• Science

    HP Discovers Potential "God Particle" of Electronics

    By Posted on 4.30.2008 16 Comments

    Silicon Valley is mostly a world of practical technology—applying principles from pure science to create handy gadgets. But today, Hewlett Packard announced a new electrical component born of theoretical physics. The device, a nanoscale component called a "memristor," requires no power to retain data, which it can store more densely than a hard drive and access about as fast as a computers RAM memory—potentially allowing it to replace both components in the future.

    4.30.2008 at 02:16pm - Comment by CompGuy

    Injecting large amounts of high speed storage directly into computational logic will drastically alter computer design. It'll change all aspects of hardware/software design methodology and the companies that do it. If this comes to pass it will start a third era in computer design. The first being the invention of the transistor, the second being the design of the microprocessor. I can't wait.

  • DIY

    Serial Ports For All

    By Posted on 2.15.2008 3 Comments

    It never fails; you want to upgrade your aging PC, but you still need that archaic RS-232C serial port for controlling your Parallax Boe-Bot, using that serial mouse, getting online via your trusted Hayes ACCURA V.90 modem, and, even, programming your Pfaff 2140 sewing machine. Apple Boot Camp enlistees can run into a similar RS-232C port quagmire using an older Windows app on a MacBook Air.

    2.15.2008 at 09:20pm - Comment by CompGuy

    These were on the market 6 months after USB was introduced. I do love SparkFun though. Do a story on some of their slick hobbyist kits and the tech subculture they service.



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