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Technology.


Performing paper New types of liquid-based pixels that can rapidly change color may ultimately serve as building blocks for full-color video images on flexible electronic paper (164: 195 *).

Cereal-box lasers Refinements to a polymer-imprinting technique enabled researchers to create little plastic lasers, which may be a step toward dirt cheap Adj. 1. dirt cheap - very cheap; "a dirt cheap property"
cheap, inexpensive - relatively low in price or charging low prices; "it would have been cheap at twice the price"; "inexpensive family restaurants"
 laser-based sensors and communications gadgets (164: 53 *).

Hocus ho·cus  
tr.v. ho·cused or ho·cussed, ho·cus·ing or ho·cus·sing, ho·cus·es or ho·cus·ses
1. To fool or deceive; hoax.

2. To infuse (food or drink) with a drug.
 focus The advent of unconventional lenses that first garble gar·ble  
tr.v. gar·bled, gar·bling, gar·bles
1. To mix up or distort to such an extent as to make misleading or incomprehensible: She garbled all the historical facts.

2.
 images to ultimately make them better for computer processing has led to finer-focused images than traditional lenses can offer and to extraordinarily efficient new ways to extract information, such as enemy troop movements, from optical data (163: 200 *).

Tailored titanium Theory-based calculations replaced trial and error in the development of titanium-based alloys that have many qualities far superior to those of previously known alloys (163: 243 *).

Keep on truckin' In a potential boon to automated management of crowded highway networks, a new method of tracking trucks with in-road sensors turned out to be an exceptionally fast way to detect the onset of traffic jams (163: 150 *).

A simple method of interleaving interleaving - sector interleave  ultrathin ul·tra·thin  
adj.
Very thin.
 Layers of positively and negatively charged materials yielded novel coatings for uses ranging from food preservation to energy production (164: 91 *).

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

SQUISHY squish·y  
adj. squish·i·er, squish·i·est
1. Soft and wet; spongy.

2. Sloppily sentimental.

Adj. 1.
 CERAMIC

Titanium silicon carbide, a little studied ceramic, was found to spring back fully from intense compression rather than to shatter, as most ceramics do (163: 141).

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

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Title Annotation:Science News Of the year
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:00WOR
Date:Dec 20, 2003
Words:251
Previous Article:Physics.(Science News Of the year)
Next Article:Food for thought.(Science News Online)(Brief Article)
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