The company, along with others, is pursuing a new paradigm for cramming more transistors on chips—building up.
In the same way that a pillow filled with pebbles is harder to get smooth than one stuffed with sand, chip makers are finding it harder to make transistors behave predictably as they shrink. Here, the ...
1don MSN
Current 4 nm GPUs cost megabucks, so the idea of IBM's new sub-1 nm technology is very scary
Moore's Law might not be dead, but it is kinda zombified.
Morning Overview on MSN
IBM packed 100 billion transistors onto one chip, promising big speed gains and far less power
IBM has pushed transistor density to a new extreme, fitting nearly 100 billion transistors onto a single chip roughly the ...
Researchers built a four-atom-thick transistor combining an atomically thin semiconductor and molecular crystal. It uses charge localization and works at room temperature. (Nanowerk News) The ability ...
Electronic devices like computers and smartphones are continually getting thinner and smaller. One of the challenges to thinner and smaller devices in the future is reducing the size of the internal ...
PORTLAND, Ore. — Electronics devices using ferroelectric transistors would turn on instantly without the need to boot from flash or hard-disk memories. Such ferroelectric transistors would likely use ...
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