by Patrick Douglas
| ISBN | 9781806240340 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Digital Drive Learning |
| Copyright Year | 2026 |
| Price | $263.00 |
A few writers started predicting the possible physical forms that future medical nanorobots would take in the 1980s and 1990s. A select number produced artistic renderings of their equipment. However, only the broadest analysis of the potential missions and capabilities had been performed up to this point. In many cases, comprehensive technical and engineering studies are still years away. Despite this drawback, some of these designs include many components that are believable as well as others that, in retrospect, might seem imaginative, impractical, or even deadly. These conjectures are still being made today. In order to build robots whose structure is made of tiny items and components, the science of nanorobotics is essential. Because the components are microscopic, researchers can create human mimics in engineering. Nanorobotics has made it possible to build the many intricate components that makeup robots. Some of the fictitious gadgets developed using the knowledge of nanorobotics are nanobots, nanites, nanoids, or nanomites. In the fields of healthcare, cosmetics, aerospace, automotive, security, military, environmental protection, electronics, computers, and communications, nanorobotics will set new benchmarks. We might have small devices inside us within the next two decades that can fight any illness known to mankind, slow down or even reverse the aging process, and practically make us immortal. This book explains how to develop into a mobile computer user and an Internet user, and how to access everything the information superhighway has to offer. This book aims to open up possibilities for creating Internet protocols that support maintaining network connections while changing locations.