The Good, the Bad, and the Weird: 3 Directions for Moore’s Law

GlobalFoundries has dropped out, TSMC is thriving, and DARPA sees another way forwardul.listicle.SerifType { font-family: "Georgia", serif; margin: 1em 0; padding: 0; list-style-type: none; list-item-decoration: none; } h3.listicle-item-hed a { color: #d80404!important; } Photo: TSMC Silicon Gold Mine: Unlike GlobalFoundries, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. sees profit in following Moore’s Law.…

November 1918: The First World War Ends

The war began the industrial revolution of warfare, of which the single most important development was the synthesis of ammonia Photo-illustration: Stuart Bradford Few 100-year anniversaries resonate so loudly as November’s marking of the end of the world’s first truly global armed conflict. The war’s unspeakable carnage scarred the memory of…

The IoT Needs a New Set of Eyes

Cameras for the Internet of Things will have to be fast, cheap, and powerful—and might not look like cameras at all Photo-illustration: Stuart Bradford The rise of computer vision has given us robot chefs and cameras that detect gas flares in fuel production. It’s also led to an increase in connected…

3D Printed Graphene Aerogel Offers Highest-Ever Capacitance for a Supercapacitor

3D printing technique could lead to revolution in fabrication of supercapacitorsAfter what has seemed a bit of a lapse in the timeline of their development, graphene-enabled supercapacitors may be poised to make a significant advances. Researchers at the University of California (UC) Santa Cruz and Lawrence Livermore Laboratory (LLNL) have…