Tech Xplore on MSN
Tiny thermometers offer on-chip temperature monitoring for processors
The semiconductor chips driving modern-day computer processors are covered in billions of individual transistors, each of ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Atom-thin material could help solve chip manufacturing problem
Making computer chips smaller is not just about better design. It also depends on a critical step in manufacturing called patterning, where nanoscale structures are carved into materials to form the ...
Making computer chips smaller is not just about better design. It also depends on a critical step in manufacturing called patterning, where nanoscale ...
More than a century before quantum mechanics was born, Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton stumbled onto an idea that would quietly foreshadow one of the deepest truths in physics. While ...
The podcaster, who has been on his sobriety journey for more than two decades, said what he's learned from Alcoholics Anonymous has helped him deal with the reality of how badly his kids want to be ...
Worried that your latest ask to a cloud-based AI reveals a bit too much about you? Want to know your genetic risk of disease without revealing it to the services that compute the answer? There is a ...
Google and Qualcomm have tag-teamed a serious vulnerability in the chipsets used in Android mobile devices, which has been ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Thermometer smaller than ant’s antenna detects computer chip’s temperature in seconds
Researchers at Penn State in the US have developed a microscopic, 2D-material-based thermometer designed ...
It took Apple nearly 18 years to figure it out, but here we are. The announcement of the $599 MacBook Neo ($499 for education buyers!) is the low-cost laptop Mac users have been wondering about for ...
Gradient's Renton, Wash., office space is home to 10 million sports and gaming cards, where a team of card geeks and ...
The Neo makes some big spec trade-offs to undercut the Air by $500. But how much RAM do you really need, anyway?
No one has had a Synchron brain-computer interface longer than Rodney Gorham. He’s still finding new ways to use it.
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