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206 results for Technology

Weizmann in Focus, Episode 4: Conquering Blood Cancer
Weizmann in Focus, Episode 4: Conquering Blood Cancer

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/video-gallery/weizmann-in-focus-episode-4-conquering-blood-cancer/

Apr 16, 2019... The Weizmann Institute brings together scientists from a variety of disciplines to tackle cancer head-on. In the fourth episode of Weizmann in Focus, CEO Dave Doneson highlights a recent headline-making breakthrough from the labs of Profs. Ido Amit and Amos Tanay. Working with hospitals across Israel, the scientists identified a very small number of malignant cells in what is considered a pre-malignant stage of multiple myeloma—the second-most common type of blood cancer. Their discovery holds the promise of earlier, more precise treatment.

TAGS: Technology, Community, Cancer, Cancer treatment, Philanthropy, Leadership, Blood

Science Tips, February 2012
Science Tips, February 2012

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/news-releases/science-tips-february-2012/

Feb 24, 2012... The Weizmann Institute is One of Seven “Instruct” Core Centres
Major transformations in biomedical science are on the horizon with the establishment of the world-class Integrated Structural Biology Infrastructure (Instruct) in support of European biomedical research.
The European Strategy Forum of Research Infrastructures (ESFRI) is involved in establishing about 40 such infrastructures, seven of them in biomedical sciences. Instruct is one such biomedical project, whose aim is to provide pan-European user access to state-of-the-art equipment, technologies, and manpower in cellular structural biology. This will allow Europe to maintain a competitive edge and play a leading role in this vital research area.

TAGS: Technology, Community, Brain, Education, Biology, Molecular genetics, Mental health

Turning Hours of Home Video Into a Mini-Masterpiece
Turning Hours of Home Video Into a Mini-Masterpiece

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/turning-hours-of-home-video-into-a-mini-masterpiece/

Feb 08, 2012... Magisto's founders Oren Boiman, left, and Alex Rav-Acha.
Most video is boring: Cats doing flips, babies taking their first steps, your second-cousin-once-removed’s bar mitzvah party. Yet we can’t help ourselves from churning it out. Some 48 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute. And it’s just getting worse with the proliferation of smart phones, which can take high-quality video (Apple’s new iPhone 4S even offers HD).

TAGS: Culture, Technology, Computers

Abbott Steps Up Presence in Israeli Market
Abbott Steps Up Presence in Israeli Market

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/abbott-steps-up-presence-in-israeli-market/

Feb 07, 2012... Since buying Israeli company Starlims in 2010, Abbott Laboratories, which has a finger in just about every biomed pie, has shown heightened interest in the Israeli market. The company is a leader in drugs and diagnostics, and has a thriving medical devices division, and a nutrition division (Similac, for example). It is even active in animal health, and it has launched a new venture capital fund that seeks technologies in Israel.

TAGS: Technology, Medicine

Israeli XPrize Mission Science Twist: Map Lunar Magnetism
Israeli XPrize Mission Science Twist: Map Lunar Magnetism

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/israeli-xprize-mission-science-twist-map-lunar-magnetism/

Nov 07, 2014... Artist's rendering of the SpaceIL Google Lunar XPrize spacecraft conducting its mission. Credit: SpaceIL
Eran Privman, CEO of SpaceIL, authored this article with contributions from mission scientist Oded Aharonson and SpaceIL science team investigator Avi Barliya. The authors contributed this article to Space.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.
With the goal of landing the first Israeli spacecraft on the moon, nonprofit SpaceIL is competing for the Google Lunar XPrize: a modern race to the moon. The competition promises a $20-million grand prize to the first nongovernmental team to soft-land an unmanned spacecraft on the moon, travel 500 meters (1640 feet) across the surface, and send high-resolution images and video back to Earth.

