Category: 3-D
Published in MIT Technology Review, March 5, 2010
The lead-free material may make it easier and cheaper to make "stacked" chips with more computing power.
A new type of solder can be melted and shaped in three dimensions under the force of a weak magnetic field.
USC football coach Pete Carroll took a break from real world football training to explore the world of virtual training during a recent visit to the USC Institute for Creative Technologies on the Marina del Rey campus.
Fans can watch the live ESPN telecast of the Sept. 12 USC football game at Ohio State in 3-D for free at USC's Galen Center.
Free tickets to the 5 p.m. Galen Center showing are available at:
Utilizing fractal patterns similar to those created by lightning strikes, Victor Ugaz, associate professor in the Artie McFerrin Department of Chemical Engineering at Texas A&M University, has created a network of microchannels that could advance the field of tissue engineering by serving as a th
The School of Engineering & Applied Science welcomes new assistant professor of Biomedical Engineering, Anjelica Gonzalez. Gonzalez came to Yale in January 2007, to serve as an associate research scientist in the Department of Biomedical Engineering.
Paul Debevec, associate director for graphics research at the Institute for Creative Technologies, has been named one of the seven most important pioneers in the history of computer graphics imagery by 3D World Magazine.