Nano-A-Go-Go
Reason Science Correspondent Ronald Bailey reviews two nanotech books in today's Wall Street Journal.
The link is for subscribers only, but here's the opening:
Prince Charles is leery of it. Activists want to ban it. Michael Crichton has written a scary bestseller about it. And financial analysts predict that it will be a trillion-dollar global business in a few years.
It also has a strange name.
Nanotechnology is the science of the very small. How small? A nanometer is one billionth of a meter. Ten hydrogen atoms lined up in a row would fit within a single one. The width of the dot above this letter "i" ranges across about a million nanometers. In the world of the nanocosm, the tiny etchings on our densest microchips are vast highways.
And nanotechnology is coming on fast. "For the first time in history, a technical revolution will approach the abruptness of a political event," writes William Atkinson. "No one in any age has heard, seen, or felt anything like it. But you will." He adds: "A.D. 2003 will seem antediluvian not in 50 years but in 15."
Such claims may seem far-fetched, but they may be right. And obviously such a revolution, if it comes about, will have major effects on business. Already places like Northwestern and Stanford universities are offering minicourses on nanotechnology for business executives.
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Minicourses in nanotechnology? A minicourse isn't nearly small enough.
Ah Yes! The elusive "nano-echo" effect!
My only hope is that actual technological progress will be fast enough to prevent legislatures from passing any preemptive measures against it. Invent it before someone notices!
Anyone know of a company to invest in? 😉
Jay D
Link to a recent Wired News article on nanotech firms
Here
Investing in individual nanotech stocks is a little on the risky side for my taste. I imagine a healthy percentage of them will bust before returning anything substantial. Does anyone know of a nanotech oriented mutual fund yet? Or know the nanotech exposure in some of the tech funds?
If you make yourself really small, you can externalize virtually everything.
"I was driving in my car the other day, when I got really small!!!"
steve martin
Minicourses in nanotechnology? A minicourse isn't nearly small enough.
Minicourses in nanotechnology? A minicourse isn't nearly small enough.
Damn! These hiccups of mine ... (Burp.)
That ain't no echo, man!
Help!
So the Lilliputians, gnomes, and dwarves hiding under the mushrooms in Ireland really have something going for them after all, hmm?