A Planet Analog article, “ 2N3904: Why use a 60-year-old transistor? ” by Bill Schweber, inspired some interest in this old ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
MIT demonstrates magnetic transistor with 10x stronger switching and built-in memory
MIT engineers built a magnetic transistor from chromium sulfur bromide, promising smaller, faster electronics with built-in ...
MIT researchers with colleagues from the University of Chemistry and Technology in Prague have used 2D CrSBr, a van der Waals ...
MIT researchers have now replaced silicon with a magnetic semiconductor, creating a magnetic transistor that could enable ...
Researchers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and University of Chemistry and Technology Prague created a ...
A new breakthrough could make chips smaller, faster, and use less energy even for cold quantum devices. Find out more!
A new magnetic transistor switches current ten times more strongly than silicon chips while operating at lower energy, and ...
In this week’s edition of The Prototype, using quantum computers for bond trading, a transistor revolution, the benefits of a ...
MIT engineers developed a magnetic transistor that could lead to smaller, faster, and more energy-efficient electronics, using a magnetic semiconductor material.
Reports from TSMC indicate that next-gen process nodes might be up to 50% more expensive than the current generation, and this could make GPUs cost more, too.
A single organic device reconfigures as transistor, rectifier and logic gate, offering compact circuits with higher ...
Live Science on MSN
Scientists unveil world's first quantum computer built with regular silicon chips
A London-based startup has created the world's first full-stack quantum computer using a standard silicon CMOS chip ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results