Live Science on MSN
IBM reveals world's first sub-1nm computer chip
IBM's NanoStack architecture has led to transistors that deliver 50% better performance and 70% less energy versus today's ...
IBM has developed the blueprint for producing a processor using sub-1-nanometer (nm) chip technology, outdoing its own ...
What exactly does 130nm, 90nm, and 65nm represent when talking about cpu fabrication processes? Well, I assume transistor size, but are all the transistors the same size? Or is this the smallest or ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Ultra-thin MoS₂ computer packs 1,400 transistors onto one chip
The rapid advancement and diffusion of artificial intelligence (AI) systems, such as the machine learning models underpinning ...
Montecito exceeds the billion-transistor count because the Itanium-2 processor architecture is itself complex — a 64-bit processor intended for server applications — and the Montecito model ...
Apple today unveiled its new A14 Bionic processor with the aim of pushing ahead of other smartphone and tablet vendors on computing power and artificial intelligence processing. The new $600 iPad Air ...
Modern CPU transistor counts are enormous -- AMD announced earlier this month that a full implementation of its 7nm Epyc "Rome" CPU weighs in at 32 billion transistors. To this, Cerebras Technology ...
Intel unveils 18A-P with Power Boost dual-contact transistors, delivering 9% higher performance, 18% lower power, and ...
One of South Africa’s leading computer scientists has weighed in on the significance of the first sub-1nm chip.
The processors in today’s computers have grown tremendously in performance, capabilities and complexity over the past decade. Clock speed has skyrocketed, and size has dwindled, even as the number of ...
These prototype processors made from atomically thin materials offer a glimpse into a post-silicon-transistor future, but scaling challenges remain. Read the paper: A complementary two-dimensional ...
Researchers at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) in Seoul have created a transistor that is switched by magnetism, rather than electricity. This could lead to computer chips that ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results