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Scientists from the University of Glasgow in Scotland have developed a nanotech switch, the size of a molecule, which could herald the 500,000 GB iPod.
The scientists reckon that the breakthrough means an iPod could increase its capacity by no less than 150,000 times the current storage...
Read More | 24 Days Ago | Comments: 4 | Last Comment: 22 Days Ago
A rather interesting article in the EETimes suggests that the holy grail of artificial intelligence, the ability to pass the Turing Test, may become a reality later this year courtesy of a collaboration between IBM and the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
The Turing Test was first described by...
Read More | Mar 16th, 2008 | Comments: 1 | Last Comment: 21 Days Ago
Anyone with an interest in the history of computing will know that the first mechanical computer was invented by one Charles Babbage, British mathematician and visionary. If you happen to be in the vicinity of the Science Museum in London you can even see a working difference engine, something...
Read More | Mar 11th, 2008
Scientists at IBM have finally managed to get around the problem of electrical interference that prevented signals from working correctly while using the carbon mesh material of grapheme. It means that they can now get on with the job in hand of building nanoscale transistors according to this...
Read More | Mar 11th, 2008
How small can a laser get? Good question, and according to the physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) the answer is very small indeed, one single quantum dot small perhaps.
To put this into some perspective, a typical microdisk laser of the type currently used in...
Read More | Apr 14th, 2007 | Comments: 1 | Last Comment: Apr 15th, 2007
Some would say blue, given the amount of sex that can be found on the web. Others might go for black, thinking along the lines of increasing online crime. To many the whole idea of Internet technology is a grey area. But, my friends, thanks to researchers at the Chinese Academy of Science, the...
Read More | Jan 6th, 2007 | Comments: 2 | Last Comment: Jan 6th, 2007