IBM just unveiled the world's first sub 1-nanometer chip: 100 billion transistors. IBM also says they've produced functioning ...
The company, along with others, is pursuing a new paradigm for cramming more transistors on chips—building up.
Young’s POSTECH team publishes high-performance device in Nature, targets next-generation semiconductor industry ...
IBM Corp. today unveiled what it says is the world’s first sub-one-nanometer chip technology, a research breakthrough that it ...
IBM has developed the blueprint for producing a processor using sub-1-nanometer (nm) chip technology, outdoing its own ...
In this lesson, students search for transistor-based devices at school. They use the results of their search to explain the significance of the transistor in their lives. A transistor is a tiny device ...
“It’s not just an incremental step, it’s a meaningful leap forward,” said Jay Gambetta, director of IBM Research and IBM ...
In this lesson, students build two circuits and explore how transistors function. When Bell Labs introduced the transistor in June of 1948, a spokesman proudly announced "This cylindrical object . . .
Smaller transistors usually mean better performance and greater power efficiency. In this case, the new 7-Å devices bump up performance by 50% while improving power utilization by 70% compared to ...
Conventional silicon-based electronics are rapidly approaching a fundamental barrier. Below about five nanometers, quantum effects make their behavior unpredictable. That’s led to research into ...
IBM chooses a different path from Intel, Samsung, and TSMC ...
Rather than continuing to shrink components along a flat plane, IBM is stacking transistors vertically. That change comes as ...