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Technology Review: March 2002

The Nanotube Computer
The nano future is emerging through the haze of hype: the road to terabit memory and cheap flat-screen displays will be paved with carbon nanotubes.
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Leading Edge

Nanotech Gets Real
From the editor in chief

Prototype

Prototype
Straight from the lab: technology´s first draft.

Insight

The Digital Dividend
Bridging the digital divide could lead to—surprise!—profits.

Trailing Edge

Video Game Odyssey
The start of a worldwide obsession: white dots on a TV screen.
A.I. Reboots
"Artificial intelligence" used to mean robots that think like people; now it means software for rejecting junk e-mail. Low expectations could yield better applications, sooner.
Merck´s Mission: An AIDS Vaccine
With a hugely ambitious new research program, the pharmaceutical giant has revived the hunt for a vaccine to prevent AIDS. Will others follow?
From PlayStation to PC
Whether you play them or not, video games are good for you. These exercises in interactivity are spurring advances in interfaces and 3-D graphics that will benefit all computer users.
Digital Railroad
Forget "content" and "branding." For freight railroads, information technology spells better ways to haul coal, lay steel and pour crushed stone.
Planet Internet
Achievements to date: Internet backbone, Web browser. So when Larry Smarr takes the reins of a new $400 million institute and starts talking about intelligent highways and digital genomics, people listen.
The Internet Amenity
For big organizations, hoarding wireless bandwidth costs more than giving it away. Smell a free lunch?
Blog This
Online diarists rule an Internet strewn with failed dot coms.
Wal-Mart Trumps Moore´s Law
Information technology matters—when it delivers "everyday low prices."
Intellectual-Property Ecology
What tree huggers can teach us about the public domain of ideas.

Upstream

Systems Biology
The map of the genome is just the rule book; "systems biology" is the ball game.

Visualize

Phase Change Materials
Microcapsules that keep you comfy.

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