united states Archives - Innovation Toronto

  1. Helper Robots Are Steered, Tentatively, to Care for the Aging
  2. New Software Spots, Isolates Cyber-Attacks to Protect Networked Control Systems
  3. Could fracking in China be a climate game changer?
  4. Produce Industry’s Food Safety Push Takes Toll on the Environment
  5. Canadian mounties claim first person’s life saved by a police drone
  6. Wind Power Urged to Compete with Fossil Fuels Head-On
  7. Hot Air in Washington, D.C., Might Keep Helium Supply Afloat
  8. Cocaine Vaccine Passes Key Testing Hurdle
  9. Intermountain Medical Center reseachers develop new 3-D technology to treat atrial fibrillation
  10. Lyme Disease Vaccine Shows Promise in Clinical Trial
  11. Underwater networking: Captain Nemo goes online
  12. Nearly 5 Million Asthmatics Worldwide Could Benefit From Antifungal Therapy
  13. Aptima Develops Sense-making System for Robots Inspired by Neuroscience
  14. Study Demonstrates That Once-a-Day Pill Offers Relief From Ragweed Allergy Symptoms
  15. U.S. Food Production Shifts North, along with Infrastructure to Move It
  16. A Hard Look at 3 Myths about Genetically Modified Crops
  17. Researchers outline concerns about unproven stem cell therapies
  18. Biofuel pioneer forsakes renewables to make gas-fed fuel
  19. Synthetic biology research community grows significantly
  20. Patterned Hearts
  21. SAP TwoGo: Cloud-Based Carpooling Game Changer
  22. Running Buddies Enrichment Program Partners Joggers with Shelter Dogs
  23. Potential Diabetes Breakthrough
  24. Edible Medical Device Pills
  25. Can Synthetic Biology Keep Your Food Safe?
  26. Vitamin E Identified as Potential Weapon Against Obesity
  27. Johns Hopkins Team Deploys Hundreds of Tiny Untethered Surgical Tools in First Animal Biopsies
  28. Getting 3-D Printing and Next-Generation Manufacturing to the Factory Floor
  29. Earth feels impact of middle class
  30. Turning Algae into Clean Energy and Fish Food; Helping Africans to Irrigate Crops
  31. Information Is Driving a New Revolution in Manufacturing
  32. Researchers Develop Device to Mitigate Blackouts, Prevent Equipment Damage
  33. Plasma Device Developed at MU Could Revolutionize Energy Generation and Storage
  34. VCU Medical Center First in Virginia to Implant Telescope for Macular Degeneration
  35. Nanosponges soak up toxins released by bacterial infections and venom
  36. Forget GDP: The Social Progress Index Measures National Well-Being
  37. Freezing Nerves Knocks Pain Out Cold
  38. Copper Surfaces Reduce the Rate of Healthcare-Acquired Infections in the ICU
  39. Chinese Hackers Hijack Online Role-Playing Games
  40. UCLA First to Perform New Procedure on West Coast to Safely Open Blocked Carotid Arteries
  41. Major symposium on arsenic contamination in food and water supplies
  42. A giant step toward miniaturization
  43. Laser Light Zaps Away Cocaine Addiction
  44. Natural soil bacteria pump new life into exhausted oil wells
  45. Reducing waste of food: A key element in feeding billions more people
  46. Engineering Algae to Make the ‘Wonder Material’ Nanocellulose for Biofuels and More
  47. ESA develops “snap-proof” space tether
  48. Cholesterol buildup links atherosclerosis and macular degeneration
  49. Revealing the weapons by which bacteria fight each other – New Antibacterial Potential
  50. Breakthrough Cancer-Killing Treatment Has No Side-Effects, Says MU Researcher
  51. HIV Self-testing: the key to controlling the global
  52. 3 Ways UAVs Could Transform America’s Food System
  53. Mechanical Engineering Professor Invents Portable Mobility Assist Device
  54. Tablet Computers Acceptable for Reading EEG Results, Mayo Clinic Study Says
  55. Robotic Ants Successfully Mimic Real Colony Behavior
  56. Cyberattacks Seem Meant to Destroy, Not Just Disrupt
  57. Purdue-developed technology could provide a solution to antibiotic-resistant bacteria, save lives
  58. How to Kick-Start Innovation with Free Data
  59. As Spy Drones Come to the U.S., We Must Protect Our Privacy
  60. Tiny Games iPhone app aims to bring playtime back into the real world
  61. Game of drones
  62. UEA researchers make breakthrough in race to create ‘bio-batteries’
  63. Life After Oil and Gas
  64. Cheap Abundant Natural Gas is a Game Changer, Says the IMF
  65. Are Algae Biofuels a Realistic Alternative to Petroleum?
  66. Robot-Delivered Speech and Physical Therapy a Success in UMass Amherst Test
  67. Hide Your House From Drones With This Tech That Makes You Impossible To Record
  68. A milestone for new carbon-dioxide capture/clean coal technology
  69. Methane Hydrates: The Next Natural Gas Boom?
  70. Digital records could expose intimate details and personality traits of millions
