Professor Uehara from JAIST works at the intersection of theoretical computer science, discrete mathematics, and the art of solving puzzles. His research strives to understand the computational ...
*There's a lot to admire here, but I especially like the provocative line about doing computer origami in materials other than paper. How about gigantic sheets of stainless-steel? *The starkness of ...
The suitability of the Miura-ori for engineering deployable or foldable structures is due to its high degree of symmetry embodied in its periodicity, and four important geometric properties: it can be ...
Jun Mitani is a professor of Information and Systems at University of Tsukuba in Japan. Professor Mitani will visit Sydney this month to attend the Sydney Origami Convention 2022. Credit: Courtesy of ...
DNA — or deoxyribonucleic acid — is a molecule that carries most of the genetic instructions used in the development, functioning and reproduction of all known living organisms. This information comes ...
Electronics manufacturers constantly hunt for ways to make faster, cheaper computer chips, often by cutting production costs or by shrinking component sizes. Now, researchers report that DNA, the ...
(This program is no longer available for online streaming.) The centuries-old tradition of folding two-dimensional paper into three-dimensional shapes is inspiring a scientific revolution. The rules ...
(Nanowerk News) Electronics manufacturers constantly hunt for ways to make faster, cheaper computer chips, often by cutting production costs or by shrinking component sizes. Now, researchers report ...
(This program is no longer available for online streaming.) The centuries-old tradition of folding two-dimensional paper into three-dimensional shapes is inspiring a scientific revolution. The rules ...
HANOVER, Germany – After months of cryptic Web marketing and word-of-mouth hype over Microsoft Corp.'s Project Origami, the company finally showed off the product: an ultracompact computer running ...
Artificial, self-assembling DNA structures may help make smaller and cheaper microchips, according to research presented in the latest issue of Nature Nanotechnology. Tinier microchips would allow ...
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