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InternetNews July 17, 2006 David Needle |
HP's Tiny Chip Could Have Huge Impact HP's Labs unveiled a tiny, wireless chip today that could make audio and visual information as well as basic text information far more broadly accessible. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2009 Mark Anderson |
Quirks of RFID Memory Make for Cheap Security Scheme On-board SRAM produces unique chip fingerprint and random numbers needed for encryption |
InternetNews April 4, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
Privacilla: RFID For Goods, Not People A conservative think tank came out against the U.S. proposal to place radio frequency identification (RFID) chips in all citizens' passports. |
The Motley Fool October 11, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
HP Eyes a Small Sweet Spot The "Memory Spot" data chip could lead to some interesting applications and future revenue streams investors like to see. |
InternetNews October 17, 2006 David Needle |
HP Taps RFID For Tracking IT Resources Research project is designed to help IT managers track data center assets. |
PC Magazine September 7, 2004 Karen Jones |
New Frontiers for RFID Tags Depending on how closely you guard your privacy, RFID is either a benevolent new technology or Big Brother waiting to pounce. |
The Motley Fool October 17, 2007 Dan Bloom |
Broadcom Leaps Ahead Broadcom's new chip promises to sharply reduce the cost of advance mobile phones. |
InternetNews May 3, 2010 |
Apple Gives a Boost to Chip Stocks Strong consumer sales and a day off from European debt fears make for a good day for stocks. |
The Motley Fool February 20, 2007 Jack Uldrich |
Hitachi's RFID Takes a Powder Dust-sized RFID tag technology raises interesting possibilities. Is now the time for investors to buy in? Probably, but questions remain. |
CIO January 1, 2003 Ben Worthen |
Bar Codes on Steroids Radio Frequency identification (RFID) tags are like bar codes on steroids; they're to traditional SKUs what Robocop was to your ordinary cop on the beat. |
InternetNews July 8, 2010 |
Semiconductor Market Finally Settling Down: IDC After the wild gyrations of 2009, some sense of normalcy is returning to the chip market as certain segments begin to grow. |
InternetNews February 6, 2006 Susan Kuchinskas |
The New Chip-erati Are RFID implants geek-chic or a tool of the military industrial complex? |
InternetNews February 28, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
Coming Soon: The Credit Card Cell Phone Start-up ViVOTech wants to put your credit cards in your cell phone so you have a little less plastic to carry around. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2009 Sally Adee |
Rambus Aims for New Ultralow-Power DRAM New mobile-memory initiative aimed at high-bandwidth, low-power smart phones. |
PC World March 23, 2007 Erik Larkin |
New Credit Cards Leak Personal Info Some cards equipped with RFID chips send out names and account numbers. |
Chemistry World February 16, 2011 Harriet Brewerton |
Remote powered lab on a chip Wen Qiao at the University of California, San Diego, made a microfluidic chip that can be powered with a commercially available radio frequency transmitter for electrophoresis experiments. |
The Motley Fool August 29, 2005 Tarek Sultani |
HP's Wager on the Future Hewlett-Packard's move into RFID technology, it's share buyback, and its new leadership make it a contender among fierce competitors. |
Wired May 2006 Annalee Newitz |
The RFID Hacking Underground They can steal your smartcard, lift your passport, jack your car, even clone the chip in your arm. And you won't feel a thing. 5 tales from the RFID-hacking underground. |
The Motley Fool May 9, 2011 Anders Bylund |
Cirrus Logic's Tormentor Revealed! Spoiler: It's exactly who you thought it was, but now we have some proof. |
The Motley Fool October 14, 2004 Tom Taulli |
Tracking Us Applied Digital's human implantable RFID chip, VeriChip, was cleared by the Food and Drug Administration for medical uses in the U.S. On the news, the stock surged 68% to $3.57. |
The Motley Fool August 18, 2010 Eric Jhonsa |
Time to Start Worrying About Chip Stocks? The July semiconductor earnings numbers were great, but warning signs also emerged. |
CIO June 15, 2004 Ben Worthen |
RFID Laws on Deck With widespread adoption of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags under way, privacy advocates are pushing for regulations on these tiny computer chips that can track information about the products they are attached to. |
CIO July 1, 2005 Thomas Wailgum |
