Ireland’s Museum of Cinema in Dublin and the Aleja Shopping Center in Ljubljana, Slovenia, have one thing in common – visually impressive, unique, and hard-wearing facades and interiors made with digitally printed glass.
In 2021, South China Morning Post reported that China had used its experimental quantum communication network to protect its power grid – the largest in the world – from security threats.
Naturally, nanotechnology – the creation, manipulation, and application of parts and particles measured on a nanoscale – has developed alongside computer-driven data science. Advances in either field are soon met with applications in the other, and the progress of each has benefited as a result.
Engineers presented a miniaturized thermal acoustic gas sensor made with a CMOS microhotplate and MEMS microphone, arguing that their novel device could meet this rising need for gas sensors.
A recent study proposed a new nanomanipulation technique based on atomic force microscopy combined with cutting-edge artificial intelligence deep learning programs.