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Tech_007Gadgets[i++] = new Array("","Introduction","","http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Slideshows/_production/ss-080819-fall-movies/ss-080819-fall-movies-tease.hmedium.jpg","","", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "273", "364", "#000000", "", "", "", "");
Tech_007Gadgets[i-1].body = "<br><b> <P style=\"font-size: 12pt; color: red\">Introduction</P></b><p></BR><a href=\"http://www.msnbc.com\"><img src=\" http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/i/msnbc/Components/Sources/Art/source-msnbc-com-newlogo.gif\" align=\"center\" border=0></a><br ALIGN=LEFT><i>By John Roach, contributor</i><br></BR>James Bond (played by Daniel Craig) returns to the big screen in \"Quantum of Solace,\" the latest movie in a franchise that regularly features high-tech spy gadgets and technologies. Some of Agent 007's make-believe gizmos have inspired real-life gadgetry, according to Peter Earnest, who worked for the Central Intelligence Agency for 35 years, including 25 years in its Clandestine Service. \"There are very creative people working in Hollywood,\" said Earnest, who is now executive director of the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C.  Click the \"Next\" arrow above to learn about seven gadgets from previous James Bond movies that are available in the real world today.<br>";

Tech_007Gadgets[i++] = new Array("","1965: Jetpacks give a little lift","","http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photo/_new/080729-coslog-jetpack-vmed-930a.hmedium.jpg","","", "", "", "", "", "right", "", "Martin Jetpack", "273", "182", "#000000", "", "", "", "");
Tech_007Gadgets[i-1].body = "<br><b><p style=\"font-size: 12pt; color: red\">1965: Jetpacks give a little lift</p></b><p></BR>Ever since James Bond used a jetpack to escape the bad guys in 1965's \"Thunderball,\" the idea of strapping on a rocket-powered backpack to soar up, up and away from the masses has been the dream of geeks everywhere. The latest attempt at backpack-powered flight, the Martin Jetpack shown here, was unveiled at an air show in Wisconsin. The New Zealand-based manufacturer says the jetpack is theoretically capable of rising more than a mile into the air, but the pilot's feet never got more than three feet off the ground during its 45-second-long public debut.<br>";

Tech_007Gadgets[i++] = new Array("","1971: Fake fingerprints easily made","","http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/040908/040908_fingerread_vmed_2p.hmedium.jpg","","", "", "", "", "", "right", "Matt Sayles", "AP", "273", "182", "#000000", "", "", "", "");
Tech_007Gadgets[i-1].body = "<br><b><p style=\"font-size: 12pt; color: red\">1971: Fake fingerprints easily made</p></b><p></BR>In 1971's \"Diamonds Are Forever,\" James Bond, masquerading as Peter Franks, uses a fake fingerprint slipped over his thumb to leave an impression on a glass when he meets diamond smuggler Tiffany Case. She secretly compares the impresison with Frank's real fingerprints, erroneously confirming Bond's false identity. In 2002, Japanese researchers showed how to make fake fingerprints with gelatin and other inexpensive household ingredients. The digits were sufficient to fool fingerprint readers about 80 percent of the time. The development raises some concerns about the effectiveness of security devices that work by reading fingerprints, such as the one shown here.<br>";

Tech_007Gadgets[i++] = new Array("","1985: Miniature cameras, a spy staple","","http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/MSNBC/Components/Photo/_new/081110-coat-camera-hmed.hmedium.jpg","","", "", "", "", "", "", "", "The International Spy Museum", "273", "336", "#000000", "", "", "", "");
Tech_007Gadgets[i-1].body = "<br><b><p style=\"font-size: 12pt; color: red\">1985: Miniature cameras, a spy staple</p></b><p></BR>A regular feature in James Bond films is the miniature, concealed camera, such as the one embedded in Bond's ring in 1985's \"A View to A Kill.\" The gadgets are not just for the movies, said Peter Earnest, the former CIA agent who is now executive director of the International Spy Museum. \"We all had hidden cameras, concealed cameras, and now we've all got a camera in our cell phone. In other words, this stuff evolves,\" he said. A 1970s-era buttonhole spy camera from the KGB, shown here, is on display at the museum.<br>";

