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Tough gel stretches to 21 times its length, recoils, and heals itself

September 6, 2012 8:55 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

A team of experts in mechanics, materials science, and tissue engineering at Harvard have created an extremely stretchy and tough gel that may pave the way to replacing damaged cartilage in human joints.Called a hydrogel, because its main ingredient is water, the new material is a hybrid of two weak gels

UK paraplegic woman first to take robotic suit home

September 5, 2012 8:39 am | by Chris Wickham, Reuters | News | Comments

A British woman paralyzed from the chest down by a horse riding accident has become the first person to take home a robotic exoskeleton that enables her to walk. Although bionic exoskeletons have been used in hospitals and rehabilitation centers,

Integrated light engine modules produce up to 104 lumens per watt

September 4, 2012 2:14 pm | Product Releases | Comments

Thomas Research Products is pleased to announce that their LED Core series of integrated light engine modules have exceeded 100 lumens per watt. The TR-SS1 series LED Core Garage Modules feature Type V DLC Compliant optics.

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Molded chip scale package ideal for ultra-portable applications

September 4, 2012 10:25 am | 3M Electronics Solutions Division | Product Releases | Comments

Alpha and Omega Semiconductor Limited introduced the AOC2403 – the industry’s first Molded Chip Scale Package (MCSP) in a tiny 0.97mm x 0.97mm x 0.3mm power package. Compared to existing Chip Scale Package (CSP) solutions,

Shapeable LED backlight designed for enhanced light distribution

September 4, 2012 10:14 am | Product Releases | Comments

Lumex announces the global launch of its first-in-the-industry QuantumBrite Shapeable LED Backlight. With the new shapeable LED backlight, holes can be cut into the backlight in virtually any shape (for example, to allow space for a switch or other component on the circuit board). This combination of flexible and shapeable LED backlight technology...

A millimeter-scale, wirelessly powered cardiac device

September 4, 2012 9:05 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

Stanford electrical engineers overturn existing models to demonstrate the feasibility of a millimeter-sized, wirelessly powered cardiac device A team of engineers at Stanford has demonstrated the feasibility of a super-small, implantable cardiac device that gets its power not from batteries

'Magic carpet' could help prevent falls

September 4, 2012 9:04 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

Plastic optical fibres, laid on the underlay of a carpet, can bend when anyone treads on it and map, in real-time, their walking patterns.Tiny electronics at the edges act as sensors and relay signals to a computer. These signals can then be analysed to show the image of the footprin

'Not without my iPad': Young tech-savvy docs want a real life, but don't call them slackers

September 4, 2012 9:00 am | by LINDSEY TANNER AP Medical Writer | News | Comments

Don't call today's young doctors slackers. True, they may shun a 24/7 on-call solo practice and try to have a life outside of work. Yet they say they're just as committed to medicine as kindly Marcus Welby from 1970s TV, or even grumpy Dr. House.

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University of Tennessee Space Institute researchers make clinical trials a virtual reality

August 30, 2012 1:39 pm | News | Comments

Clinical trials can be time-consuming, expensive and intrusive, but they are also necessary. Researchers at the University of Tennessee Space Institute in Tullahoma have developed an invention that makes clinical trials more efficient by moving them into the virtual world.

'Nano machine shop' shapes nanowires, ultrathin films

August 30, 2012 9:20 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

A new "nano machine shop" that shapes nanowires and ultrathin films could represent a future manufacturing method for tiny structures with potentially revolutionary properties. The structures might be "tuned" for applications ranging from high-speed electronics to solar cells

"Little flash" as bionic eye brings amazed woman some sight

August 30, 2012 9:11 am | by Thuy Ong, Reuters | News | Comments

 A bionic eye has given an Australian woman partial sight and researchers say it is an important step towards eventually helping visually impaired people get around independently. Dianne Ashworth, who has severe vision loss due to the inherited condition retinitis pigmentosa,

Connectors satisfy power and data requirements for advanced medical equipment

August 29, 2012 5:21 pm | Product Releases | Comments

FCI has developed a power distribution connector for medical equipment such as automated medication dispensers.  The rugged PwrBlade Series connector’s ability to handle both power and high-speed data signals delivers a unique, intelligent solution that enables advanced medication inventory management, patient monitoring and medical record management.

