Speculative Technology

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Speculative Technology cure for an as yet uncurable disease cure for Alzheimer's disease cure for blindness cure for cancer cure for the common cold life extension technology anti-aging technology revival long after death body part transplant brain transplant eye transplant head transplant heart transplant species transmutation species uplifting accelerated growth rate therapy appearance altering technology artificial body part brain disembodiment technology personal flying contraption human enhancement technology brain implant brain stimulating implant rejuvenation technology remote controlled person super growth therapy super strength formula brain-computer interface plug-in learning device body implant implanted weapon memory implantation technology implanted memory punishment intelligence augmentation technology mass mind control mind control technology mind linking technology mind reading technology mind altering technology mind-computer merging truth inducing technology mind transfer technology mind uploading duplicate of a person memory erasure mindwipe punishment death ray killer microdrone paralysis device smart ammunition digital clone of a person speculative weapon autonomous weapon systems in society autonomous weapons system killing everyone sentient bomb virtual lover android clone of a person autonomous weapons system android sex-droid virtual person mechanical insect mechanical man robot prizefighter speculative robot robot helper artificial intelligence AI assistant AI companion AI safeguards sentient space probe sentient machine sentient computer smart tools teleportation device space portal pod or booth-like device artificial womb disintegration chamber sonic shower suicide booth speculative handheld device intangibility device self-replicating machine self-replicating nanomachines automatic surgery machine dream recorder electromagnetic catapult force field generator matchmaking technology memory recorder monitoring implant people tubes planet killing weapon radiation neutralizer recording implant space gun speculative healing device speculative device dictation machine flat-panel display flying drone lie detector searchable electronic database sound masking device videophone voice identification device tractor beam underwater breathing gill universal translation device voice duplicator speculative nanotechnology ankle bracelet magnetic boots sun gun once speculative device speculative torture device pain implant speculative wearable device pain belt pain collar vision beyond the visible spectrum glasses jet pack speculative environmental suit speculative diving suit speculative spacesuit speculative glasses powered exoskeleton speculative full body outfit sentient spaceship speculative airship flying ship flying car hoverboard mobile life support device piloted creature-shaped vehicle self-driving car speculative airliner speculative submarine speculative vehicle virtual reality suit subterrene thought-controlled vehicle Bussard ramjet faster than light travel flying saucer ion drive spaceship multi-generational spaceship multistage rocket nuclear powered spaceship speculative spaceship solar sail spaceship speculative interstellar probe world ship time machine speculative technology artificial life astronomical impact avoidance augmented reality hologram anti-gravity technology rotational simulated gravity invisible spaceship gravity manipulating technology artificial gravity technology personal invisibility cloak invisibility technology speculative virtual reality digital afterlife speculative virtual reality headset virtual reality room virtual reality sex local weather control system undersea tunnel sub-planetary-scale engineering artificial island speculative engineering engineered space structure space mirror space telescope world eating machine space station space dock engineered orbital structure orbital weapons planetary invisibility cloak engineered trans-orbital structure space elevator artificial planet asteroid mining changing the orbit of a planet around its star manipulation of evolution on a planet planetary weather control system planetary-scale engineering planetary-scale machine hollowed out asteroid habitat astronomical-scale engineering speculative geoengineering speculative terraforming matter manipulating technology food synthesizer matter duplicator matter replicator matter transmuter miniaturization technology interstellar communication network biological spaceship spacetime manipulating technology device bigger inside than outside space folding travel technology time freezing device stellar engineering Dyson sphere stellar rejuvenation fusion power cold fusion bioengineered human pathogen speculative energy generation technology antimatter power geothermal energy from Earth's interior human battery perpetual energy machine speculative biotechnology speculative genetic engineering speculative genetically modified crops stasis technology suspended animation cryogenic technology DNA encoded message biological computer biological machinery bringing back extinct species human cloning synthetic food food pill suspended animation punishment.
