Can science and technology make the robot of similar to mankind quick in action currently?
They need to do way instain inventor.
Archive → January, 2010
Can science and technology make the robot of similar to mankind quick in action currently?
IT’S YOUR TURN
Missouri University of Science and Technology history and traditions. Watch 140 years of history in under 4 minutes.
Duration : 0:3:55
Who do you think is the greatest to have made the most contribution to technology ,Science and conservation ?
Who do you think is the greatest to have made the most contribution to technology ,Science and conservation .
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory: Advancing Transformational Science and Technology
At the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, we’re moving the boundaries of science through our interdisciplinary approach to solving challenges in energy and the environment, national security and fundamental sciences. Its these advancements today that will bring about big changes for tomorrow—in our nation and in the world.
A complete transcript of this video is available at http://www.pnl.gov/labvideotranscript.pdf
Learn more about Pacific Northwest National Laboratory at http://www.pnl.gov/.
Duration : 0:5:8
How is technology dependent on science and how are science and technology different from one another?
The discover of radium and it’s qualities was science in action. Using radium to develop an x ray machine was technology.
well if you think about it, technology makes experiments easy to be tested. You don’t really want to wait all day to prove that your hypotheses was right, so technology really helps science. If your trying to prove something or test something, technology makes you life way easier. They’re different because technology deals with making life easier and then there’s the technical stuff about machinery and ya da ya da. Technology deals with more broader scale than science, it’s like more hands on. Technology is cool too. While science is much cooler, Science is been around than technology. But anyway, science deals with everything, from testing an experiment to finding a cure for a disease. Science deals with explanations and experiments.
Any ideas for an 11th grade technology science fair project?
I’m going to be a junior next year and have decided to get to work on my science fair project early. If you have any ideas on what I should build (it has to be under the catagory of ‘technology’) or any suggestions on problems that could be easily solved by building something, please, feel free to share. ;P It would be greatly appreciated! And this counts as a grade, so your best answer would be good. Hehe.
ummm..what about a robot that does stuff? lmao..idkk. be creative.
If I Major in Information Science Technology with concentration in library?
If I major in Information Science Technology could I apply for jobs like being an office assistant like a secretary or receptionist. However I was also wondering since this is a broad major, some people tell that I could look into research jobs. That I don’t necessarily have to work in a library and that I could even look into medical research jobs if I really want to get more specific. I was also looking into information center jobs, but I heard because of this economy the govt is cutting some of those jobs.
Information Science is a pretty marketable major. Lots of companies have corporate libraries and need someone to manage those resources. They also need people to manage documents. All businesses need to manage their information in all kinds of ways. Having a broad major is actually good, so you’re not limited. You could even help to manage information that will go onto a company’s web site and be involved in that kind of department. Good luck!
European Science & Technology
Ariane Rocket
Galileo Project
Aribus A380
Eurofighter Typhoon
Columbus laboratory/ATV/Node3
TGV/Transrapid
LHC/CERN
Duration : 0:9:31
What would your perfect world, utopia/eutopia look like? Science, technology, art, culture, religion society?
What would your perfect world, utopia/eutopia look like? Science, technology, art, culture, religion society
How would you design your eutopa or utopia, your perfect world. What would be the government, society, technology, and culture? Actually More’s original Utopia isn’t so bad. A tad limited by the 16th century, but generally quite agreeable. Actually quite a few dystopias especially Brave New World, don’t seem so bad either. And I would love to live in won of Ayn Rand’s "collectivist" dystopias.
Creative Processes in Science and Technology: Insights from
Google Tech Talk
May 14, 2009
ABSTRACT
Creative Processes in Science and Technology: Insights from Visual Arts. Presented by Dr. Julio M. Ottino.
Creativity is essential in art, in science, and in technology. But in what way is creativity different in these three areas, and in what way is it similar? Technology is about invention, making and building; science is about unveiling, revealing what may already be there. Philosophers, placing the emphasis on uniqueness, have declared that science is ephemeral and that art is permanent, and have placed artistic creation on the highest plane. Others have taken the same viewpoint. However, is this actually true? Or more pragmatically, are there creative processes and lessons that can be transferred across domains? In what ways do the domains intersect and enrich each other? Julio M. Ottino argues that artistic creativity reveals processes that hold lessons for scientific and technological creativity.
