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50 Stories on Carnegie Mellon University
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Can't save? Blame your brain

Slow and steady wins the race, but a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. Those dueling proverbs sum up the investing mind.

FSB: How to live forever

Third place team: NeuroBank What it does: Extracts and stores neural stem cells for the treatment of diseases such as Alzheimer's Founders: Raymond Sekula, 35, and Sasha Bakhru, 27 School: Carnegie Mellon University Launched: September 2007

Time.com: Depressed? Don't Go to the Mall

Research into how people make financial decision suggests that sad people spend more, and they don't even realize they're doing it

Fortune: High stakes robot-racing

Hard core robot experts tend to turn up their noses at remote-control bots like Robotex's - even if they're fully armed.

CNNMoney: The :-) turns 25

It was a serious contribution to the electronic lexicon.

Business 2.0: Forget nanotech. Think claytronics.

Like a lot of businesspeople, Todd Mowry hates videoconferencing with his colleagues. "It's like visiting someone in prison," he says. "You talk through a glass wall, but you can't deal with each o...

Snake robots slither to the rescue

For someone trapped under rubble after an earthquake the sight of something resembling a snake wriggling towards them would probably be the last thing they would want to see. But a new breed of life-saving robot is being developed that take their shape and movement from those limbless reptiles, and, it is hoped, will prove invaluable not only in search and rescue operations but also be a great asset to human surgery.

Money Magazine: Defend your virtual home

It may seem melodramatic, but the truth is, hackers across the globe - or maybe across the street - are working 24/7 to find ways to steal your passwords, take control of your computer or turn your hard drive into a whirring pile of scrap metal.

Tests show cell phone air safety risk

Just when you thought it was safe to switch on your cell phone, it seems that making calls in the air could pose a greater risk than running up an exorbitant bill.

CNNMoney: The 76-cent myth

When you have a legitimate point to make, it can undercut your argument to rely heavily on a sound-bite statistic that easily can be misinterpreted.

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