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Automobile
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Textiles
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nainsi rastogi
| Added idea
"people wants every thing cheap and compact......."
| 1 year ago
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as we are in technical era we want electronics in our pocket ....... every thing very handy and easy to buy and use also ......... in field of textile we want compact products with high technology......
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Sanjay Nigam
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"Automobile"
| 3 years ago
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A few of many, many applications in nanotech, When nanotech arrives, self-sufficient nano-mechanics will have a "nanoautocenter" inside both bumpers of a vehicle. That way, in the event of an accident, if the forces still overcome the energy...
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Ideate: "What are applications of nanotechnology in the market?" deleted from your view.
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The price war between intel and AMD is costing the semiconductor industry heavily. The microprocessor market lost revenues of $5bn in 2006, and $6bn in 2007. It is no secret that the world’s economies have slowed down. With data trickling in for the fourth quarter, 2007 is shaping up to be a not so great year. Retail sales are down, the housing market is in the tank, and the dollar has hit record lows. What does all this mean for chip suppliers? There are several factors influencing the 2008 worldwide semiconductor forecast. In general, the replacement cycles for PCs and mobile phones should provide the semiconductor market with a needed boost in a volatile economic environment. With cautio...
Trends: "Price wars cost the semiconductor industry $23bn in lost revenues" deleted from your view.
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Sanjay Nigam
| Answered
| 3 years ago
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In embedded systems applications, task cases can dramatically simplify product usage. Despite supposedly "user-friendly" on-screen menus, many consumers still find programming their VCRs a tedious, frustrating, and error-prone experience. Why?...
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Answer: "Are task cases useful for embedded systems applications?" deleted from your view.
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For the people who have developed the nanolaser this could be of grat advancement a laser that focuses light into a 30-nanometer-wide. The advance in technology could lead to hard disks with 10 terabits of data packed into a square inch. The nanolaser is an important step toward a disk-writing system that many researchers are currently working on. Such a system would use both light and magnetic fields to store data on a disk, packing up to 50 terabits per square inch of data. The laser can concentrate 250 nanowatts of power on a 30-nanometer-wide spot. The smaller the light spot of the laser, the smaller the bit size, which means more bits per square inch. On a hard disk, each bit is a tiny...
Trends: "Higher-Density Data Storage: A novel nanolaser could cram more data onto a hard disk." deleted from your view.




