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December 2007
ExxonMobil flexes R&D muscle in Anaheim
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Like a steel trap
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Nanobiotech Research Evolves for Drug Delivery
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Organic displays on a roll
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Solid inks emerge in Oregon
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Special “K” the key to semiconductor’s 32 nm diet
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Superhydrophobia is a good thing
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
What Do Competition, Cooperation, & Standards Have in Common
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
 
November 2007
DuPont, Cooper-Standard Automotive earn multiple award nods
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
First look at the birth of a buckyball
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Fresh air, molecule by molecule
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Google’s greenbacks power green R&D
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
That hissing you hear? U.S. gas imports on the rise
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
The Gutenberg Transistor
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
 
January 2007
Transforming TFTs
    R&D, Advantage Business Media





Editor's Take
Tim Studt - Editor In Chief: Laboratory Design Magazine
Congrats to the LHC
Sept. 8, 2008

In just a few hours now, researchers near Geneva, Switzerland, will press some computer buttons and inject the first ions into the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Physicists around the world will participate in this historic event, with a number of “pajama parties” scheduled for Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. The first technical discussions for this project began as long ago as in 1981, so it has indeed been a long time coming and a time for technological rejoicing.

Many people are unaware now of the competition between the LHC and the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC), which was to be built in Texas, with actual approval and construction start in 1987. The project was canceled by the Federal Government in 1993 after its cost ballooned from its initial $4.4 billion to more than $12 billion. It took a little longer to bring to fruition, but the end result is “in the pudding.”

The LHC group and its parent CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) took a more conservative financing and technology approach and held to their budget of about $6 billion.

It’s also interesting in how positive all the media buzz has been about the LHC and the international cooperation that’s surrounded it (outside of the technology skeptics who believe that the LHC will create a black hole that will envelop the world).

You could almost compare the LHC to the recent Beijing Olympics in that before the events, there was some skepticism outside of the local communities about the actual events or capabilities. Some wondered how anything outside of the U.S. could be that good. However, once you physically saw that they were successful, well-run, well-organized and technologically competent, you embraced them with the respect that they were due and likely should have been due from the beginning.

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