Recommended publications
  • Models of Time Travel
    MODELS OF TIME TRAVEL A COMPARATIVE STUDY USING FILMS Guy Roland Micklethwait A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of The Australian National University July 2012 National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science ANU College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences APPENDIX I: FILMS REVIEWED Each of the following film reviews has been reduced to two pages. The first page of each of each review is objective; it includes factual information about the film and a synopsis not of the plot, but of how temporal phenomena were treated in the plot. The second page of the review is subjective; it includes the genre where I placed the film, my general comments and then a brief discussion about which model of time I felt was being used and why. It finishes with a diagrammatic representation of the timeline used in the film. Note that if a film has only one diagram, it is because the different journeys are using the same model of time in the same way. Sometimes several journeys are made. The present moment on any timeline is always taken at the start point of the first time travel journey, which is placed at the origin of the graph. The blue lines with arrows show where the time traveller’s trip began and ended. They can also be used to show how information is transmitted from one point on the timeline to another. When choosing a model of time for a particular film, I am not looking at what happened in the plot, but rather the type of timeline used in the film to describe the possible outcomes, as opposed to what happened.
    [Show full text]
  • GURPS4E Ultra-Tech.Qxp
    Written by DAVID PULVER, with KENNETH PETERS Additional Material by WILLIAM BARTON, LOYD BLANKENSHIP, and STEVE JACKSON Edited by CHRISTOPHER AYLOTT, STEVE JACKSON, SEAN PUNCH, WIL UPCHURCH, and NIKOLA VRTIS Cover Art by SIMON LISSAMAN, DREW MORROW, BOB STEVLIC, and JOHN ZELEZNIK Illustrated by JESSE DEGRAFF, IGOR FIORENTINI, SIMON LISSAMAN, DREW MORROW, E. JON NETHERLAND, AARON PANAGOS, CHRISTOPHER SHY, BOB STEVLIC, and JOHN ZELEZNIK Stock # 31-0104 Version 1.0 – May 22, 2007 STEVE JACKSON GAMES CONTENTS INTRODUCTION . 4 Adjusting for SM . 16 PERSONAL GEAR AND About the Authors . 4 EQUIPMENT STATISTICS . 16 CONSUMER GOODS . 38 About GURPS . 4 Personal Items . 38 2. CORE TECHNOLOGIES . 18 Clothing . 38 1. ULTRA-TECHNOLOGY . 5 POWER . 18 Entertainment . 40 AGES OF TECHNOLOGY . 6 Power Cells. 18 Recreation and TL9 – The Microtech Age . 6 Generators . 20 Personal Robots. 41 TL10 – The Robotic Age . 6 Energy Collection . 20 TL11 – The Age of Beamed and 3. COMMUNICATIONS, SENSORS, Exotic Matter . 7 Broadcast Power . 21 AND MEDIA . 42 TL12 – The Age of Miracles . 7 Civilization and Power . 21 COMMUNICATION AND INTERFACE . 42 Even Higher TLs. 7 COMPUTERS . 21 Communicators. 43 TECH LEVEL . 8 Hardware . 21 Encryption . 46 Technological Progression . 8 AI: Hardware or Software? . 23 Receive-Only or TECHNOLOGY PATHS . 8 Software . 24 Transmit-Only Comms. 46 Conservative Hard SF. 9 Using a HUD . 24 Translators . 47 Radical Hard SF . 9 Ubiquitous Computing . 25 Neural Interfaces. 48 CyberPunk . 9 ROBOTS AND TOTAL CYBORGS . 26 Networks . 49 Nanotech Revolution . 9 Digital Intelligences. 26 Mail and Freight . 50 Unlimited Technology. 9 Drones . 26 MEDIA AND EDUCATION . 51 Emergent Superscience .
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring the Referral and Usage of Science Fiction in HCI Literature
    Exploring the Referral and Usage of Science-Fiction in HCI Literature? Philipp Jordan1, Omar Mubin2, Mohammad Obaid3, and Paula Alexandra Silva4 1 University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, USA [email protected] 2 SCEM, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia [email protected] 3 Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden [email protected] 4 DigiMedia Research Center, University of Aveiro, Aveiro, Portugal [email protected] Abstract. Research on science fiction (sci-fi) in scientific publications has indicated the usage of sci-fi stories, movies or shows to inspire novel Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) research. Yet no studies have anal- ysed sci-fi in a top-ranked computer science conference at present. For that reason, we examine the CHI main track for the presence and nature of sci-fi referrals in relationship to HCI research. We search for six sci-fi terms in a dataset of 5812 CHI main proceedings and code the context of 175 sci-fi referrals in 83 papers indexed in the CHI main track. In our results, we categorize these papers into five contemporary HCI research themes wherein sci-fi and HCI interconnect: 1) Theoretical Design Re- search; 2) New Interactions; 3) Human-Body Modification or Extension; 4) Human-Robot Interaction and Artificial Intelligence; and 5) Visions of Computing and HCI. In conclusion, we discuss results and implications located in the promising arena of sci-fi and HCI research. Keywords: Design fiction, Future visions, HCI inspiraton, Popular cul- ture in science, Science fiction 1 Introduction Sci-fi has inspired many technological innovations. Its influence is present in the invention, conceptualization, design and application of interfaces and technology.
