Melting Microchip Defects May Extend Moore's Law
schliz lets us know about research out of Princeton on melting away defects on microchips using a laser. The new technique, termed Self-Perfection by Liquefaction (SPEL), was published in the May 4 issue of Nature Nanotechnology. Researchers have traditionally approached chip defects by trying to improve the microchip fabrication process, but this eventually reaches fundamental physical limits to do with random behavior of electrons and photons. By focussing on fixing defects, the new method enables more precise shaping of microchip components, and engineers expect to dramatically improve chip quality without increasing fabrication cost. The before-and-after images are remarkable. Here's a diagram of how the process works.
Whew yeah, those are amazing. World-changing, even.
What am I looking at?
Where do the frikin' sharks come in to it?
Is crushing a suspect's child's testicles illegal?
John Yoo: "No, [if] the President thinks he needs to do that."
Scientists really need to stop using lasers to fix microchips and start using them for something practical.
For instance, death rays.
How much funding do these people get ?
... the original was bigger than 162 x 169 pixels also ;-)
It's obvious they've just used the BBC testcard and Photoshopped out the girl, clown and blackboard.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/classic/classic/images/640/testcard.jpg
Stands out a mile, obvious fake
They spelled liquifaction correctly.
Finally, the CS way of developing is extending to other areas.
Soon architects will quickly make ten buildings without much previous study, then sell those who don't fall in the first two weeks with the promise that if some fall in the first five years, they'll release a v2.0 shaped as the ones still standing.
I can almost see the changelog:
"v1.5.1142 - The coming of winter discovered a weakness against rain in paper roof. New ice roof installed."
What about CowboyAnnealing?