Whatever Happened to Nanotechnology?
Nanotechnology did not fail. Tim Harper’s archive shows how the boom became tools, materials, standards, manufacturing processes and supply chains, and what that teaches today’s deep-tech companies.
This section covers nanotechnology, advanced materials and early-stage deep-tech commercialisation.
For the full historical context, see the Nanotechnology Archive.
Nanotechnology did not fail. Tim Harper’s archive shows how the boom became tools, materials, standards, manufacturing processes and supply chains, and what that teaches today’s deep-tech companies.
It is just over four years since I drove through an ice storm in Georgia and South Carolina for the meeting that led to the founding of G2O Water. In…
Nanotech and Water: It Took Ten Years Just To Get To The Starting Line Read Post »
Something else that may worry the environmental movement is the number of variants of fullerenes that seem to be multiplying
Jim Thomas of the ETC Group made a crucial point on and interview on BBC Radio 4s environmental program “Costing
One of the major issues plaguing anyone making use of carbon nanotube is the variability between batches, production methods, and
The speaker line-up is now complete for Europes first Nanotextile Conference, EuroNanoTex 2004. It has certain similarities to our first
Readers based in Switzerland may like to know that Cientifica CEO Tim Harper will be in Zurich for the First
Already? There seems to be a lot of churn maybe as a result of many nanotechnology companies having difficulty answering
Richard Smalley will be a witness at the Energy and Natural Resources Committee oversight hearing on the sustainable low-emission generation
Somewhere between the folksy ramblings and dismissal of concerns over nanotechnology as a quantum flapdoodle on the Forbes Wolfe blog