    [Show full text]
  • Groundbreaking Ceremony Held for New ECE Building by TOM MOONE
    NEWS FOR ECE ILLINOIS ALUMNI AND FRIENDS WINTER 2011 Also in this issue: New Assured Cloud Computing Center to be established at Illinois Groundbreaking Solar Decathlon: Helping students and the world ceremony held Alumnus Michael McCorquodale is the first ECE Engineer for new ECE building in Residence Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Breaking ground on the future Dear alumni and friends, I have good news! The dream of a new building for our department, after many years of planning and anticipation, is now becoming a reality. Last month’s groundbreaking of the new ECE building marks the beginning of a new era for our department, a department of global influence and impact, thanks to the excellence of its faculty and alumni. And it is this global impact that makes this groundbreaking special not only for our department, our college, our campus, and our university, but also for the state of Illinois, our nation, and the world. Our faculty and our alumni have been among the pioneers of the major technological innovations that are the bedrock of today’s computing and communication technologies. The marvel of the computing technology and the communications infrastructure we enjoy today, and its catalytic role in improving living standards around the globe, would not have been possible without John Bardeen’s invention of the transistor or Jack Kilby’s brilliant idea of the integrated circuit. These Nobel Prize-winning innovations by two giants of the ECE ILLINOIS community have been followed by many more groundbreaking advances by ECE faculty and alumni, advances that inspire and drive our quest for a sustainable future for all.
    [Show full text]
  • Tolva Lorebook 050417 Singlep
    This is a book about the wider fictional context in which our video game, The Signal From Tölva, can be understood. You do not need to read this book to enjoy the game, and reading on should not spoil the game for you. Instead we intend to provide an inspiring and colourful backdrop, and to shine another light on the mysterious events that take place in the world in which the game is set. Events on Tölva represent one crucial step within a larger story which encompasses the ambitions and machinations of factional machine intelligences across an entire galaxy. The fate of the human race also hangs in the balance in this hostile and complicated universe (even though humans don’t appear in The Signal From Tölva video game, they do play a role in the wider story). Tölva, you should remember, is but a single point in endless space. What happens there will have implications for an entire galaxy, but it is nevertheless only one node in a network of conflict and complexity that makes up a strange and violent universe. Read on to learn more about the ideas, technologies, worlds and personalities that make that universe what it is. introduction 03 THE GRIM PROLOGUE This is a tragedy of the remote future. It is a story about the relationship between the people the human race became and the intelligent machines they created to explore the galaxy. The setting of Magnitudes is far distant from today, and is a time when spacefaring and planetary exploration are routine. Extreme high technology and exotic events are commonplace, but these things are not often at the disposal of normal men and women.