Dr. Julio M. Ottino is the dean of the Robert R. McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Northwestern University where he holds the titles of Distinguished Robert R. McCormick Institute Professor and Walter P. Murphy Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering. Born in Argentina he had a career as an artist before he moved to the U.S. for his PhD in Chemical Engineering at the University of Minnesota. He then held a faculty position at UMass/Amherst and held chaired and senior appointments at Caltech, Stanford, and the University of Minnesota. He joined Northwestern in 1991 and was chairman of the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering from 1992 to 2000. He was the founder and co-director of the Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems.
Duration : 0:56:2
Science and Technology
current science and technology research happening at Rochester
Duration : 0:1:30
Why should we integrate the study of science, technology, and society?
My group and I were uncertain about what to answer this question, but one of my group answered, "Because it needs to meet for society, development for technology and study of science." We are not sure if it is not right or not. If you know what to answer, can you please tell as soon as possible?
European science and technology
European science and technology
Ariane Rocket
Galileo Project
Aribus A380
Eurofighter Typhoon
Columbus laboratory/ATV/Node3
TGV/Transrapid
LHC/CERN
2007 Nobel Prize in Physics:
Albert Fert (EU)
Peter Grünberg (EU)
2007 Nobel Prize in Chemistry:
Gerhard Ertl (EU)
2007 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine:
Mario Capecchi (US citizen, born in Europe)
Oliver Smithies (US citizen, born in Europe)
Martin J. Evans (EU)
2007 Nobel Prize in Literature:
Doris Lessing (EU)
2007 Nobel Prize in Economics:
Leonid Hurwicz (USA)
Eric S. Maskin (USA)
Roger B. Myerson (USA)
Europe is gaining ground on the US in the field of innovation thanks mainly to Nordic countries leading the way.
The EU-US innovation gap has been decreasing year-on-year since 2003, according to a 2006 report . The latest version of the EU’s “innovation scoreboard” reveals it was the Danes, Finns, Germans and Swedes who were ahead of the pack, establishing themselves as world leaders in the field. The report also highlighted outstanding performance in life-long learning, with participation levels highest among the Swedish population at 35%, compared to Europe’s overall 11%.
Published by a Maastricht research institute, the scoreboard ranks the economies of 34 countries on the basis of 25 indicators, including education, investment in modern technologies, R&D expenditure and numbers of patents granted. The countries under the microscope are the US, Japan and the EU, as well as Croatia, Turkey, Iceland, Norway and Switzerland.
The report identifies four main groups:
Innovation leaders: Sweden, Switzerland, Finland, Denmark, Germany and Japan
Innovation followers: UK, Iceland, France, Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Ireland, US
Countries catching-up: Slovenia, Czech Republic, Lithuania, Portugal, Poland, Latvia, Greece, Bulgaria, Cyprus and Romania
Trailing countries: Estonia, Spain, Italy, Malta, Hungary, Croatia and Slovakia
The “trailing countries” have scored well below the innovation average for the EU as a whole and require substantial investment to catch up. Luxembourg, Norway and Turkey would not fit in any of these categories.
A survey by the EU’s statistical office Eurostat reveals that over 40% of European companies are actively innovating, more frequently in collaboration with customers and suppliers than with universities and public research institutes
Duration : 0:4:35
Science and Technology – reporting on group discussion – Nairobi Manifesto Roundtable
Jasper Kirika reports back on a group discussion on Science and Technology and development in Africa. Part of the Manifesto roundtable in Nairobi which discussed the document Innovation, Sustainability, Development: A New Manifesto.
The Roundtable was held in Nairobi, Kenya on 4 December 2009, and hosted by African Centre for Technology Studies (ACTS).
Manifesto: http://anewmanifesto.org
ACTS: http://www.acts.or.ke
Duration : 0:9:44
science news with gusto