Written by stuffarena Friday, 01 January 2010 11:23
3D bio-printer is a result of a great experiment of Organovo company. this printer or machine is capable for of arranging human cells and artificial scaffolds into complex three-dimensional structures. because of this new technology it will easy to replace liver and kidney tissue and many other things. the technology behind this bio printer is laser-calibrated print heads. Organovo will start to promote this research institutions soon.

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Engadget now available for Pre and Pixi: the first webOS app of 2010 (and 1000th in the Catalog)!
BREAKING NEWS
3 hours ago
Engadget's top posts, 2009
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Looks like AT&T is about to get a version of the LG Arena -- these shots of a GT950 with the carrier's branding just hit the tubes. The phone hasn't been officially announced by either AT&T or LG, but the safe bet is that the 950 is just a bespoke variant of the familiar Arena KM900, so look for a three-inch 800 x 480 touchscreen with LG's S-Class UI, a five megapixel camera, GPS, Wi-Fi, and 8GB of storage. We'll have to see whether this hits at CES next week or MWC in February -- but until then you can get a feel for this thing by checking out our KM900 hands-on video right here.
Engadget now available for Pre and Pixi: the first webOS app of 2010 (and 1000th in the Catalog)!
By Joshua Topolsky
posted Jan 1st 2010 at 3:12AM
posted Jan 1st 2010 at 3:12AM
That's right folks. Hot on the heels of our iPhone app release (which has since skyrocketed up the App Store charts to #1 in News), the webOS version has officially landed. You'll see that the experience is shockingly, wonderfully similar to the iPhone / iPod touch version, but of course there are a couple of webOS flourishes to be found. You can download the application right from your Pre or Pixi by simply popping open the App Catalog and, you know... downloading the thing. This is the 1000th application in the Catalog -- a piece of info we feel pretty psyched about. We've got even more on the way (like BlackBerry and Android versions), so keep it tuned here, but for now... webOS fans, go get your fix!
Netgear PTV1000 Push 2 TV WiFi video card hits the FCC
By Nilay Patel
posted Jan 1st 2010 at 3:09AM
posted Jan 1st 2010 at 3:09AM
We've long said that wireless video streaming direct from a laptop is one of our dream gadgets, and while most of the gear we've seen is based on Wireless USB, it looks like Netgear's trying something a little different: this PTV1000 Push 2 TV Adapter just hit the FCC database, and it looks to send video from your laptop to your TV over WiFi. It's apparently built on an upcoming Intel standard called Wireless Display that requires a Core i3, i5, or i7 processor with integrated GMA graphics and Windows 7, but nothing's been officially announced yet -- and what little info we have isn't great, as the docs warn users that Wireless Display is unsecured and won't play all DVDs or Blu-rays. That's not a huge problem, we suppose -- all we want to do is beam a Hulu window to our TV simply and easily. We're assuming we'll find out a lot more at CES next week, stay tuned.
OWEN E1 e-reader gets outed for Chinese reading public
By Laura June
posted Jan 1st 2010 at 1:02AM
posted Jan 1st 2010 at 1:02AM
Engadget's top posts, 2009
By Joshua Topolsky
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 11:59PM
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 11:59PM
Wow. Can you believe it? We made it all the way through 2009! We truly had some of the most amazing and exciting coverage ever on Engadget this past 12 months -- and we figured it's time to take a look back at the heaviest hitters from the last 365. This was a big year for us, we got a whole new look, an iPhone app (with more on the way), hired some new staff, got ourselves a show, went on late night TV, and managed to snap up some killer scoops and keep the news rolling (better than ever before, actually -- this was by far our heaviest year for traffic). So let's take a moment to reflect on what caused all the fuss in 2009, and yes, we know this list is Apple heavy. We blame you guys.
Top 20 most trafficked posts of 2009 (in order)
Top 20 most trafficked posts of 2009 (in order)
- Phil Schiller keynote live from WWDC 2009
- Live from Apple's 'It's only rock and roll' event
- Live from Apple's iPhone OS 3.0 preview event
- Live from the Macworld 2009 keynote
- iPhone 3GS review
- Motorola Droid review
- Palm Pre: everything you ever wanted to know
- Exclusive: first Google Phone / Nexus One photos, Android 2.1 on-board
- HTC Hero review
- Windows 7 review
- Palm Pre review
- Microsoft sucks at Photoshop
- Microsoft announces availability of Windows 7 Beta and Windows Live
- Steve Jobs is taking a leave of absence from Apple due to health reasons
- Video: Sony's PSP Go leaks out before E3, is obviously a go
- Motorola Droid first hands-on
- Windows 7 Beta goes public
- Modern Warfare 2's Prestige Edition includes fully functioning night vision goggles
- Snow Leopard review
- Live from Palm's CES press conference
And a few other statistics for 2009 (all related to Engadget Classic):
$38,204.57 - Retail value of stuff we gave away to readers
12,681 - total number of posts for 2009
1,821 - Number of galleries on Engadget for 2009
454 - Number of hands-on posts
99 - Number of Engadget reviews
66 - number of podcasts
4 - number of Engadget shows
Ask Engadget: Best Skype phone for Europe?
By Darren Murph
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 11:05PM
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 11:05PM
We know you've got questions, and if you're brave enough to ask the world for answers, here's the outlet to do so. This week's Ask Engadget question is coming to us from Roland, who can't wait to get his recently relocated sister some sort of phone with Skype capabilities.
There's nothing worse than not being able to communicate with someone when you desperately need to, so we're hoping that our readers across the pond will be able to chime in here with a little advice. If you've got something productive to add, drop it down in comments below!"My sister recently moved to Belgium. She has access to WiFi at home, so I'd like to send her a mobile phone that can run a Skype client. Requirements are WiFi, can work on Belgian / European carriers, runs Skype, and has excellent battery life. Anyone have any suggestions?"
'8-bit Xmas' breathes new life into your 'Bah! Humbug!' NES
By Paul Miller
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 9:08PM
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 9:08PM
Is there still room in your heart for eight more unassuming bits of Xmas? We hoped you'd say yes. See, 8-bit Xmas 2009 is an all-new NES cart full of festive LEDs and an original multiplayer snowball fight NES game. It sells for $43, but for $5 more you can get a personalized title screen -- which seems like a relatively cheap fulfillment of that decades long dream of yours to have your name up in pixelated lights on the home console that defined the home console. The cart should be compatible with all real NES systems and hopefully many fake ones, and while it can't help you forgive your Aunt Samantha for giving you that Sudoku quilt, it might just do the insignificant task of teaching you the true meaning of Xmas.
Palm App catalog hits 1,000 apps... okay, 946
By Laura June
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 7:37PM
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 7:37PM
Invetech 3D bio-printer is ready for production, promises 'tissue on demand'
By Vladislav Savov
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 6:28PM
posted Dec 31st 2009 at 6:28PM
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