Tech_007Gadgets[i++] = new Array("","1997: Cell phone-controlled cars","","http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/MSNBC/Components/Photo/_new/ShakerRacer1.hmedium.jpg","","", "", "", "|", "", "", "", "Hagenberg University of Applied Sciences ", "220", "423", "#000000", "", "", "", "");
Tech_007Gadgets[i-1].body = "<br><b><p style=\"font-size: 12pt; color: red\">1997: Cellphone-controlled cars</p></b><p></BR><br> <br>During a memorable car chase in 1997's \"Tomorrow Never Dies,\" Bond steers his gadget-laden BMW through a parking garage via the touchpad on his cell phone, while watching the action on the phone's video display. Today, open-source software from researchers at Hagenberg University in Austria allows users of accelerometer-equipped cell phones, shown in this image, to control a toy car. Project leader Andreas Jakl described a James Bondian video clip showing off the gizmo to msnbc.com: \"Our 'James Bond' tries to drive the car with a touchscreen device like in the movie, but it all goes wrong and the car crashes. However, Q then gives him the new ShakerRacer-phone, where he can now control the car using natural motions instead of using a touchscreen.\"<br>";

Tech_007Gadgets[i++] = new Array("","1999: Gadget saves skiers' lives","AvaLung_Straight","http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/MSNBC/Components/Photo/_new/150011%20F06_Avalung_Straight.hmedium.jpg","","", "", "", "", "", "right", "", "", "273", "222", "#000000", "", "", "", "");
Tech_007Gadgets[i-1].body = "<br><b><p style=\"font-size: 12pt; color: red\">1999: Gadget saves skiers' lives</p></b><p></BR>The gratuitous ski chase in 1999's \"The World is Not Enough\" includes a ski jacket that inflates into a life-saving protective sphere. Though no similar jacket yet exists in the real world, a device called the AvaLung II, shown here, from equipment manufacturer Black Diamond, buys skiers trapped in an avalanche some potentially life-saving breathing room. The lung pulls in air from the surrounding snowpack and directs it to the user's mouth via tubing. Exhaled air is shuttled to another part of the snowpack to minimize lethal carbon-dioxide contamination.<br>";

Tech_007Gadgets[i++] = new Array("","2002: Adaptive camouflage makes cars invisible","","http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/060524/060524_invisible_hmed8p.hmedium.jpg","","", "", "", "", "", "right", "", "Science", "273", "310", "#000000", "", "", "", "");
Tech_007Gadgets[i-1].body = "<br><b><p style=\"font-size: 12pt; color: red\">2002: Adaptive camouflage makes cars invisible</p></b><p></BR>Wanna disappear? Bond's Aston Martin in 2002's \"Die Another Day\" has the ability, thanks to a technology called adaptive camouflage. Though the concept seems far-fetched, several research teams around the world are working on invisibility devices. Researchers in Susumu Tachi's lab at the University of Tokyo, for example, have developed a screenlike cloak that displays the scene behind the wearer on the front. The visual effect is like seeing through the person. Several U.S. teams, meanwhile, are developing materials that make objects invisible by deflecting radar, light and other waves around them like water flowing around a rock in a stream, as depicted in this image.";

Tech_007Gadgets[i++] = new Array("","2006: Bond gets a tracking chip","","http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/2007/Sept/070906/070907_microchip_hmed_1p.hmedium.jpg","","Image: Casa Rinconada", "", "", "", "", "", "Steve Mitchell", "AP file", "253", "423", "#000000", "", "", "", "");
Tech_007Gadgets[i-1].body = "<br><b><p style=\"font-size: 12pt; color: red\">2006: Bond gets a tracking chip</p></b><p></BR>\"Ow,\" Bond says when his bosses inject a tracking chip into his arm so they can keep an eye on his whereabouts in 2006's \"Casino Royale.\" Far-fetched? Not at all. Several years ago a company called VeriChip started selling implantable identification devices about the size of a grain of rice for humans. When a scanner is passed over the chip, it reveals the user's unique verification number, allowing doctors to access medical records. The technology is considered potentially life-saving for wandering patients such as those with Alzheimer's disease, though a 2007 Associated Press report raised concerns about the product's safety. This photo shows the implant.";

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