News

On Wed Aug 27 [2025] at the Space Centre, we’ll do four things well: Media producer, storyteller, and product strategist with ...
The ‘Earlyworm’ ticket is $52.50 and is available until 11:59 pm Wednesday, August 20, 2025. After that, a Standard ticket is ...
The International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI) have been going since 1969 and this year, it’s being held in Montréal. Here’s more from an August 15, 2025 International Joint ...
Ted Sargent, Canada Research Chair in Nanotechnology, University of Toronto, has been mentioned here a number of times regarding his work on solar cells. Here are a few of the mostly recent postings ...
First mentioned here in a Dec. 10, 2013 posting, Cornell University’s Cornell Council for the Arts (CCA; located in New York State) is hosting a 2014 Biennial celebrating this theme: “Intimate ...
Here’s some information about Oxford’s sixth annual nanotechnology summer programme from a March 25, 2014 news item on Nanowerk (Note: A link has been removed), The theme of the sixth annual Oxford ...
There’s a very good November 11, 2019 article by Natalie Angier for the New York Times on carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and the colour black, On a laboratory bench at the National Institute of Standards and ...
I’ve been writing about the World Science Festival in New York City for a few years now (here’s a May 5, 2011 posting about Baba Brinkman and Fotini Markopoulou-Kalamara at the 2011 festival) and the ...
It was an unexpected response to a series of follow-up questions about electrochromic windows at the University of British Columbia’s (UBC) Centre for Interactive Research on Sustainability (CIRS) ...
The last few days have been devoted to the ‘announcement’ by Environment Canada via the Project for Emerging Nanotechnologies (PEN) which is based in Washington, DC. I think I’ve adequately covered ...
The survey being conducted by Paige Jarreau and Science Borealis (Canadian science blog aggregator) is coming to an end today. If you have any interest in participating here’s more including a link ...
It stands to reason that sensors and monitoring devices held against the skin (wearable electronics) for long periods of time could provoke an allergic reaction. Scientists at the University of Tokyo ...