INSTITUTE TECHNOLOGY
The China-Dollar Question The illusory goal of RMB appreciation (ie dollar weakening) would do nothing to strengthen the real position of American manufacturing, but it would hurt all US consumers and technology companies by increasing costs. The China-Dollar Question: III Don't Asian nations have nefarious motives for accumulating OUR currency? Not at all. It's simply an outgrowth of the extraordinarily widespread use of the US dollar as the world's trade and reserve currency. Dylan Knight Rogers - GPLv3 Talk at the Illinois Institute of I gave a talk at the Illinois Institute of Technology on GPLv3 to the Chicago GNU/Linux Users Group, ChiGLUG on December 02, 2006. I have a WAV file that everyone can download, and a gallery of images to view. The China-Dollar Question: II Do China's dollar reserves give them huge power over the US? I don't think so. Here's another post from gildertech.com, aswering that widespread worry. -Bret Swanson ________________________________. posted to: Telecosm Lounge [IWS] NIOSH: NANOTECHNOLOGY FOCUS--Meeting 4 January 2007 National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Engineering, and Technology Subcommittee of the Committee on Technology, National Science and National Science and Technology Council, Committee on Technology Future logic circuits that literally work in a test tube or even But a new breakthrough by researchers at the California Institute of Technology could result in future logic circuits that literally work in a test tube--or even in the human body. In the current issue of the journal Science, More exact means to measure the relative positions of ever-tinier positions of ever-tinier devices squeezed by the millions onto silicon chips might be new types of targets, and not expensive new equipment, according to modeling studies by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Math creates new fast, efficient image enhancement technique A fast, efficient image enhancement technique developed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and originally applied to improving monochrome microscope images has proved itself equally effective at the other end Mechanical motion has been used to make atoms in a gas "spin" For the first time, mechanical motion has been used to make atoms in a gas "spin," scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) report. The technique eventually might be used in high-performance magnetic Ethylene for efficient and safe hydrogen-storage media? New research reported by scientists from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Turkey’s Bilkent University makes the surprising prediction that "ethylene, a well-known inexpensive molecule, can be an important
institute+technology: massachusetts institute of technology , georgia institute of technology , massachusetts institute of technology , georgia institute of technology , institute+technology
|