  71. Breaking the final barrier: room-temperature electrically powered nanolasers
  72. The Brain Activity Map
  73. Internet searches can identify drug safety issues well ahead of public alerts
  74. Researchers Developing 3D Printer, ‘Bio-Ink’ to Create Human Organs
  75. Better Living through Mindfulness
  76. Brace Yourselves, Drone Journalism Is Coming
  77. The Ten Principles of 3D Printing
  78. There Should Be Grandeur: Basic Science in the Shadow of the Sequester
  79. Holographic Technique Could Lead to Bionic Vision
  80. New FDA-Approved Clot Removal Devices Show Promise for Treating Stroke Patients
  81. Asthma Drug Found Highly Effective in Treating Chronic, Severe Hives and Itch
  82. Can we compost our way out of landfills?
  83. U.S. Could Double Energy Productivity
  84. A World Without Work
  85. United Nations Panel Calls Hormone Disruptors a “Global Threat”
  86. Great Backyard Bird Count Goes Global, Shatters Records
  87. Could a computer on the police beat prevent violence?
  88. Fast New Test Could Find Leprosy Before Damage Is Lasting
  89. “Growing” medicines in plants requires new regulations
  90. Improving behaviour in children with autism
  91. The Bitcoin – global anarchist financial revolution, giant scam, great investment or some combination of all three?
  92. Argus II becomes first “bionic eye” to gain approval for sale in U.S.
  93. Decoys could blunt spread of ash-killing beetles
  94. Stem Cell-Based Bioartificial Tissues and Organs
  95. University of Oxford develops low-cost self-driving car system
  96. On the Fast Track to Routine 3-D Printing
  97. Has the ideas machine broken down?
  98. New Material Promises Better Solar Cells
  99. Unchecked Antibiotic Use in Animals May Affect Global Human Health
  100. Mercury contamination in water can be detected with a mobile phone
  101. Innovation Nation at War
  102. UAB researchers cure type 1 diabetes in dogs
  103. New strategy prevents rheumatoid arthritis in mice
  104. U.Va. Nonprofit Organization, PureMadi, Develops Innovative Water Purification Tablet for Developing World
  105. Smart satnav drives around the blue highway blues
  106. VIDEO: The Most Interesting Engineering Feat
  107. Widely used nanoparticles enter soybean plants from farm soil
  108. Why Robots Are Worse for the Economy Than You Think
  109. Raging (Again) Against the Robots
  110. March of the Lettuce Bot
  111. The search for better ways of storing electricity is hotting up
  112. Lawns Into Gardens
  113. Low-cost, 3D printable prosthetic hand
  114. In a French Case, a Battle to Unmask Twitter Users
  115. Robot Makers Spread Global Gospel of Automation
  116. South Korea Makes Billion-Dollar Bet on Fusion Power
  117. Stem cells may transform the development of new drugs
  118. Doubling Down on Energy Efficiency
  119. Stanford Cancer Treatment Called Medical Breakthrough
  120. The dronefather
  121. 2 Makers Press the Case for Electric Cars
  122. Ingredient in diarrhea medicine leads to sustainable new farm fertilizer
  123. VIDEO: How to stop leaks — the way blood does
  124. Mass. Eye and Ear Researchers Regenerate Sensory Hair Cells, Restore Hearing to Noise-Damaged Ears
  125. Experts aim to redefine healthcare and research ethics
  126. Another tiny miracle: Graphene oxide soaks up radioactive waste
  127. Breaking the Mold: Could Additive Manufacturing Resuscitate a Once-Proud U.S. Industry?
  128. Researchers seek longer battery life for electric locomotive
  129. Ad Blocking Raises Alarm Among Firms Like Google
  130. Carbon Taxes Make Ireland Even Greener
  131. The Dawning of Domestic Drones
  132. Can We Win the Race Against the Machines?
  133. Quest to Find New Uses for Abundant Natural Gas
  134. On-Demand Synaptic Electronics: Circuits That Learn and Forget
  135. Are Microgrids the Key to Energy Security?
  136. Fitting ‘smart’ mobile phone with magnifying optics creates ‘real’ cell phone
  137. Radio waves to kidneys lower persistent high blood pressure
  138. Ordinary Heart Cells Become ‘Biological Pacemakers’ With Injection of Single Gene
  139. Welcome to Saudi Albany?
  140. VIDEO: Rice, Texas Children’s team creates biocompatible patch to heal infants with birth defects
  141. Biologists Engineer Algae to Make Complex Anti-Cancer ‘Designer’ Drug
  142. Wind, solar power paired with storage could be cost-effective way to power grid
  143. Let’s Gang Up on Killer Bugs
  144. Robots and Robber Barons
  145. The costs of climate change can be mitigated if economic activity moves in response
  146. Johns Hopkins Surgeons Implant Brain “Pacemaker” for Alzheimer’s Disease in United States as Part of a Clinical Trial Designed to Slow Memory Loss