    [Show full text]
  • Stellivore Extraterrestrials? Binary Stars As Living Systems.” Acta Astronautica 128: 251–56
    Vidal, C. 2016. “Stellivore Extraterrestrials? Binary Stars as Living Systems.” Acta Astronautica 128: 251–56. doi:10.1016/j.actaastro.2016.06.038.1 Stellivore Extraterrestrials? Binary Stars as Living Systems Clément Vidal Center Leo Apostel Evolution, Complexity and Cognition research group Vrije Universiteit Brussel (Free University of Brussels) Krijgskundestraat 33, 1160 Brussels, Belgium Phone +32-2-640 67 37 | Fax +32-2-6440744 http://www.clemvidal.com c [email protected] Abstract: We lack signs of extraterrestrial intelligence (ETI) despite decades of observation in the whole electromagnetic spectrum. Could evidence be buried in existing data? To recognize ETI, we first propose criteria discerning life from non-life based on thermodynamics and living systems theory. Then we extrapolate civilizational development to both external and internal growth. Taken together, these two trends lead to an argument that some existing binary stars might actually be ETI. Since these hypothetical beings feed actively on stars, we call them “stellivores”. We present an independent thermodynamic argument for their existence, with a metabolic interpretation of interacting binary stars. The jury is still out, but the hypothesis is testable with existing astrophysical data. Keywords: SETI, Dysonian SETI, Astrobiology, High energy astrophysics, High energy astrobiology, Living systems theory, Stars: binaries: general, Stellivore 1 - Introduction In 1960, Freeman Dyson proposed to search for extraterrestrial intelligence (ETI) by looking for infrared radiation emitted by an artificial biosphere covering a star (Dyson 1960). Unfortunately, despite some searches, the results are negative (Jugaku, Noguchi, and Nishimura 1995; Carrigan Jr 2009; Wright et al. 2014). We thus lack proof or even indication of ETI, a fundamental gap in our knowledge of the universe.
    [Show full text]
  • SF COMMENTARY 81 40Th Anniversary Edition, Part 2
    SF COMMENTARY 81 40th Anniversary Edition, Part 2 June 2011 IN THIS ISSUE: THE COLIN STEELE SPECIAL COLIN STEELE REVIEWS THE FIELD OTHER CONTRIBUTORS: DITMAR (DICK JENSSEN) THE EDITOR PAUL ANDERSON LENNY BAILES DOUG BARBOUR WM BREIDING DAMIEN BRODERICK NED BROOKS HARRY BUERKETT STEPHEN CAMPBELL CY CHAUVIN BRAD FOSTER LEIGH EDMONDS TERRY GREEN JEFF HAMILL STEVE JEFFERY JERRY KAUFMAN PETER KERANS DAVID LAKE PATRICK MCGUIRE MURRAY MOORE JOSEPH NICHOLAS LLOYD PENNEY YVONNE ROUSSEAU GUY SALVIDGE STEVE SNEYD SUE THOMASON GEORGE ZEBROWSKI and many others SF COMMENTARY 81 40th Anniversary Edition, Part 2 CONTENTS 3 THIS ISSUE’S COVER 66 PINLIGHTERS Binary exploration Ditmar (Dick Jenssen) Stephen Campbell Damien Broderick 5 EDITORIAL Leigh Edmonds I must be talking to my friends Patrick McGuire The Editor Peter Kerans Jerry Kaufman 7 THE COLIN STEELE EDITION Jeff Hamill Harry Buerkett Yvonne Rousseau 7 IN HONOUR OF SIR TERRY Steve Jeffery PRATCHETT Steve Sneyd Lloyd Penney 7 Terry Pratchett: A (disc) world of Cy Chauvin collecting Lenny Bailes Colin Steele Guy Salvidge Terry Green 12 Sir Terry at the Sydney Opera House, Brad Foster 2011 Sue Thomason Colin Steele Paul Anderson Wm Breiding 13 Colin Steele reviews some recent Doug Barbour Pratchett publications George Zebrowski Joseph Nicholas David Lake 16 THE FIELD Ned Brooks Colin Steele Murray Moore Includes: 16 Reference and non-fiction 81 Terry Green reviews A Scanner Darkly 21 Science fiction 40 Horror, dark fantasy, and gothic 51 Fantasy 60 Ghost stories 63 Alternative history 2 SF COMMENTARY No. 81, June 2011, 88 pages, is edited and published by Bruce Gillespie, 5 Howard Street, Greensborough VIC 3088, Australia.
