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Swedishoo
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(3/26/2004 4:53:27 AM)




 Army To Invest In Cyberuniform Center
Nothing Comes Between Me and My Nano's
Swedishoo from Chemtrail and Company III Mail To The Creator Reply To This Message
Nothing Comes Between Me and My Nano's Posted 7-18-2001 03:32


Be All That You Can Be...plus the help of some Nano threads for our soldiers.

Army To Invest In Cyberuniform Center By Doug Brown, Interactive Week June 25, 2001 2:25 PM ET

If Army researchers have their way, future soldiers will move through battlefields wearing networked uniforms with built-in sensors, which will have wide implications for civilian products.

With an investment of $10 million annually, the Army is looking to collaborate with a to-be-decided university to start an Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies. This institute will incorporate cyberspace, as well as other smatterings of technology, into the clothes the men and women of the military will wear in the 21st century.

Nanotechnology entails the manipulation of matter on a molecular level, and holds the promise of the discovery of new materials with unique properties.
In addition to transforming uniforms, Army brass expect the institute to spawn technologies and products that will be embraced by civilians, said Dr. Michael Andrews, deputy assistant secretary of the Army for research and technology, and chief scientist.

"We want to provide a good level of capability for our soldiers that will translate itself into commercial use for police or doctors - for those who may have to go into a chemical or biological environment," Andrews said.

Among other things, the Army envisions creating uniforms that will monitor soldiers' vital signs on a real-time basis and even send back images to commanders.

The Army believes that many technology-transfer fruits will be borne from the research into materials that will make the uniforms nearly impenetrable by ballistics, yet lightweight, and able to repel biological and chemical agents while absorbing oxygen. Even in the early stages of planning for the center, Army officials are pointing toward the potential for networked computing benefits to society at large, such as the incorporation of biosensors in clothing that could constantly monitor people's health status, Andrews said.

Tom Kalil, former President Bill Clinton's chief technology adviser, praised the institute plan, and predicted that nanoscience investments by government will surely benefit society.

Such research, said Kalil, now an adjunct fellow at the New America Foundation, "could lead to technological breakthroughs as significant as the development of electricity, the transistor and the Internet."

"Clearly, there are military applications of nanotechnology," he said, "but there are also many more civilian benefits, and some that could have 'dual-use' benefits - such as nano-engineered uniforms for police, or biosensors that could provide much earlier detection of diseases."

The investment in the institute will be one of largest the Army has made in a single university, said Dr. Henry Everitt, a physicist and program manager at the Army Research Office.

The new institute will be "an important step for the nanotechnology research community," said Philip Kuekes, a computer architect in quantum science research who specializes in nanotechnology at HP Labs. "Right now, at the beginning of the century, the scientific community recognizes a big opportunity in nanotechnology."

Kuekes said the blending of nanotechnology and clothing makes sense, given the computer's evolution from an "air-conditioned beast in a basement somewhere" to something people carry around with them. "I think it's an interesting area of research."

Christy

Duncan Kunz [guest] from Chemtrail and Company III Reply To This Message
Nanotechnology spinoffs Posted 7-20-2001 22:35

There's no doubt that nanotech has the potential to be as ground-breaking a development as anything we've seen this past century (and we've seen a lot of 'em).

In addition to biosensors, imagine a nanotech-derived computer built in to a hearing-aid sized device that would translate ANY language to another (in real time) and would translate back YOUR reply into that language! Imagine how much confusion and potental hostility we could eliminate simply by being able to
Duncan Kunz [guest] from Chemtrail and Company III Mail To The Creator Reply To This Message
Nanotechnology spinoffs Posted 7-20-2001 22:44

There's no doubt that nanotech has the potential to be as ground-breaking a development as anything we've seen this past century (and we've seen a lot of 'em).

In addition to biosensors, imagine a nanotech-derived computer built in to a hearing-aid sized device that would translate ANY language to another (in real time) and would translate back YOUR reply into that language! Imagine how much confusion and potental hostility we could eliminate simply by being able to communicate with everyone on Earth!

And imagine a nanotech-derived robot tank with a laser blaster, going out on its own and killing whatever enemy it's programmed to -- now imagine the "robot tank" as big as a white blood cell, with the "enemy" being a brain tumor.

And that's the way it is with ANY new technology, whether nanotech, genetic engineering, stem cell research, food irradiation, etc. they aren't good technologies or bad technologies, they're just technologies.

And like any new technologies going back to agriculture, the wheel, fire, the alphabet, or the domestication of the dog, these technologies are genies -- which will NEVER go back into the bottle.

So how do we make these genies work FOR us rather than AGAINST us? Probably be learning as much about them as we can, so we can separate the wheat from the chaff, the bogus from the real.

That, and keeping a never-ending vigil on all the interests that use them.

Duncan
Swedishoo from Chemtrail and Company III Mail To The Creator Reply To This Message
Welcome Duncan Posted 7-21-2001 03:06

Welcome Duncan!! Good to see you here and to read your inputs on Nanotech.

The way I see it, Biotechnology and NanoMedicine will make the largest movement in NanoScience over the next decade, but not right away.

Using properties, of course on an atomic scale, I believe what we will see first in this new frontier, is with new products. Concrete as hard as rock, but as flexible as rubber. Cloth as sheer as nylon, but the warmth of wool. I believe we are going to be flooded with a new market of (at first) improvements, then progress to entirely new goods all together.

Christy