Queen Elizabeth Prize Awarded to Inventors Who Revolutionized Digital Imaging

Winners of the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering announced in London today, Michael Tompsett Nobukazu Teranishi and Eric Fossum . Along with George Smith they will share the A 1million prize for combined contribution to digital imaging have been honored with the prestigious Queen Elizabeth Prize, a British award that celebrates world-changing innovations in engineering that have been of global benefit to humanity.

Queen Elizabeth Prize Awarded to Inventors Who Revolutionized Digital Imaging

Winners of the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering announced in London today, Michael Tompsett Nobukazu Teranishi and Eric Fossum . Along with George Smith they will share the A 1million prize for combined contribution to digital imaging have been honored with the prestigious Queen Elizabeth Prize, a British award that celebrates world-changing innovations in engineering that have been of global benefit to humanity.

Queen Elizabeth Prize Awarded to Inventors Who Revolutionized Digital Imaging

Winners of the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering announced in London today, Michael Tompsett Nobukazu Teranishi and Eric Fossum . Along with George Smith they will share the A 1million prize for combined contribution to digital imaging have been honored with the prestigious Queen Elizabeth Prize, a British award that celebrates world-changing innovations in engineering that have been of global benefit to humanity.

Queen Elizabeth Prize Awarded to Inventors Who Revolutionized Digital Imaging

Winners of the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering announced in London today, Michael Tompsett Nobukazu Teranishi and Eric Fossum . Along with George Smith they will share the A 1million prize for combined contribution to digital imaging have been honored with the prestigious Queen Elizabeth Prize, a British award that celebrates world-changing innovations in engineering that have been of global benefit to humanity.

How Keating won unlosable election

IT WAS regarded as the unlosable election – for the coalition that is – and perhaps no-one was more surprised than Labor Prime Minister Paul Keating as polling night unfolded. Far from losing, there was a 5.5 per cent swing to Labor which increased its majority by two to 13 seats in parliament’s lower house.