  147. Proliferation warnings on nuclear “wonder-fuel”
  148. Synthetic fuels could eliminate entire U.S. need for crude oil, create ‘new economy’
  149. A Vault for Taking Charge of Your Online Life
  150. For PC Virus Victims, Pay or Else
  151. Water-resistant coating guards limestone from pollution
  152. The Installed Price of Solar Photovoltaic Systems in the U.S. Continues to Decline at a Rapid Pace
  153. RED shocks with Odemax 4K distribution platform and REDRAY home player
  154. Award-winning device harvests energy from railway track vibrations
  155. Stanford geoscientist cites critical need for basic research to unleash promising energy sources
  156. Solar Industry throws a Tupperware Party
  157. Promising Drug Slows Down Advance of Parkinson’s Disease and Improves Symptoms
  158. Integrity of Internet Is Crux of Global Conference
  159. New COPD and Asthma drugs limiting excess mucus could save lives
  160. Engineering Plants for Biofuels
  161. Google Asks People To Speak Out Against ITU’s Attempt To Takeover Internet Governance
  162. One Step Closer To Real Medical Tech Breakthrough
  163. A low-cost, finger-nail sized radar
  164. How Can We Create A World Of Powerful Female Entrepreneurs?
  165. Mr. Spock, Your Holodeck is Ready: SBU Demonstrates Largest Resolution Immersive Visualization Facility Ever Built
  166. Computer Vision System Detects and Identifies Behaviors That Signal Autism
  167. How to Build a More Resilient Electric Grid
  168. U.S. Poised For Energy Self-Sufficiency
  169. VIDEO: Household Bioreactors Could Ease Energy Woes
  170. Ingredient in diarrhea medicine leads to sustainable new farm fertilizer
  171. Fuel From Waste, Poised at a Milestone
  172. Disruptions: Casting a Ballot by Smartphone
  173. US Federal Trade Commission offers US$50K prize for blocking robocalls
  174. NASA’s Space Launch System Using Futuristic Technology to Build the Next Generation of Rockets
  175. Six degrees of mobilisation
  176. Synthetic Biofilter Removes Estrogens and other Medicine Residues from Drinking Water
  177. As Dengue Fever Sweeps India, a Slow Response Stirs Experts’ Fears
  178. RIC WILL UNVEIL WORLD’S FIRST NEURAL-CONTROLLED BIONIC LEG AT FOURTH ANNUAL SKYRISE CHICAGO EVENT
  179. What’s Wrong With Online Voting?
  180. Building Small: In Many Industries, Economies of Size Is Shifting to Economies of Numbers
  181. Forget Patents: Why Open Source Licensing Concepts May Lead To Biotech Innovation
  182. Meth Vaccine Shows Promising Results in Early Tests
  183. Volcano power plan gets U.S. go-ahead
  184. Killing the Computer to Save It
  185. Plants provide accurate low-cost alternative for diagnosis of West Nile Virus
  186. The Growing Divide Between Harvard and Online Schools
  187. Antiscience Beliefs Jeopardize U.S. Democracy
  188. New research moves York scientists closer to lung cancer blood test
