Molecular Clusters That Can Retain Charge Could Revolutionize Computer Memory
jfruh writes:Computing devices have been gobbling up more and more memory, but storage tech has been hitting its limits, creating a bottleneck. Now researchers in Spain and Scotland have reported a breakthrough in working with metal-oxide clusters that can retain their charge. These molecules could serve as the basis for RAM and flash memory that will be leagues smaller than existing components (abstract).
I do not think that word means what you think it means.
I eat only the real part of complex carbohydrates.
Spintronics is a quantum thing - a way of specifying more information in each electron. As such, it's very difficult to work with.
This is more similar to carbon nanotubes. They're a new thing, which could be very useful, if only you could cheaply and efficiently manufacture them and put them in the proper places on a chip. However:
So using these may be more realistic than carbon nanotubes!
(T>t && O(n)--) == sqrt(666)