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Popular Science Names Top Tech Innovations of 2006.


Hurriquake Nail Takes First "Innovation of the Year" Award in the 19th Annual "Best of What's New" Awards

NEW YORK New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 -- Every year, the editors of Popular Science magazine review thousands of new products and technologies in pursuit of the 100 breakthroughs that merit the magazine's highest honor, a "Best of What's New" award. Appearing in the much-anticipated December issue of Popular Science - the most widely read issue of the year - "Best of What's New" celebrates the 100 most impressive advancements in 10 categories: Automotive, Computing, Gadgets, Home Entertainment, Personal Health, Aviation & Space, Engineering, Home, Recreation, and General Innovation. This year, for the first time, the magazine is also honoring one product as the overall outstanding "Innovation of the Year," out of the thousands of products tested. This award goes to the remarkable Hurriquake Nail, a specially designed nail that protects homes against the strong rain and wind that Mother Nature can create during even the most violent weather.

Using the small, powerful Hurriquake Nail to build homes only adds about $15 to the total building cost, versus traditional nails. Built with angled barbs barbs

the primary, delicate filaments that are given off the shaft of a bird's contour feather. They project from the rachis and bear the barbules.
 circling the bottom section, it resists pulling out in wind gusts up to 170 mph, and has better holding power to protect a home's structure during fierce storms.

In addition to the "Innovation of the Year," topping each "Best of What's New" category is one Grand Award winner, a product or technology that represents a significant leap over existing technologies in its industry. These winners are based on the significance of the innovation, the quality of the design and the finished product, the originality of thought, and the ambition and scope of the overall project.

"The 'Best of What's New' awards honor those innovations that are truly going to make a difference, whether it's to advance the dream of an all-in-one handheld multimedia device or to build hurricane-proof homes, saving thousands of lives and billions of dollars along the way," said Mark Jannot, editor of Popular Science. "The added element of the 'Innovation of the Year' award showcases that even with 100 top products, there is one standout that deserves special recognition for its impact on human life."

The 2006 Grand Award winners of the Popular Science "Best of What's New" awards are:

AUTO TECH: Bugatti Veyron The references in this article would be clearer with a different and/or consistent style of citation, footnoting or external linking.

The Bugatti Veyron 16.
 16.4

The Fastest Production Car Ever

The Bugatti Veyron 16.4 cannot fairly be compared with other cars, because none, including Formula One racers, can match its specs (SPECificationS) The details of the components built into a device. See specification. : 1,001 horsepower, 253 mph, 0 to 60 mph in 2.5 seconds. Engineers spent years refining the eight-liter, four-turbo, 16-cylinder engine to squeeze 1,001 horsepower from it. This supremely stable supercar Supercar is a term used for a high-end sports car, typically an exotic or rare one, whose performance is highly superior to that of its contemporaries. The proper application of the term is subjective and disputed, especially among enthusiasts.  can be driven by anyone, is mind-bendingly fast, and will probably never be matched in our lifetime.

COMPUTING: One Laptop Per Child See OLPC.  XO

Better Screen, Better World

The goal of this product is simple and noble: to give a laptop to every child in need, especially in developing countries, where the machines will be sold in bulk for about $130 a piece. The One Laptop Per Child nonprofit organization Nonprofit Organization

An association that is given tax-free status. Donations to a non-profit organization are often tax deductible as well.

Notes:
Examples of non-profit organizations are charities, hospitals and schools.
, formed at MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology , didn't just create a cheap computer. In addition to cutting costs, it also improved on the standard laptop by slashing the machine's energy use by 90 percent, ideal for a device that could be charged by hand-cranked power in rural villages.

GADGETS: Sony Reader The Sony PRS-500 Reader is an e-book reader for the U.S. market. It uses an electronic paper display developed by E Ink Corporation, that has 166 dpi resolution, four levels of grayscale, is viewable in direct sunlight, requires no power to maintain the image, and is usable in  PRS-500

Goodbye Paper

Sony's long-awaited Reader is the first E-ink-equipped e-book reader in the US and can hold hundreds of books that get downloaded like music. It has a nearly inexhaustible battery and inflicts no more eyestrain eyestrain /eye·strain/ (-stran) fatigue of the eye from overuse or from uncorrected defect in focus of the eye.

eye·strain
n.
 than a typical paperback because it doesn't glow like the backlit An LCD screen that has its own light source from the back of the screen, making the background brighter and characters appear sharper.  LCD screen on a computer monitor.

HOME ENTERTAINMENT: Nintendo Wii

The Console That Gets You In The Game

Nintendo took a step back with this new console, the Wii (pronounced "we") by looking at its superpowered competitors and taking a totally different path. The controller introduces a three-axis accelerometer accelerometer

Instrument that measures acceleration. Because it is difficult to measure acceleration directly, the device measures the force exerted by restraints placed on a reference mass to hold its position fixed in an accelerating body.
 that transforms the player's hand motions into in-game action, so you really play the games. In Wii Tennis, for example, the player swings their hand just as you would a racket.

HEALTH: Custom-Grown Bladders

Creating Human Organs In The Lab

This breakthrough is the first complex organ that's been successfully grown and transplanted. Tissue engineer Anthony Atala Anthony Atala, M.D., is the Director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, and Chair of the Department of Urology at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine in the state of North Carolina in the United States.  of Wake Forest University and his colleagues grew these custom-made bladders from patients' own cells which have been transplanted successfully. This year, Atala made the announcement that none of the seven patients who received the organs four years ago suffered the rejection problems that commonly plague transplant patients.

AVIATION & SPACE: Surrey Satellite and QinetiQ TopSat

Small Sat With a Big Future

At about the size of a dorm fridge, the TopSat is the world's smallest spy satellite. It is an inexpensive satellite that will put many more nations into the space reconnaissance business. Because these mini satellites are affordable, they permit the use of many satellites over larger areas. Created for the British Ministry of Defense and the National Space Centre by QinetiQ and Surrey Satellite Technology, the prototype 265-pound TopSat began sending usable spy images last December.

ENGINEERING: Water Cube National Swimming Center in Beijing

A Building Made Of Bubbles

The stunning design of the new swimming center that is under construction for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games Olympic games, premier athletic meeting of ancient Greece, and, in modern times, series of international sports contests. The Olympics of Ancient Greece


Although records cannot verify games earlier than 776 B.C.
 plays on the rectangular structure of soap bubbles soap bubble An adjective referring to a dilated, smooth-contoured cyst-like or ballooned, occasionally loculated space(s). See Physaliferous Bone radiology An expansile, often eccentric, vaguely trabeculated space with a thin, sclerotic, sharply defined margin, . The building also features a ceiling made of transparent Teflon and light-sensitive walls, and it is earthquake-proof. It will span 7.8 acres, house five pools, and seat 17,000 spectators, yet it doesn't contain a single steel cable, concrete column or structural beam.

HOME TECH: Bostitch Hurriquake Nail

The Alpha Nail That Makes Your Home Twice As Tough

Hurricane winds rip apart nailed-together walls, and earthquakes shake houses so violently that a nailhead can pull straight through a piece of plywood. Since natural disasters can not be stopped, Bostitch engineer Ed Sutt has dedicated his career to designing a better nail. The result is the HurriQuake, with the perfect combination of features to withstand nature's darker moods. It costs only about $15 more to build a house using HurriQuakes.

RECREATION: Celestron SkyScout

Your Tour Guide To Outer Space

This handheld planetarium planetarium, optical device used to project a representation of the heavens onto a domed ceiling; the term also designates the building that houses such a device. A modern planetarium consists of as many as 150 motor-driven projectors mounted on an axis.  is a revolutionary handheld device that uses advanced GPS technology with point and click convenience to identify thousands of stars, planets, constellations and more. A GPS receiver gives the handheld SkyScout its position, an electronic compass tells it what direction it's pointing, and an accelerometer determines the angle of the device.

GENERAL INNOVATION: HP Memory Spot

Stick Digital Data On Anything

This small chip is a self-contained storage device with a radio and processor that sticks to photos, documents or cards. The two-millimeter-square chip packs in half a megabyte One million bytes, or more precisely 1,048,576 bytes. Also MB, Mbyte and M-byte. See mega and space/time.

(unit) megabyte - (MB, colloquially "meg") 2^20 = 1,048,576 bytes = 1024 kilobytes. 1024 megabytes are one gigabyte.
 of flash memory and can swap all its data in less than a second, so you can load it up and read files off it almost instantaneously.

The full list, descriptions and images of all 100 "Best of What's New" Winners is in the December issue of Popular Science, on newsstands November 14, 2006, and can be viewed at http://www.popsci.com/

Founded in 1872, Popular Science is the world's largest science and technology magazine, with a circulation of 1.3 million and 6.6 million readers. Each month, Popular Science delivers "The Future Now," reporting on the intersection of science and everyday life with an eye toward what's new and why it matters. Our readers believe that the future is going to be better, and Popular Science gives them the tools and information to improve their technology and their world. The winner of the 2004 National Magazine Award for General Excellence, Popular Science is published by Time4 Media, the world's leading publisher of enthusiast magazines. Time4 Media is a subsidiary of Time Inc., which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Time Warner Inc. (NYSE NYSE

See: New York Stock Exchange
: TWX (TeletypeWriter eXchange Service) A U.S. and Canadian dial-up communications service that became part of Telex. In 1971, the Bell System sold TWX to Western Union. TWX transmitted 5-bit Murray code or 7-bit ASCII code at up to 150 bps. See Telex. ).
COPYRIGHT 2006 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Date:Nov 7, 2006
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