Is this real? Does anyone have any more details?
Cheers
Is this real? Does anyone have any more details?
Cheers
-- Syd
On a sunny day (Tue, 09 Jun 2015 12:20:59 +0100) it happened Syd Rumpo wrote in :
Simple test: Where to buy th 1 GB non volatile nanoano RAM?
Negative.
It is an investor scam until the sjips are on ebay and actually work.
They've been announcing this for years. The idea is to physically move the tubes to connect or not. Seems insane to me.
-- John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc picosecond timing laser drivers and controllers jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com http://www.highlandtechnology.com
On Tue, 09 Jun 2015 12:20:59 +0100, Syd Rumpo Gave us:
It is under the veil of a graphene blanket. :-)
On Tue, 09 Jun 2015 07:18:18 -0700, John Larkin Gave us:
An LCD was a physical manipulation of crystals. How can you be so in the dark about micro-manipulations?
The speed is the thing here. Too slow = no go.
Nothing moves in an LCD.
Or too high an error rate. Imagine tapping one of those things.
-- John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc picosecond timing laser drivers and controllers jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com http://www.highlandtechnology.com
On Tue, 09 Jun 2015 08:22:48 -0700, John Larkin Gave us:
You ain't real bright. Press against your old laptop screen and watch the colors sway where the pressure was applied. Then think again.
Look up twisted nematic field effect.
Another "technology of the future" from HP labs--
...just like their memristor work a few years ago
...or the Champagne optical switch from a few years earlier
...and FERAM from about the same time as Champagne
all these are interesting technologies, they just haven't made it to the big time yet
on the other hand, the fbar duplexer is gangbusters, and another group invented what became IEEE-1588, the precision time protocol.
Which are now available as samples ($$$):
Don't know about it myself;
NVRAMs and MCUs with integrated FeRAM are commercially available, and have been for some time. Great for embedded systems where you need the read-write speed and rewrite lifetime, and don't mind the added cost (the extra process steps and reduced cell density make FeRAM relatively expensive compared to SRAM).
For those who haven't been watching, perhaps. :)
Tim
-- Seven Transistor Labs, LLC Electrical Engineering Consultation and Contract Design Website: http://seventransistorlabs.com
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