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NASA Tech Briefs
NASA Tech Briefs, Free Subscription
NASA Tech Briefs, Free Subscription |
| Magazine - NASA Tech Briefs | |||||
| Thursday, 24 April 2008 | |||||
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* An official publication of NASA The monthly magazine features exclusive reports of innovations developed by NASA and its industry partners/contractors that can be applied to develop new/improved products and solve engineering or manufacturing problems. Authored by the engineers or scientists who did the work, the briefs span a wide array of fields, including electronics, physical sciences, materials, computer software, mechanics, machinery/automation, manufacturing/fabrication, mathematics/information sciences, and life sciences. NASA Tech Briefs also contains feature articles on successful NASA spinoffs, profiles of NASA tech transfer resources, news briefs, and application stories. Regular columns describe new patents, industry products, software, and literature. NASA Tech Briefs is a magazine published by the National Aeronautics and Space Agency of the United States. It is published monthly by NASA, in an attempt to publicize technical discoveries made by NASA and provide information to industry with the goal of converting these discoveries into practical commercial uses. (Wikipedia.org) Click Here, Get Free Subscription to NASA Tech Briefs Qualify for Your Free Subscription! Geographic Eligibility: USA, Canada, Selected International Publisher: Associated Business Publications International Visit NASA Tech Briefs Website About NASA Tech Briefs: When the U.S. Congress formed the National Aeronautics & Space Administration in 1958, it mandated in the charter that NASA and its contractors must report to industry any new, commercially-significant technologies developed in the course of their R&D, so that engineers, managers, and scientists could use this valuable information to improve their competitiveness and productivity. For more than three decades, this has been accomplished primarily through the publication of NASA Tech Briefs. First issued as single sheet reports in the 1960s and converted to a magazine format in the 1970s, NASA Tech Briefs has been a joint publishing venture of NASA and Associated Business Publications (New York City) since 1985, a pioneering government-private sector partnership that has saved taxpayers millions of dollars in publishing costs while dramatically increasing the magazine’s reach to OEM design/development engineers and managers. Today, NASA Tech Briefs’ qualified circulation surpasses 190,000. The monthly magazine features exclusive reports of innovations developed by NASA and its industry partners/contractors that can be applied to develop new/improved products and solve engineering or manufacturing problems. Authored by the engineers or scientists who did the work, the briefs span a wide array of fields, including electronics, physical sciences, materials, computer software, mechanics, machinery/automation, manufacturing/fabrication, mathematics/information sciences, and life sciences. Most briefs offer a Technical Support Package, which explains the technology in greater detail and provides contact points for questions or licensing discussions. NASA Tech Briefs also contains feature articles on successful NASA spinoffs, profiles of NASA tech transfer resources, news briefs, and application stories. Regular columns describe new patents, industry products, software, and literature. Bookmark
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| michele.muraro@mazzispa.it,michele.muraro@mazzispa.itmichele.muraro@mazzispa.it,michele.muraro@mazzispa.it,michele.muraro@mazzispa.it, HOW TO DO IT???? |
| Alan Stern, NASA's "hard-charging" and "reform-minded" Associate Administrator for the Science Mission Directorate, resigned on March 25, 2008,[44] to be effective April 11, after he ordered funding cuts to the Mars rovers and Mars Odyssey that were overturned by NASA Administrator Michael D. Griffin. The cuts were intended to offset cost overruns for the Mars Science Laboratory. Stern, who served for nearly a year and has been credited with making "significant changes that have helped restore the importance of science in NASA’s mission.", says he left to avoid cutting healthy programs and basic research in favor of politically sensitive projects. Griffin favors cutting "less popular parts" of the budget, including basic research, and Stern's refusal to do so led to his resignation. NASAe |
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