News tagged with architecture
Bell Labs breaks optical transmission record, 100 Petabit per second kilometer barrier
Sep 29, 2009 |
4.9 / 5 (27) |
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Alcatel-Lucent today announced that scientists in Bell Labs, the company’s research arm, have set a new optical transmission record of more than 100 Petabits per second.kilometer (equivalent to 100 million Gigabits per second.kilometer). ...
Researchers create all-electric spintronics
Oct 27, 2009 |
5 / 5 (21) |
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A multidisciplinary team of UC researchers is the first to find an innovative and novel way to control an electron's spin orientation using purely electrical means.
New radio chip mimics human ear, could enable universal radio (w/Video)
Jun 03, 2009 |
4.1 / 5 (23) |
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(PhysOrg.com) -- MIT engineers have built a fast, ultra-broadband, low-power radio chip, modeled on the human inner ear, that could enable wireless devices capable of receiving cell phone, Internet, radio ...
Direct recording shows brain signal persists even in dreamless sleep
Sep 30, 2008 |
4.6 / 5 (19) |
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Neuroscientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have taken one of the first direct looks at one of the human brain's most fundamental "foundations": a brain signal that never switches off and may ...
IBM Scientists Effectively Eliminate Wear at the Nanoscale
Sep 07, 2009 |
4.4 / 5 (14) |
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(PhysOrg.com) -- IBM scientists have demonstrated a promising and practical method that effectively eliminates the mechanical wear in the nanometer-sharp tips used in scanning probe-based techniques. This discovery can potentially ...
Chips with everything
Technology / Computer Sciences
Feb 24, 2009 |
4.4 / 5 (11) |
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(PhysOrg.com) -- While the technology to make computer chips smaller and cheaper progresses each year, the fundamental structure of the chip - the computer architecture - has remained the same for decades. ...
Science at the petascale: Roadrunner supercomputer results unveiled
Oct 26, 2009 |
4.6 / 5 (10) |
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The world's fastest supercomputer, Roadrunner, at Los Alamos National Laboratory has completed its initial "shakedown" phase doing accelerated petascale computer modeling and simulations of a variety of unclassified, fundamental ...
Data Travels Six Times Faster in the Clouds
Technology / Computer Sciences
Feb 26, 2009 |
4.8 / 5 (8) |
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(PhysOrg.com) -- The National Center for Data Mining (NCDM) at the University of Chicago at Illinois established a cloud computing system that can quickly compile data from widely geographically distributed ...
The secret to chimp strength
Mar 30, 2009 |
4.4 / 5 (7) |
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February's brutal chimpanzee attack, during which a pet chimp inflicted devastating injuries on a Connecticut woman, was a stark reminder that chimps are much stronger than humans—as much as four-times stronger, some researchers ...
Cloud computing: a new horizon
Apr 16, 2009 |
4.4 / 5 (7) |
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The outlook is bleak for laptops, hard drives and desktops - clouds are on the horizon and could change the way we use computers forever. For some, the ‘cloud’ is just the latest technological craze, but for ...
Archaeologists unearth Nero's revolving banquet hall
Other Sciences / Archaeology & Fossils
Oct 07, 2009 |
3.9 / 5 (7) |
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Archaeologists have unveiled the remains of a revolving banquet room built by the Roman emperor Nero, who ruled between 54 and 68 BC and was famed for his depraved and extravagant lifestyle, a statement said ...
First Details on a Future Intel Design Codenamed 'Larrabee'
Aug 04, 2008 |
3.7 / 5 (7) |
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Intel Corporation is presenting a paper at the SIGGRAPH 2008 industry conference in Los Angeles on Aug. 12 that describes features and capabilities of its first-ever forthcoming "many-core" blueprint or architecture codenamed ...
Researchers save electricity with low-power processors and flash memory
Oct 14, 2009 |
3.3 / 5 (8) |
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Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and Intel Labs Pittsburgh (ILP) have combined low-power, embedded processors typically used in netbooks with flash memory to create a server architecture that is fast, but far more ...
Visualizing the Aztecs
Technology / Computer Sciences
Sep 23, 2009 |
5 / 5 (5) |
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(PhysOrg.com) -- Anyone who has visited the ancient ruins of great civilizations can appreciate the difficulty of visualizing the buildings at their peak. Today's visitor to the British Museum can see structures ...
Nero's rotating banquet hall unveiled in Rome
Other Sciences / Archaeology & Fossils
Sep 29, 2009 |
5 / 5 (5) |
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(AP) -- Archaeologists on Tuesday unveiled what they think are the remains of Roman emperor Nero's extravagant banquet hall, a circular space that rotated day and night to imitate the Earth's movement and ...


