ZME Science on MSN
Computer in a thread: A fiber chip as thin as human hair could turn clothes into smart devices
Your next computer might not be a phone or a watch, it could be the shirt on your back. A team of researchers at Fudan ...
Semiconductor chips that process light rather than electricity could boost processing speeds and reduce energy use.
It's been a long time since Alice Charton got a good look at a human face. There are plenty of people moving through her world, of course—her husband, her friends, her doctors, her neighbors—but ...
Live Science on MSN
'Earthquake on a chip' uses 'phonon' lasers to make mobile devices more efficient
A new technology that generates tiny, earthquake-like effects could shake up the wireless device industry with smaller, less ...
Researchers at Fudan University have developed a flexible, ultra-thin fiber chip with the processing power of a desktop computer.
The Maia 200 AI chip is described as an inference powerhouse — meaning it could lead AI models to apply their knowledge to ...
Computer chips drive the technologies we rely on every day, from smartphones to medical devices. Yet many chips remain vulnerable to hardware-level attacks that can compromise privacy, safety and ...
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