TAGS: Space, Technology, Awards, Education

Web Gems: Introducing the Winners of the First Annual Labbies, "The Scientist" Magazine's Prizes for the Best Web-Based Multimedia by Labs
Web Gems: Introducing the Winners of the First Annual Labbies, "The Scientist" Magazine's Prizes for the Best Web-Based Multimedia by Labs

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/web-gems-introducing-the-winners-of-the-first-annual-labbies-the-scientist-magazine-s-prizes-for-the-best-web-based-multimedia-by-labs/

Sep 02, 2010... On her first tour of her freshman dorm at the University of California, Davis in the fall of 1992, neurophysiologist and science journalist Kirsten Sanford met an engineering student who talked to her about signing up for an electronic mail account—a term she had never heard before. At the time, the Internet was little more than green text on a black screen, and hardly anyone she knew used it. But Sanford was intrigued. “The idea that I could send messages immediately to people without having to stamp a letter was fascinating.”

TAGS: Technology, Awards, Biology, Computers

How Israel's First Computer Was Built in a Bike-Repair Shop
How Israel's First Computer Was Built in a Bike-Repair Shop

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/how-israel-s-first-computer-was-built-in-a-bike-repair-shop/

Mar 25, 2013... The computer under construction. Photo courtesy of Weizmann Institute
In a glass case in the computer sciences building at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, stands a somewhat nondescript item. It’s an old-fashioned machine with lots of wires emerging from it, connecting it to receivers and other electronic components. Only a small sign in the corner reveals its significance.
This is WEIZAC — an acronym for “Weizmann Automated Computer,” the first electronic computer built in the country, in 1954-5 and operational until 1964. It was, the sign tells us, developed in the institute’s applied mathematics department.

TAGS: Culture, Technology, Computers

Thin Films on a Scale
Thin Films on a Scale

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/feature-stories/thin-films-on-a-scale/

Jun 01, 2008... Time equals money. But so does weight—when it comes to the films used in computers and optical telecommunications. Shaving off pounds from these devices could mean huge benefits for microelectronics as well as for satellites or spacecraft, where launching costs around $50,000 per kilogram (2.2 pounds).
A new recruit to the Institute, Dr. Milko van der Boom of the Department of Organic Chemistry, is working to create thin films with such desirable qualities as low weight and long-term thermostability. He is targeting an “all-organic” product, which he hopes will replace today’s inorganic materials. The rationale is simple. Organic films would be much easier to modify, offering far better, cheaper devices that could even be introduced into home appliances, revolutionizing the electronics industry.

TAGS: Technology, Optics, Nanoscience

Weizmann Global Gathering 2014: Partners in Scientific Advancement, Prof. Michal Neeman
Weizmann Global Gathering 2014: Partners in Scientific Advancement, Prof. Michal Neeman

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/video-gallery/weizmann-global-gathering-2014-partners-in-scientific-advancement-prof-michal-neeman/

Oct 29, 2014... Prof. Michal Neeman spoke at the 2014 Global Gathering session, Partners in Scientific Advancement, about why it's so important for us to get high-resolution images of cancer. Today's instrumentation allows scientists to actually observe cancer in the body, providing invaluable new data. Of course, staying on top of the technology, much less knowing how to maximize its use, is also a challenge.

TAGS: Technology, Cancer, Philanthropy

Walmart, Microsoft, AT&T-Backed Foundry Invests Millions in Encryption Pioneer
Walmart, Microsoft, AT&T-Backed Foundry Invests Millions in Encryption Pioneer

https://www.weizmann-usa.org/news-media/in-the-news/walmart-microsoft-at-t-backed-foundry-invests-millions-in-encryption-pioneer/

Nov 13, 2018... Encryption startup Duality Technologies' cofounders. Courtesy of Duality Technologies
In the 1980s, Shafi Goldwasser co-invented “zero knowledge proofs,” a cryptographic breakthrough that, improbably, enables someone to prove a fact as true without revealing any information about that fact. For example, an investor seeking to prove her status as an accredited investor could demonstrate that her salary exceeds a certain minimum threshold while withholding the exact amount. (You can read more about the concept—one of the hottest area of research in the field of blockchain tech—in this Fortune feature from last year.)

TAGS: Technology, Mathematics, Computers

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