IBM Creates World's Smallest 3-D Map
schliz writes "IBM scientists have created the smallest 3-D map of the earth, so small that 1,000 maps could fit on a grain of salt (YouTube video from IBM). The 500K-pixel map was created in 2 minutes 23 seconds. Using a tiny, heated silicon tip, the technique reached a resolution of 15nm — comparable to the 10nm achievable by the more complex electron beam lithography. The researchers believe that smaller resolutions are feasible. Potential applications range from fast prototyping for CMOS nanoelectronics to fabricating shape-matching templates for self-assembling nano-rods or nano-tubes, IBM says. The researchers also produced a billion-to-one scale model of the Matterhorn." This is very much a laboratory technique at the moment, at least five years from commercial use.
>> at least 5 years from commercial use.
http://xkcd.com/678/
That's going to be a PITA to fold.
Ah miniature maps. The next big thing.
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beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his mind he dreams himself your master
Perhaps the Earth we live on is in actuality someone's really tiny 3D map.
I'll believe it when I see it.
a 3D map made of pixels created with a physical needle? what the hell does that mean? is this a physical map, or just information? what is a "pixel" in a 3D map? do they mean a voxel? or are pixels a unit of discrete physical space now? (3D physical space?). Somebody got their concepts all mixed up I think.
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Stay tuned for some shock and awe coming right up after this messages!
Professor Slartibartfast is particularly proud of his glacier work with this model.
Steven Wright has claimed that he has a 1:1 map of the United States. He keeps it spread out across the country because it's a bitch to fold.
Welcome to the Internet, where you can take a look and see for yourself with just a single click.