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SmallTalk is a podcast series where we chat about nanotechnology
with leading scientists, thinkers, artists, writers, and visionaries,
and look at quirky nanoscience stories in the news. Dr. Stephanie Chasteen,
of the Exploratorium’s Teacher Institute, hosts this monthly
series. New editions will be issued at the beginning of each month
through spring 2007.
Click on a link to listen now, or use your browser's Save As function
to download and listen later.
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 | Nature’s Playing Field: Nanotechnology and Medicine Dr. Tejal Desai of UCSF talks about the intersection of nanotechnology and medicine, an area of research that has dramatic implications for the future. It could lead to artificially engineered tissues, or more effective drug delivery. It could also result in new kinds of health monitoring devices, as Dr. Thomas Murray, from the Hastings Center, explains.
|  | Nanotechnology’s Role in Making Cheap Solar Power Want to get off the grid but think it’s just too expensive? UCB's Dr. Jeff Grossman explains how nanotechnology may be used to make solar panels cheaper. We’ll also hear from philosopher Patrick Lin of the Nanoethics Group about ethical dilemmas that crop up when we try to improve our lives through nanotechnology.
|  | Consumer Products Using Nanotechnology Julia Moore and Evan Michelson of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars talk about nanotechnology products they’ve found for sale in a variety of stores. Should these products have some sort of special label? Journalist Philip Ball also weighs in on the controversy.
|  | Vroom! Nanocars and Nanofactories Dr. Jim Tour, a chemist at Rice University, builds the world’s smallest vehicles. He calls them “nanocars,” and he thinks these tiny vehicles might lead to nano-sized factories. We’ll also hear from University of Florida graduate student Diane Hickey, who will tell us some of the interesting reactions she’s run into when explaining nanotechnology.
|  | Nanograffiti: Building from the Atoms Up Join us as we speak with IBM Fellow Dr. Don Eigler, who first used a scanning tunneling microscope to demonstrate the ability to build structures at the atomic level by spelling “I-B-M” with individual atoms. Also, meet Tom Rockwell, Director of Public Exhibition at the Exploratorium, who describes, in an audio essay, how he imagines the land of the very small.
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