particle beam
3 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
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Live Webcast: Getting to Microsoft Office 365: The Right Migration for Your Business
If you've been stuck using bare bones, web-based tools, you'll appreciate the full featured collaboration in MS Office 365. Check out this live webcast to learn more about Microsoft Office 365,...
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Large Hadron Collider sets record
The recently restarted Large Hadron Collider has become the world's most powerful particle accelerator, after setting a new record for beam intensity.
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Large Hadron Collider sees first collisions
The world's largest particle accelerator has performed its first collisions, and its first beam acceleration.
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Large Hadron Collider back in operation
The world's biggest particle accelerator, the Large Hadron Collider, is in operation again after more than a year of repairs.
Additional Results
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Holographic storage rises from the dead
Holographic storage has incredible potential, but has never made it to market despite$100 million and years of R&D. But now it gets one more chance to make good.
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Samsung updates the Galaxy Beam, its projector-packing smartphone
Samsung has announced the Galaxy Beam, an updated version of a phone it announced in 2010.
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Samsung Galaxy Beam (images)
This isn't your ordinary Samsung Galaxy handset. Instead, the Beam has one very big trick up its sleeve.
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Luidia's eBeam Edge - Setting the standard for interactive whiteboards
Who needs an actual whiteboard? Give me a light-colored wall, a mini projector, and the Luidia eBeam Edge and I can teach anywhere, anytime, in person or online.
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NASA aiming to make 'tractor beams' a reality
A team of laser experts are studying different techniques for corralling particles and transporting them via laser light to instruments on rovers and orbiting spacecraft.
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CenterBeam takes on Microsoft with cloud collaboration suite
The big hook for CenterBeam's new service is that organizations don't necessarily have to ditch all their existing, on-premise Exchange or Microsoft Office infrastructure.
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Particles move faster than light?
Scientists at Cern have reported the apparent discovery of particles traveling faster than the speed of light.
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Large Hadron Collider breaks beam intensity record again
Cern's Large Hadron Collider has set a new world record for beam intensity, meaning the massive experiment can record more data than before.
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First images from Planet Mercury beamed home
Stay tuned. We're bound to learn more about Mercury than we've ever known before.
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World's 1st exabyte storage system
Exabyte? That's 1,000 Petabytes, 1,000,000 Terabytes or 1 billion Gigabytes. 1 EB is a big number, but that's not the most impressive thing about the new technology
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Cern hopes to prove more dimensions exist
Scientists at the Cern laboratory in Switzerland have said that the Atlas research project may prove the existence of extra dimensions and the Higgs Boson as early as next year.
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Awesome video: Navy shoots down drones with frickin' laser beams
When it comes to wonderful toys, the United States Navy has some of the best ever.
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Samsung Galaxy Beam smartphone with pico projector launching next month
Samsung is in the midst of displaying a wide collection of new smartphones at CommunicAsia 2010 this week, and now the news coming out of the ICT trade show is that the Samsung Galaxy Beam (which...
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iBuyPower beams up LAN Warrior II gaming PC in NZXT Vulcan case
It's only been a few days since NZXT's Vulcan stylish, compact case reached reviewers' hands (see a review here), and already iBuyPower is offering a new PC built around the chassis. While the...
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Large Hadron Collider hits milestone: Smashes protons at highest energy level yet
The Large Hadron Collider overcame some early electrical hurdles and operated at its highest energy level yet as it collected data from smashing protons together.
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LHC to run for longest continuous period
The Large Hadron Collider is about to enter its longest continuous operational period, in preparation for full-strength particle-smashing.
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A 70 TB tape cartridge: too much, too late?
IBM and Fujifilm have demonstrated a technology that, if productized, could give us a 70 TB tape cartridge. Is tape dead - or merely sleeping?
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