    [Show full text]
  • Temporal Distances: Fudging It 4
    ADVENTURES IN SPACE Space Travel Space: A Brief Introduction 1 Drive vs Thrust: How Much Faster? 2 Absolute Distances: The Hard Way 4 Temporal Distances: Fudging It 4 Velocity: How Fast Am I? 5 Absolute Velocity 5 Temporal Velocity: Easier/Less Accurate 6 Temporal Velocity: Accurate/Trickier 6 Engine Strain 7 How Big is a Star System? 8 How Big is a Galaxy? 9 Interstellar Travel: Workarounds 10 Shortcuts 10 Jaunting 10 Winging It 10 Hoofing It 10 Drive Limits 11 Ready-to-Play Drive Limits 11 Fuel Capacity 11 Fuel Rarity 12 Imprecise 12 Interstellar Only 12 Minimum Size 12 Non-Orbital 12 Specialized 12 Traceable 12 Uncomfortable 13 Volatile 13 Variable Drive Technology 13 ADVENTURES IN SPACE Space Travel Space: A Brief Introduction Throughout this first section, one does well to remember the sage advice of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy: “Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space.” As you might expect, figuring out a reasonable way to cope with the immensity of a solar system, a sector, a galaxy or an entire universe is a serious undertaking that a GM building his own setting needs to confront early on. There are a couple ways to do it, each with their own advantages and disadvantages, and each suited for a different kind of narrative. What these methods have in common is that they make use of two of a spacecraft's Systems: Thrust and Drive.
    [Show full text]
  • Naval Engineering and Labor Specialization During the Industrial Revolution
    Naval Engineering and Labor Specialization during the Industrial Revolution Darrell J. Glaser Department of Economics United States Naval Academy [email protected] Ahmed S. Rahman Department of Economics United States Naval Academy [email protected] January 2012 1 Abstract This paper explores the roles of capital- and technology-skill complementarities in labor allocation decisions within the U.S. Navy. During the latter 19th century the officer corps was highly specialized, and was split between groups of line and staff officers. This was also a time of dramatic technological changes which affected nearly every facet of naval opera- tions. Specifically, naval technological developments tended to be \engineering-biased," in that they raised the relative importance of engineer-oriented skills. This created a dilemma for the Navy, as it navigated the balance between the benefits of a specialized workforce implementing increasingly complex technologies with rising communication and coordina- tion costs. We first document the extent of capital- and technology-skill complementarities within the navy which fostered greater labor specialization. We then show how the Navy vitiated the specialized human capital of officers by blending the corps. The study offers in- sights into how an industry undergoing wrenching technological changes managed its labor and human capital allocation to help the U.S. become a world class naval power. • Keywords: skilled-labor complementarity, skill-replacing and skill-using technology, labor allocation • JEL Codes: J2, J7, N3, N7, O3 2 1 Introduction This paper explores the effects of capital- and technology-skill complementarities in the U.S. Navy. Specifically, we explore how such complementarities influenced task specialization and labor allocation during the latter 19th and early 20th centuries.
    [Show full text]
  • The Blackness of Liet-Kynes: Reading Frank Herbert's Dune Through
    religions Article The Blackness of Liet-Kynes: Reading Frank Herbert’s Dune Through James Cone Peter Herman Theology & Religious Studies, Marymount University, Arlington, VA 22207, USA; [email protected] Received: 1 August 2018; Accepted: 17 September 2018; Published: 18 September 2018 Abstract: Frank Herbert’s landmark science fiction novel Dune has received numerous sequels, prequels, and film treatments. Detailing the saga of humanity’s far future beyond our present solar system, the work plays successfully with religious, political, and ecological themes. This essay deals with the social/theological implications of two figures within the story-world of Dune: Its protagonist and visible hero, Paul Atreides/Muad’Dib and the lesser figure of the “Imperial Planetologist” Dr. Kynes, also known to the Fremen as “Liet”. By reading these two figures through the theology of James Cone, we discover that the obvious hero is not a messianic figure but a demonic one. Further, it is the lesser character of Liet-Kynes who actually fulfills the messianic role in Cone’s theological system. This essay is preceded by and makes use of Jeremy Ian Kirk’s work with the film Avatar that provides similar analysis. Where Kirk’s principal concern is with the ethical considerations of Avatar, this essay will more closely bear on Cone’s dynamic of redemption and conversion, specifically his notion of dying to white identity to be reborn in blackness. Keywords: theology; whiteness; black liberation; liberation theology; soteriology; salvation 1. Introduction Frank Herbert’s six Dune novels provide an amazing and detailed view of a possible future for the human race among the stars.1 The world-building in which he engaged spans thousands of years and billions of miles in his speculative future version of our known universe.2 Religion, specifically the often cynical manipulations of the Bene Geserit Sisterhood, plays a role in the narrative.
