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Lauren Saccone

Lauren Saccone has been a freelance writer for over 15 years. Her work has appeared in Pacific Standard, The Mary Sue, Parade Magazine, Miles Away, DailyLounge, Inquisitr, Hello Giggles, Bust, and various other outlets. A professional copywriter and SEO specialist, she is a graduate of Eugene Lang College: The New School in New York City.

From This Author

Improving the Power of Silicon Chips By Slowing Things Down

Scientists from Bar-Ilan University's Faculty of Engineering and Institute of Nanotechnology and Advanced Materials have discovered a way to improve the quality of light and sound on silicon chips -- by slowing them down.

Nanomaterials Scientists Pave the Way for Ultra-Tiny Electronics

Scientists from Stony Brook University have uncovered some important findings that could help to create the next generation of ultra-small electronics.

Creating Energy Efficient Electronics with Gallium Nitride

Scientists from Cornell University believe that gallium nitride may prove a powerful tool in developing high-speed electronics and wireless communication.

Creating A Tactile Interaction Strategy to Allow For Human-Swarm Communications

Scientists from the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology in Russia have created a new strategy that could help improve interactions between robotic swarms and their human counterparts.

Detecting Environmental ‘Noise’ That Can Damage The Quantum State of Qubits

Scientists from MIT and Dartmough College have created a new type of tool that can detect specific characteristics of an environmental 'noise' known for its ability to destroy qubits.
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Leveraging the Principle of the Hall Effect to Boost Radio Signals

Researchers from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have successfully created a synthetic Hall effect, one of the most well-known electromagnetic effects found in physics, to achieve one-way radio transmission.

NIST Team Demonstrates Atoms Can Receive Communication Signals

Scientists from the NIST have successfully demonstrated a sensor that relies on atoms to receive communication signals.

Scientists Measure Glucose Concentration in Human Body with Electromagnetic Waves

Scientists from Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp have designed a sensor that is can determine the concentration of glucose in a living being using electromagnetic waves.

A New Method for Accurately Measuring Changes in Magnetic Order

Scientists from the Tokyo Institute of Technology have devised a way to accurately measure minute changes in the magnetic order of antiferromagnetic materials.

New Patent Filing from Microsoft Hints at a Future Folding Computing Device

Microsoft has filed patents that many experts believe hint at a future folding computing device for consumers.
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