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DomainNesteggscom Offers Dot Coms for Emerging Nanotech
Ted Stalets
The owner of a sole, lonely website within the millions found on the Internet thinks that he has a solution for a very big need, for those who deal with the very small. Ted Stalets, a Nashville futurist and owner of www.DomainNesteggs.com, has registered prime Nanotech Internet addresses targeted at these entrepreneurs of the very small. These dot com addresses were carefully selected to provide a competitive advantage for those who think very small - to help them become very big and very profitable. (PRWEB) February 12, 2005 -- The owner of a sole, lonely website within the millions found on the Internet thinks that he has a solution for a very big need, for those who deal with the very small. Ted Stalets, a Nashville futurist and owner of www.DomainNesteggs.com, has registered prime nanotech Internet addresses targeted at these entrepreneurs of the very small. These dot com addresses were carefully selected to provide a competitive advantage for those who think very small - to help them become very big and very profitable. Talk to Ted, and you will hear terms like NanotechRobotics and NanotechGenomics - not your common Sunday evening meal chatter. Ted owns the dot coms for these tech terms, as well as 700 more. They are all listed by category at www.DomainNesteggs.com. All have one thing in common – they describe a potential dot com business for a specific emerging technology. Of the various technologies tracked by Mr. Stalets such as Virtual Reality, Robotics, Online Voting, and the Intelligent Internet – probably the most compelling is the emergence of nanotechnology, or nanotech for short. The world of the very small is slowly being understood by inquiring minds. And with understanding inevitably comes application development, and further down the road – commercialization. So is the case for the development of nanotech – the science which deals with processes measured in the billionths of a meter (that’s about 10 hydrogen atoms in a row). At this very, very small dimensional scale, humans are developing technologies by actually emulating the process of life - we all start our existence from the very small. We are then “built” by an intelligence which is pretty much on autopilot – drawing on the environment provided by our mother before birth, and our digestive system and physical world after birth. Scientists at research labs, with the help of venture capitalists, are now moving their nanotech findings out of research facilities. The field of nanotechnology is now moving towards commercialization. Sales of products that incorporate nanotechnology are expected to explode over the next five years, from $13 billion last year to an estimated $500 billion in 2010, according to Lux Research. Industrial items such as glass, paint, and plastics are all being slowly infused with nanotech processes to create much more durable and useful products. The theoretical promise of nanotech is to someday take common molecules like dirt, and use nanotech intelligence to manipulate the component atoms to assemble any type of consumer or industrial good. That’s right – a new bicycle – out of dirt! Hard for most of us to even envision – but not for the most farsighted of the nanotech theorists. Besides the emerging use of nanotechnology within industry, nanotech is also starting to partner with biotech. This union promises awe-inspiring developments within many of our lifetimes. Nature has already mastered the remarkable feat of atomic assembly - as witnessed by our DNA and our cell metabolism. Each of our bodies have a nanoscale intelligence in charge of the replication of our DNA. Within our trillions of cells, tiny molecular “motors” precisely transport necessary biochemicals to where they are needed, and remove other biochemicals as waste. On scientists drawing boards are itsy bitsy tiny robots - nanoscale intelligence referred to as nanobots. According to some, these nanobots could be injected into our circulatory systems, intent on going about their programmed instructions. For example, seeking out and destroying radical cells – such as cancer cells and other types of toxins found within our bodies. Early nanotech robotic applications will be to keep us healthy and free of diseases. Later applications offer the promise of slowing down the aging process itself. “Forecasts such as these really get people’s juices flowing - both positive and negative,” declares Ted Stalets. “Some people want nothing to do with this sort of stuff – and others will say ‘bring it on’.” Most assuredly, the emergence of nanotech will require a rethinking of our human ethics, as we develop the power to alter our lives at the nanotech scale. Mr. Stalets' www.DomainNesteggs.com diaplays an interesting chart which projects timeframes for the mainstream acceptance of several emerging technologies. Within this chart, nanotech is the furthest away – expected to be mainstream within the years of 2025 – 2030. Ted defines mainstream as the achievement of a 30% usage level within the general population of developed countries. His website offers entrepreneurs and forward-looking corporations the opportunity to purchase generic Internet domains which describe emerging nanotech industries. Here are a few of the dot coms available at www.DomainNesteggs.com. NanotechnologyIndustries.com – the most generic of terms useful for a directory of nanotech industries NanotechManufacturers.com – as above, but for nanotech manufacturers NanotechRobotics.com – the seminal description of the upcoming nanotech age NanotechPlastics.com – an early adopter of nanotech, the plastics industry is already using nano processes to make ordinary plastic bags much lighter and more durable Nanotech-Medicine.com – combining nanotech with medicine will create thousands of jobs and hundreds of new products and processes within the next few decades GeneticExam.com – already there are companies on the Internet who compute an individual genetic profile after analyzing a person's saliva taken with a cotton swab. An information-rich profile of an individual's genetic health and potential troublespots is then sent out on a CD rom NanotechGenomics.com – once individualized genetic exams become commonplace, further nanotech applications will involve the actual manipulation of our human genetics Today's nanotech is a billion dollar market. Unregulated growth could push this to trillions in a few decades. Some futurists see the field of nanotech as a force for change as powerful as the printing press, or the industrial revolution, or even the Internet itself. The carefully selected nanotech dot coms at www.DomainNesteggs.com offer a few future nanotech titans their branded Internet presence today. About DomainNesteggs.com: Located in Nashville, Tennessee, DomainNesteggs.com is a domain name reseller specializing in emerging technologies - Internet Intelligence, Virtual Reality, Biotechnology, Robotics, and Nanotechnology.
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