Word: chip
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Three related new studies by the Annenberg Public Policy Center (available at appcpenn.org illuminate TV's power to make parents crazy. Technology such as the V chip allows parents to block shows, and ratings are attached to many programs, but very few parents use either of them. Nine of 10 parents could not accurately identify the age ratings for a sampling of programs their children watched. And parents reported to researchers that they felt powerless to control their kids' media consumption...
Howard has just served us four plates of the best chocolate-chip cookies I've ever eaten when Warden Burl Cain tells us that Howard killed a man and is going to die an old man in prison for it. It's flat as that, but it exposes the most intimate, relevant detail of Howard's life. I don't want to look at him, but I do, and Howard doesn't flinch. Howard's sad eyes don't change, don't feign remorse or regret, just stay sad, and his gold-plated teeth are the only thing that hints...
They went to Gene Logic because the company is one of a handful, along with California's Affymetrix and Incyte, that have developed DNA-chip and microarray technology--in this case, chips that can monitor some 42,000 genes in one shot--and software to analyze the results. Using these powerful tools, Gene Logic scientists tested the patient's cells alongside others from both healthy and sick people. In a few days, they completed the analysis...
...disability, acquired or inherited. If I were to lose my eyes, I would quite eagerly submit to some sort of surgery that promised a video link to the optic nerves. (And once there, why not insist on full-channel cable and a Web browser?) The military's reasons for chip insertion would probably have something to do with what I suspect is the increasingly archaic job description of "fighter pilot," or with some other aspect of telepresent combat, in which weapons in the field are remotely controlled by distant operators. At least there's still a certain macho frisson...
MOLECULAR MEDICINE Streaming through the body by the billions, nanobots could chip plaque from arteries, gang up on bacteria and viruses, scour toxins from the bloodstream, repair broken blood vessels--and dozens of jobs doctors haven't dreamed...