Polymer Optical Transmitters Go Even Faster
Whispers_in_the_dark writes "Scientific American is running
an article on how a new type of polymer sandwich could be used in the future to push lightwave encoding of data up to around 200 GHz instead of the 10 GHz that is the upper bound today. The best part is that the new deviceswill be cheaper to produce than the current ones, after mass production presumably."
The elimination of signal interference is a primary concern in quantum systems. I wonder if this polymer fiber can be used as a secure Heisenberg channel and if so at what speeds can we expect reliable operation?
It sucks how University libraries recieve Science(tm) two weeks late.
This is slightly offtopic, but still about the same type of thing. I was thinking about fiber optics the other day and talking about them in my E&M class (they added optics as an extra unit). We were trying to figure out how they "fix" fiber optic cables if they break? I looked around online and found out that they have to "pump up" the signal every half mile or so I think it was, so do they just go back to this junction and replace the entire thing? I had always thought the cabling was more expensive than copper but aparrently it is cheaper. All of these technologies are interesting but I still think that the future is in wireless technology. As our cities and states get more developed, nobody wants to go back through and lay a bunch of polymer cabling or fiber optics to have high speed internet. It has gotta be wireless. Easy deployment, cheap, etc :)
Lucent/Bell Labs is well known for publishing science fiction as scientific findings to pump up thier stock. Is that going to change just because J. Hendrick Schon doesn't work there any more? I don't think so. Don't rush out and buy any stock in Lucent because you read this article.
How ya like dat?
is it just me, or has anyone else also got used to calculating datatrancfer speed in bits rather than Herz??
if i had 0.1 GHz ethernet... then would i also have 1.4 GBit CPU instead of that oldish 32 bit i586 alike?