  189. Stop Building Bombs and Start Building Starships
  190. New storage facility a game changer for Simply Green
  191. Researchers hope prairie’s wild tomatillo may provide medical breakthrough in cancer fight
  192. Invisible barrier wards off metal corrosion
  193. Developing computers that can ‘think’ and ‘see’ in the same way as humans
  194. Public Television Takes Role in Curbing Dropout Rates
  195. Sorghum Eyed as a Southern Bioenergy Crop
  196. A New Kind of Warfare
  197. Productivity and growth: Was that it?
  198. Starving the Future
  199. Elusive FinSpy Spyware Pops Up in 10 Countries
  200. An American admiral calls for new military thinking and questions stealth technology
  201. Flame Malware Greatly Expands the Scope of Cyber Warfare
  202. There’s Still Hope for the Planet
  203. A Weapon We Can’t Control
  204. U.S. Attacks, Online and From the Air, Fuel Secrecy Debate
  205. Clouded Forecast
  206. VIDEO TEDxConcordiaUPortland – Anis Mojgani – Equal Parts Science and Magic
  207. Can We Build Tomorrow’s Breakthroughs?
  208. VIDEO TEDxBozeman – Yarrow Kraner – Creativity is Your Superpower
  209. Sites go offline in US piracy laws protest
  210. China Puts US on eBay – Redux
  211. Innovation key to UK prosperity
  212. What The New Patent Reform Act Means For Innovation
  213. Innovation: China’s new frontier
  214. China Puts US on eBay
  215. Painless Way to Achieve Huge Energy Savings: Stop Wasting Food
  216. The New American Normal
  217. Spring is coming earlier, and nature is scrambling to keep up
  218. Solar Power in Ontario Could Produce Almost as Much Power as All U.S. Nuclear Reactors
  219. In a Test of Sales Savvy, Selling a Red Brick on YouTube
  220. China’s Growth Shifts the Geopolitics of Oil
  221. Watching China Run
  222. Zoom Replaces Missing Vroom
  223. An end to frivolous patents may finally be in sight
  224. Tipping Point? Who’s Sleeping Now?
  225. Can The US Continue To Innovate At A Necessary Rate Without Causing Complete Social Upheaval?
  226. Tellyphone
  227. The Happiest People
  228. Asian Computer Makers Move Into Riskier Ventures
  229. Television Begins a Push Into the 3rd Dimension
  230. Combating climate change by observing the Earth
  231. Search, but You May Not Find
  232. Earth-Friendly Elements, Mined Destructively
  233. Global Economic Update: United States
  234. China Racing Ahead of U.S. in the Drive to Go Solar
  235. Innovation in America – Barack Obama
  236. Surge in Natural Gas Cars Has Utah Driving Cheaply
  237. All is Not Well in Silicon Valley
  238. Border Crossing Alert!
  239. A New, Global Oil Quandary: Costly Fuel Means Costly Calories
  240. Can A Vibrating Mouse Prevent Computer-related Injuries?
  241. Online Library Gives Readers Access To 1.5 Million Books
  242. You’re Eating That?