High-bright, seven-inch TFT features 40,000-hour backlight

August 29, 2012 10:52 am | Product Releases | Comments

OSD Displays has introduced a seven-inch WVGA 800 x RGB X 480 TFT with 500 Nit backlight utilizing long life 40,000-hour LED’s. This new seven-inch TFT is fully RoHS compliant. The OSD070T0680-29 offers a 250:1 contrast ratio and supports

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Stop switch ideal for space sensitive applications

August 29, 2012 10:09 am | Product Releases | Comments

Milford, CT – EAO Corporation of Milford, CT USA, a premier global supplier of Human Machine Interface (HMI) Systems and Components, introduces the Series 51 Stop Switch.  These units are ideal for space sensitive applications often found within:

Connector lock ensures the cord does not get disconnected

August 27, 2012 4:13 pm | Product Releases | Comments

Interpower Corporation is pleased to announce the addition of an IEC 60320 Sheet I connector lock part number 85910120 to their IEC 60320 connector lock product line. This connector lock is designed to fit the Interpower IEC 60320 Sheet I plug and IEC 60320 Sheet J outlet and is RoHS compliant.

Homeland Security's Science & Technology Directorate's 'Detect to Protect' program will assess trigger and confirmer sensors designed to detect biological agents within minutes

August 27, 2012 8:57 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

The idea that disease and infection might be used as weapons is truly dreadful, but there is plenty of evidence showing that biological weapons have been around since ancient times.* Bioterrorism, as it is dubbed, is nothing new, and although medicines have made the world a safer place against a myriad of old scourges both natural and manmade, it still remains all too easy today to uncork a nasty cloud of germs.

Merging the biological and the electronic

August 27, 2012 8:50 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

Harvard scientists have, for the first, time created a type of "cyborg" tissue by embedding a three-dimensional network of functional, bio-compatible nanoscale wires into engineered human tissues.As described in a paper published August 26 in Nature Materials, a multi-institutional research team led by Charles M. Lieber, the Mark Hyman

Nanoparticles reboot blood flow in brain

August 24, 2012 8:32 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

A nanoparticle developed at Rice University and tested in collaboration with Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) may bring great benefits to the emergency treatment of brain-injury victims, even those with mild injuries.Combined polyethylene glycol-hydrophilic carbon clusters (PEG-HCC),

IBC 2012: Mini-camera with maxi-brainpower

August 23, 2012 3:01 pm | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

Just a few more meters to the finish line. The mountain biker jumps over the last hill and takes the final curve, with the rest of the competition close at his heels. At such moments, you do not want to just watch, you would really love to put yourself in the same shoes as the athlete.

SiliconExpert Webinar on Counterfeit Electronic Component Detection & Avoidance

August 23, 2012 1:45 pm | News | Comments

SiliconExpert Technologies, a provider of electronic component management tools, is hosting a webinar with guest speaker Dr. Diganta Das, a member of the research staff at the University of Maryland’s Center for Advanced Life Cycle Engineering (CALCE)

Pressure sensors designed for cost efficiency, long term stability

August 23, 2012 11:59 am | Product Releases | Comments

Servoflo Corporation of Lexington, Massachusetts is pleased to announce the MS4425 Series of pressure sensors. These temperature-compensated piezoresistive pressure sensors are available in various pressure ranges from 0-1 psi up to 0-300 psi.

The keyboard you can wash

August 23, 2012 11:48 am | by Kasey Panetta, Associate Editor | Blogs | Comments

Keyboards are one of those objects that get incredibly dirty but are also really annoying/impossible to clean. So, whether it’s your kid’s sticky fingers or your mom’s habit of spilling tea (sorry, Mom), it might be time to check out the Logitech Washable Keyboard K310.

Super-strong, high-tech material found to be toxic to aquatic animals

August 23, 2012 8:53 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are some of the strongest materials on Earth and are used to strengthen composite materials, such as those used in high-performance tennis rackets. CNTs have potential uses in everything from medicine to electronics to construction.

First UK operation to tackle heart failure with novel nerve-stimulating implant

August 23, 2012 8:52 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

Researchers at the University of Leicester have announced that the UK's first operation to tackle heart failure (HF) with a novel nerve-stimulating device will be performed today (Thursday August 23) at Glenfield Hospital.The operation, which is part of a clinical trial called INOVATE-HF, could pave the way for a revolutionary treatment of a condition that scientists say has reached "epidemic proportions."

'Electronic nose' prototype developed

August 22, 2012 8:44 am | by Eurekalert! | News | Comments

Research by Nosang Myung, a professor at the University of California, Riverside, Bourns College of Engineering, has enabled a Riverside company to develop an "electronic nose" prototype that can detect small quantities of harmful airborne substances.

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