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October 2007
Modulated Laser Systems
    Pavilion Integration Corp.
New Fiber Optic Laser Interferometer Encoder
    Renishaw Inc.
New Tactile Switch has LED Illumination in a Right Angle Design
    E-Switch, Inc.
Next Generation MQO
    RPMC Lasers
Real-Time Laser Scan Monitoring
    Cambridge Technology Inc.
 
September 2007
Modulated Laser Systems
    Pavilion Integration Corp.
Near-Infrared Linear Polarizers Eliminate Unwanted Reflections
    Edmund Industrial Optics
New Tactile Switch has LED Illumination in a Right Angle Design
    E-Switch, Inc.
New UV Laser Delivers High Performance/Cost Ratio
    Coherent, Inc.
 
August 2007
Clare Releases First Device in New Family of Optically Isolated, Self- Biased Gate Drivers
    Clare, Inc.
Modulated Laser Systems
    Pavilion Integration Corp.
New Tactile Switch has LED Illumination in a Right Angle Design
    E-Switch, Inc.
NuFire 200W Fiber Laser
    Nufern
Optical Heated Windows
    Reynard Corp.
TechSpec Light Pipes Homogenize Non-Uniform Light Sources
    Edmund Industrial Optics
 
February 2007
3DLM Launches WireFinder
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
New Integrated Industrial Scanning System
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
 
January 2007
Avalanche Photodetector
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Customizable Variable Density Functions in a Compact Footprint
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
ESDI’s New CaliBall
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Next-generation Lasers for 100 Gb Optical Networks 
    R&D, Advantage Business Media
Teachable Series 9000 Photoelectric Sensors
    R&D, Advantage Business Media



Editor's Take
The complexity of science
May 16, 2008

How complex is science and technology? How many interactions, side effects, and unintended consequences are there from the most mundane (and the most sophisticated) of our developments? The old adage that “the more we know, the more we find out that we don’t know” appears to be particularly accurate in the 21st century.

In general, we find out the particularly negative consequences of our developments far sooner that we find out the positive ones. Take nanotech for example, a very large amount of research is being expended to both develop this technology for applications from electronic circuitry to textiles, while a lesser but still large amount of research is dedicated to determining the effect of those same products on their exposure to the human body and the environment. Take biotech, an enormous amount of research was dedicated in the 1990s and early part of this decade on the sequencing of the human genome (and other genomes as well). During the period of the Human Genome Project, junk DNA was pretty much ignored, hence the term ‘junk.’ Now researchers are finding that this junk DNA has a relation to how, where, and when the genes that were mapped in the HGP are expressed. And then look at a NASA report issued this week that cites human activity as being mostly responsible for global warming (if there is global warming of course), neglecting of course possible cyclic solar or natural terrestrial effects. And we pretty much had it all decided that an asteroid or similar impact in the Yucatan area of Mexico was responsible for the decline of the Triassic dinosaurs. That, of course, was before other researchers came up with alternative possibilities that included biological diseases and solar events. And then the PC was considered to be the only truly practical and usable computing device and Apple Macs were considered to be too pricey and narrow to survive for long.

For more than 30 years, R&D Magazine ran a column written by Fred Jueneman called the Innovative Notebook. In these columns, Fred looked at alternative possibilities for many commonly accepted scientific ideas. Fred (a former researcher who now lives in Northern California and writes music on his Mac) gave us a legacy that is more true today than ever, that we should never accept the accepted and never ignore any possibility.

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