Tag Archive
Stipkala LLC, Patent Law Firm, Celebrates Best Year Ever: 2009 (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance)
Intellectual property law firm Stipkala LLC marks 2009 as a year of record-breaking revenues and unprecedented growth. Â The firm now boasts a presence in Charleston, Cincinnati, Houston, and Washington, DC, and a clientele from around the world. Â Specializing in patent preparation, prosecution, licensing, and litigation, and focused on biotechnology, chemistry, nanotechnology, and... »
Olmsted law-enforcement center project could get ax (Post-Bulletin)
As Minnesota lawmakers scour the state budget hunting for extra dollars, a local law enforcement center project could end up in the crosshairs. (read the story…) Related items Minnesota House OKs $1 billion capital spending proposal (Pioneer Press) BOG: $2.3 million to Bucks for Brains (The Daily Athenaeum) 2 state govt officers to sit on panel (MalaysiaNews.net) ASU scientists... »
Marshall, Gerstein & Borun Announces New Associates and Current Professionals’ Achievements (PRWeb)
Marshall, Gerstein & Borun LLP, an intellectual property law firm, has added three new associates and also recognized the successes of its current law professionals. (PRWeb Nov 8, 2009) Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/11/prweb3171474.htm (more…) Related items Stipkala LLC, Patent Law Firm, Celebrates Best Year Ever: 2009 (PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance) Scott Rickert, Nanofilm President, Offers... »
Breaking the Law at the Nanoscale (Technology Review)
When objects get very close, Planck’s law is violated (read on…) Related items Strung-out plastic performs heat feat (New Scientist) Process Allows Nanoscale MEMS to be created inside CMOS wafer. (ThomasNet) Stick Electrode suits weld overlay hardfacing applications. (ThomasNet) U of Minnesota researcher discovers how electricity moves through cells (EurekAlert!) Sound Idea: Acoustic Technology Lets Small Planes "Listen" for Nearby Aircraft... »
Fabrics that fight germs and detect explosives go to market (Cornell News Service)
Fabrics with embedded nanoparticles to detect counterfeiting devices, explosives and dangerous chemicals or to serve as antibacterials for hospitals, law enforcement or the hospitality industry are just a few of the products that a new company, launched by two Cornell researchers, will produce. (more here…) Related items New technology may lessen health and environmental concerns about nanotechnology... »