
Freezing and slicing gives a snapshot of life inside cells.
Expandable Silicon
A new chip design could lead to far cheaper large-area electronics.
Customized Stem Cells
Reprogramming cells taken from disease sufferers could lead to new treatments.
Real-Time Reflections
New algorithms promise dramatically improved animation.
Plug-In Hybrids: Tailpipes vs. Smokestacks
Plug-ins will lead to lower overall emissions, even if the electricity that powers them comes from coal.

Startup Profile

Bidding for Interest Rates
NeoSaej says its new algorithms will lead to better interest rates for bank depositors.

Features

A Technology Surges
In Iraq, soldiers conducting frontline street patrols finally get software tools that let them share findings and plan missions.
By David Talbot
Microsoft's Shiny New Toy
Photosynth is an application that's still a work in progress. It's dazzling, but what is it for?
By Jeffrey MacIntyre

Essay

Art Games
Digital artists are using game technologies to create bold new works.
By Christiane Paul

Q&A

Walter Bender
One Laptop per Child's president for software and content explains why the program's strategy has changed.
By Larry Hardesty

Visualization

Between Friends
Sites like Facebook are proving the potential value of the "social graph." Here's what it looks like.
By Erica Naone

Reviews

Android Calling
Does Google want to free your phone--or own it?
By Simson Garfinkel
The Mess of Mandated Markets
New federal biofuel standards will distort the development of innovative energy technologies.
By David Rotman
The Digital Utility
Nicholas Carr's new book examines the implications of cloud computing.
By Mark Williams

Hack

Amazon Kindle
With Amazon selling a digital reader, e-paper has gone mass-market.
By Daniel Turner

Demo

Ethanol from Garbage and Old Tires
How a versatile, cheap new process turns garbage into biofuel.
By Kevin Bullis

7 Years Ago in TR

The Power of Thought
Research in neural-implant technology has made gains.
By Michael Patrick Gibson

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MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology