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December 2007
Buckyball bowling. Molecule manipulation. Are Wii not entertained?
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
From Theory to Practice: Theoretical Technique Comes of Age
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
The gathering storms
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
 
November 2007
All science, just science
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Microsoft keeps growing, here and elsewhere
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
The Natural (now programmable)
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
 
October 2007
Improving Bridge Performance with Finite Element Analysis
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
 
September 2007
Star Power
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
 
August 2007
Modeling Non-Normal Data Using Statistical Software
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
 
July 2007
Designing the Future with DFMA
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
 
June 2007
Modeling Earthquakes with Realistic Simulation Software
    R&D, Advantage Business Media





Editor's Take
The Sensor Internet
September 4, 2008

Sensors are taking off. No, they really are. In 2007, a team from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center tasked an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to fly over one of the damaging wildfires racing through Southern California. The data collected for its sensors—which included crucial thermal-infrared imagery at much higher detail than available satellites—was instantly visualized using a software platform called Sensor Web 2.0.

Essentially, this system marks the latest in a steady progression of three developing technologies: robust interactive sensors, autonomous aerial vehicles, and sophisticated data management software. Sensor Web 2.0 happens to be polished enough to have played a crucial role in modern emergency response scenario, which possibly helped it earn a 2008 R&D 100 Award from R&D Magazine’s panel of judges.

What’s really interesting about the technology is that it is giving rise to the “Internet” of sensors. In addition to the existing Internet populated by human- or software-controlled computer “entities”, we will soon see a highly complex network of sensors, including thermal imagers, temperature gauges, cameras—from the simplest motion detectors to pricey space-based spectroradiometers.

Yeah, I admit to thinking this sounds a little like Skynet. But for fun let’s extend the sci-fi—what if Skynet were patched in to that swarm of insect-like robots that achieved a sort of decision-making sentience in Michael Crichton’s novel “Prey”. It doesn’t take too much of a stretch to envision the results. Aerial sensor-laden nanorobots assembled by engineered microbes which able to access the resources of the mythical Skynet would probably make quick work of any Terminator James Cameron might have to offer.

The stuff of sci-fi often pales before stranger truths, however, and who knows what biotechnology will bring us in the near future. “Sensor Internet” has a long ways to go before true global interconnectivity occurs, but for now, it’s heartening to see disparate areas of R&D coming together to deliver a tool that can truly help us respond quickly to a natural world that even less forgiving of slow response times than a swarm of nanorobots.

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