Scientific American Magazine Vol 285 Issue 4

Scientific American Magazine

Volume 285, Issue 4

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Features

Code Red for the Web

Could the Internet crash? This summer's Code Red attacks could foreshadow destructive cyberwarfare between hacker groups or between governments

Carolyn Meinel

Refuges for Life in a Hostile Universe

Only part of our galaxy . is fit for advanced life

Donald Brownlee, Guillermo Gonzalez, Peter D. Ward

The Challenge of Macular Degeneration

Researchers have begun to identify the causes of this dreaded eye disease that targets the elderly

Hui Sun, Jeremy Nathans

Driving the Info Highway

The Internet has hit the road. Drivers can now access anything from custom traffic reports to spoken e-mail messages to video games. But is it safe?

Steven Ashley

Drowning New Orleans

A major hurricane could swamp New Orleans under 20 feet of water, killing thousands. Human activities along the Mississippi River have dramatically increased the risk, and now only massive reengineering of southeastern Louisiana can save the city

Mark Fischetti

Magic Bullets Fly Again

Molecular guided missiles called monoclonal antibodies were poised to shoot down cancer and a host of other diseases--until they crashed and burned. Now a new generation is soaring to market

Claire Panosian

Departments

Errata

Data Points, October 2001

Brief Bits, October 2001

Tobacco Pharming

Finding Homo sapiens' Lost Relatives

Mice and Men-- Working Knowledge on a Computer Mouse

End Points

Can't Read, Can't Count

The Farm Report

Patently Bizarre

50, 100 and 150 Years Ago

From the Editors

A Wide Web of Worlds

I Was Wrong

The End of Oil

Crowns of the Minotaur

Letters