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The fate of stacking

IEEE Design & Test of Computers, 2009
The impending doom of CMOS scaling has semiconductor mavericks scrambling for alternative solutions to continue increasing the device density per chip. One serious candidate is 3D integration in which the planar manufacturing technology extends skyward into the third dimension, much like skyscrapers.
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The Fateful Journey

2012
Bold, headstrong, and fabulously wealthy, Dutch traveller Alexine Tinne (1834–1869) made several excursions into the African interior, often accompanied by her mother, at a time when very few European women traveled. 'The Fateful Journey' follows her trip with German zoologist Theodor von Heuglin, which took them through Egypt and Sudan in search of ...
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Fated to be a professor?

The American Sociologist, 1998
My family has included professors for four generations, most of them associated with the University of Toronto. This accounts for my attending that university as an undergraduate where I first studied sociology, and perhaps suggests that I was fated to go on to become a professor myself.
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FATE, the environmental fate constants information database

Journal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences, 1993
An online database, FATE, has been developed for the interactive retrieval of kinetic and equilibrium constants that are needed for assessing the fate of chemicals in the environment. The database contains values for up to 12 parameters for each chemical. As of December 1991, FATE contained values for about 200 chemicals.
Heinz P. Kollig   +2 more
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Fateful imprints

Science, 2017
A mysterious method of gene control, and the rare diseases it causes, is shedding its secrets.
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The fate of nitroguanidine in the rat

Fundamental and Applied Toxicology, 1988
The metabolism and disposition of nitroguanidine (NG), a component of military propellants and munitions, were examined in the rat. Radiolabeled nitroguanidine [( 14C]NG) was administered orally at doses of 20 and 200 mg/kg and intravenously at a dose of 20 mg/kg. Regardless of the route of administration, the radiolabel was recovered quantitatively in
B, Ho   +4 more
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If the Fates Allow

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1999
The three Fates stood in judgment of human fortunes, from which there could be no appeal. Despite our ever-increasing medical knowledge, the Fates still seem to be at work.
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The Fate of the Aral—the Fate of Peoples

Anthropology & Archeology of Eurasia, 1994
The Aral Sea is a unique natural object. Its formation in its present territory took place 2-2.5 million years ago, thanks to the two Central Asian rivers—the Amu-Darya and the Syr-Darya. The history of four Central Asian nationalities—the Uzbeks, Karakalpaks, Kazakhs, and Turkmens—has been associated with the Aral since ancient times.
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The Fate of Micronuclei

This chapter provides a brief overview about micronuclei and their postmitotic fate. Micronuclei are small chromatin-containing bodies formed during mitosis and located in the cytoplasm. Micronuclei have been known for more than 100 years and used as biomarkers for decades, but their fate after formation and with that their biological relevance for the
Henning, Hintzsche, Helga, Stopper
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Twists of Fate

Scientific American, 2015
A diagram is presented showing the epigenetic aspects of diseases as related to different areas of the body.
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