Nanotechnology Reveals Hidden Fingerprints 26
valiko75 writes "Hidden fingerprints can now be revealed quickly and reliably thanks to two developments in nanotechnology.
The thing is that they have invented an easier way to reveal hidden fingerprints, but the explanation is rather vague. The main point is that the experiments are not very stable at the moment, but with its development this technology will probably help in discovering many criminal mysteries."
Utter nonsense (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Utter nonsense (Score:5, Funny)
Sure it was - it was on CSI: Duluth just the other day. Guess you only watch CSI: Las Vegas, CSI: Miami, CSI: New York, CSI: Hoboken, CSI: Johnsburg ...
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meta-editing (Score:5, Funny)
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Man this is some good weed! What is this?...
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Um. (Score:2, Funny)
If the detectives in your town need a fingerprint just to discover a mystery is afoot, move. Call me when science is able to figure out a way to SOLVE crimes using fingerprints, then I'll be impressed.
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I seem to remember.. (Score:2)
Not vague, but rather exact (Score:3, Insightful)
Reinventing the wheel ? (Score:2)
What does it show us that we couldn't see before ?
By the sounds of the article, I thought maybe we'd discovered a way to uncover nano-prints left behind by people wearing gloves or somthing.
another one.. (Score:1)
and..."the experiments are not very stable"
so the experiments are not stable, but we can say already that the method is reliable how?
my head is going to explode!
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More false positives? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Indeed, one study suggests over 1,000 fingerprint matching errors a year [livescience.com].
Fingerprint matching is bad science.
This is some cool chemistry... (Score:3, Insightful)
A nanotech version of this might be something like a patch with an array of nanoscale robotic 'arms' on one side, each holding onto one of these nanoparticles. The patch would get slapped on a surface they wanted a print off of, chemical sensors would react to the fingerprint and deposit their nanoparticle. You could build in a computer interface and upload the results directly into a computer, too.
Now give that 'patch' legs and make it self mobile, and a way to resupply the gold nanoparticles, basic AI to hunt down most likely spots for prints, etc... now we have a police crime nanobot that's worth being called nanotech.
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