Ask a Scientist: Nanotechnology
In this "Ask a Scientist!" episode, Oliver Brand, electrical and computer engineering professor at Georgia Tech University and the executive director at the Institute for Electronics and Nanotechnology, answers the question, "What's the difference between the nanoscale and the atomic ...This is an NSF Multimedia Gallery item. (Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery)
Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery - February 5, 2018 Category: Science Source Type: video

Scientists are hot on the trail of cyberattackers, thanks to a new system which logs their actions
A new cybersecurity system developed by researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology and known as Refinable Attack INvestigation (RAIN) will provide forensic investigators a detailed record of an intrusion, even if the attackers attempted to cover their tracks. The system will be largely ...This is an NSF Multimedia Gallery item. (Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery)
Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery - December 22, 2017 Category: Science Source Type: video

New models serve as "crash test dummies" to safeguard against dangerous bridge wobbling
Georgia State University researchers have found a potential safeguard against dangerous wobbling of pedestrian bridges. The key factors: biomechanically inspired models of pedestrian response to bridge motion and a mathematical formula to estimate the critical crowd size at which bridge wobbling ...This is an NSF Multimedia Gallery item. (Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery)
Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery - December 6, 2017 Category: Science Source Type: video

Could you be next victim of combosquatting?
Researchers at Georgia Tech and Stony Brook University are warning of an insidious threat known as "combo-squatting." Used in cyber-attacks, it combines trademarked names with other words to lure users to scam websites.This is an NSF Multimedia Gallery item. (Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery)
Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery - November 24, 2017 Category: Science Source Type: video

Researchers have created a device that makes walking up and down stairs easier
Researchers at Georgia Tech and Emory University have created a device that makes walking up and down stairs easier. They've built energy-recycling stairs that store a user's energy during descent and return energy to the user during ascent.This is an NSF Multimedia Gallery item. (Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery)
Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery - August 24, 2017 Category: Science Source Type: video

MPS Distinguished Lecture by Professor Rigoberto Hern?ndez, Georgia Tech
NSF Distinguished Lecture Series in Mathematical and Physical Sciences: Professor Rigoberto Hern?ndez from Georgia Tech, on April 25, 2016. Title: Advancing Science Through Diversity Original air date: April 25, 2016This is an NSF Multimedia Gallery item. (Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery)
Source: NSF Multimedia Gallery - October 28, 2016 Category: Science Source Type: video

Please Poke My Paronychia!
For a fantastic instructive 1:24-minute video on treating paronychia, just watch Dr. Larry Mellick, a professor of emergency medicine at the Medical College of Georgia, at work. (Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video)
Source: Emergency Medicine News - Video - April 30, 2013 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: video