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> Fabric protectors (like Scotchgard) and water repellants have been
> available
> for ages (that's why people wax their cars), nothing "nano", just regular
> technology marketed under a hype branding. Also, not all (red) liquids are
> adhesive - depends on surface tension and cohesivity (mercury won't
> "stick",
> for instance).
Yep, it really does depend on what liquid they used. I used to have a set
of marker pens for measuring the stickyness of surfaces (I forget what the
scale was, but they were numbered 1-50 or something). The 1 was like
mercury, it would stick to nothing (not even normal paper) and would always
form blobs. The 20-30 would mark and stick to pretty much anything (like a
permanent marker). We were using them when we had problems with print not
sticking very well to plastic wrap. They could have easily used a liquid
like I had in my marker pen #1 and it would pretty much "run off" of
anything you put in it.
One of the most interesting uses of "nanotech" would be to keep your car
windscreen clean, without the need for wipers or a cloth to get off splatted
flies.
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