    [Show full text]
  • Architect on Call Services
    REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS FOR ON-CALL ARCHITECTURAL/ENGINEERING SERVICES NAME AND LOCATION Redstone Architects, Inc. Superior Engineering Designhaus Architecture BEI Associates, Inc. THA Architects Engineers CHMP, Inc. Southfield, Michigan Michael A. Boggio Assoc Rochester, Michigan Detroit, Michigan Flint, Michigan Grand Blanc, Michigan Southfield/Detroit, Michigan Years in Business 67 years 12 years/28 years 7 years 52 years 48 years 37 years Number of Employees 10 full time/1 part time 30 full time/8 part time 11 full time/1 part time 70 full time/2 part time 32 full time/2 part time 21 full time/3 part time Staff Assigned to RH Al Gittleman, Arch, Pt of Contact Satish Mistry, PE Principal Peter Stuhlreyer Prin Arch owner Donald Vroom Arch Proj Exe Jackie Hoist Arch Blg Insp Mgr David Hanoute Arch Principal Spec-Fire safety, bldg codes Udayan Memon PE Struct Eng Roger Berent VP will be a N Chmielewski Arch Proj Dir George Ananich Arch Evaluator Greg Mason Arch Proj Mgr L. Fabilli, Arch, prgram, design Michael Boggio AIA Proj Mgr registered arch this year Joan Gauthier PE Civil Eng Ron Campbell Arch Historic Annette Hader Arch Job Capt B. Yaldo-Assoc Arch Design Stanley Joniec AIA Sr Architect Scott Kelley - Sr Designer Allan Gazoul PE Elect Eng Fares Abdallah PE Electrical Rodica Phillips Arch Int Design Don Smith-Dir of specifications Paul Padiyar PE Sr. Civil Eng David Sturges PE Mech Eng Karl Strine - Mechancial James Sporer Landscape Arch Manilal Patel PE Sr Mech Eng Ali Zorkot Phd PE Struct Eng Doug Skylis PE Rowe Eng civil Kevin Cook PE Civil Eng Bhavin Patel Civil Engineer and site engineering James Novosad PE Proj Eng R Scott Leo EE, Elect Eng Les Hartzman Constr.
    [Show full text]
  • CII Member Companies
    Construction Industry Institute 2002 Annual Conference Conference Proceedings CII Contributions to America Keystone, Colorado CII Member Companies 3M ABB Lummus Global Abbott Laboratories ALSTOM Power Air Products and Chemicals BE&K Allegheny Energy Supply BMW Constructors Anheuser-Busch Companies Baker Concrete Construction Aramco Services Company Bechtel Group BP Amoco Corporation Black & Veatch Bayer Corporation Burns & McDonnell CITGO Petroleum Corporation Burns and Roe Enterprises Cargill Butler Manufacturing Company Celanese CCC Group ChevronTexaco Corporation CDI Engineering Group Colectric Partners CH2M HILL Constructors/IDC Conoco Chicago Bridge & Iron Company Dofasco Day & Zimmermann International The Dow Chemical Company Dick Corporation DuPont Dillingham Construction Holdings Eastman Chemical Company Eichleay Engineers & Constructors ExxonMobil Corporation Emerson Process Management General Motors Corporation Fluor Daniel General Services Administration Foster Wheeler USA Corporation GlaxoSmithKline Fru-Con Construction Corporation Intel Corporation Graycor Eli Lilly and Company Hilti Corporation Marathon Oil Company Honeywell International NASA Jacobs Naval Facilities Engineering Command Johnson Controls Ontario Power Generation J. A. Jones Petrobras Kellogg Brown & Root Pfizer Kiewit Construction Group Phillips Petroleum Company Kværner Praxair M. A. Mortenson Company The Procter & Gamble Company PSEG Energy Technologies Rohm and Haas Company Parsons Energy & Chemicals Group Shell Oil Company Primavera Systems Smithsonian Institution Rust Constructors Solutia S&B Engineers and Constructors Ltd. Sunoco SMS Demag Tennessee Valley Authority The Shaw Group U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory Siemens Westinghouse Power U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Structural Group U.S. Department of Commerce/NIST Technip USA Corporation U.S. Department of Energy Turner Construction Company U.S. Department of State Walbridge Aldinger Company U.S. Steel Washington Group International Weyerhaeuser Company Williams Group International H.
    [Show full text]