Is Big Brother Coming to Your Wallet? Despite privacy worries, the march is on toward putting RFIDs in individuals' wallets, whether or not they want them. Whenever companies decide to deploy RFIDs containing personal data, CIOs will have to figure out what's going to be done with the data. |
InternetNews October 23, 2006 Roy Mark |
U.S. E-Passports Hitting Market Four years in the making, RFID-embedded passports meeting milestones. |
Salon.com September 13, 2000 Katharine Mieszkowski |
A chip named Fido It's the American dream all over again -- Pet Chips are the new Pet Rocks. |
The Motley Fool April 16, 2004 Steven Mallas |
PCs Boot Up Shipments of personal computers are up strongly. Find out what companies an investor should be looking for. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2009 Guizzo & Santo |
The Runners-up: More Earthshaking Chips These 13 great little chips didn't make our list -- mainly because we ran out of space in print. And, well, one isn't even a chip |
The Motley Fool August 30, 2004 Rich Duprey |
Profiting From Moore's Law Intel develops a new chip that roughly doubles the number of transistors on a chip. Whether it's in the chip makers themselves, or in the picks and shovels of the industry, investors stand to make big profits from tiny chips. |
The Motley Fool September 6, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
Intel Chips Away at Its Workforce 11,000 pink slips could halt Intel's sagging fortunes. The massive downsizing is unfortunate for the Intel employees who will lose their jobs, but the best way for Intel to get back in the game is to chip away at its workforce. |
PC Magazine June 16, 2008 Jason Cross |
Nvidia GeForce GTX 260 They're huge, expensive, and incredibly fast. Nvidia's new GPU architecture and products redefine "high-end." |
IEEE Spectrum June 2008 Neil Savage |
Chip for Future Eye Implants Runs on Picowatts, Thanks to New Deep-Sleep Tech Chip could run for a year on millimeter-sized battery. |
The Motley Fool September 24, 2004 Bill Mann |
Where'd the Term 'Blue Chip' Come From? Even at the turn of the century, there existed an unmistakable allusion between the stock market and gambling. What's funny, though, is that the only "chip" designation was for companies deemed to be the safest, well-known companies that had histories of making dividend payments. |
The Motley Fool August 2, 2010 Carl Bagh |
Looming Threat for Visa, MasterCard From AT&T, Verizon Now your smartphone really can do everything -- including paying the bills! |
The Motley Fool June 15, 2006 Rich Duprey |
Chipping Away at Chip Industry Turmoil A sea change in semiconductor industry technology can create opportunities for some investors. |
InternetNews July 7, 2006 Erin Joyce |
The RFID Growth Conundrum Why isn't the FDA pushing harder for RFID to combat counterfeit drugs? The answer is not so simple. |
InternetNews December 11, 2007 |
Toshiba Joins Solid-State Notebook Drive Push Chip maker Toshiba Corp. said on Monday it would make flash-based solid state drives for notebook PCs, as it seeks to create new sources of demand for flash memory chips. |
PC Magazine October 11, 2006 |
Bits & Bites v25n19 Intel and researchers have developed a silicon chip that can produce laser beams. |
PC World January 4, 2002 Joris Evers |
AMD to Release Athlon XP 2000+ Monday Rival won't let Intel's newest P4 hog the spotlight, schedules shipment of 1.67 GHz CPU... |
IEEE Spectrum November 2008 Samuel K. Moore |
Multicore Is Bad News For Supercomputers Adding cores slows data-intensive applications. |
InternetNews May 2, 2007 Clint Boulton |
Microsoft, Intel Tagged For RFID Project Determined to lead the market for RFID products, Microsoft is teaming with Intel to offer business customers a platform that will enable RFID transactions on various devices. |
Wired July 2004 Josh McHugh |
Attention, Shoppers: You Can Now Speed Straight Through Checkout Lines! Radio-frequency chips are retail nirvana. They're the end of privacy. They're the mark of the beast. Inside the tag-and-track supermarket of the future. |
Managed Care April 2002 |
More Than Just 'Chipping' Away at Problem of Uninsured Children CHIP (the Children's Health Insurance Program) continues to grow by leaps and bounds. About 4.6 million children in the U.S. received coverage through CHIP in fiscal year 2001. That's an increase of 38 percent from fiscal year 2000... |
InternetNews July 5, 2006 David Needle |
Chip Sales Up Almost 10% The Semiconductor Industry Association reported chip sales of $19.7 billion for May, a 9.4 percent hike from the $18.1 billion tallied for the same month a year ago. |
Metropolis April 2007 Belinda Lanks |
Deconstructions: Nanochip A memory chip the size of a white blood cell has profound implications for the future of computing. |
InternetNews March 26, 2008 |
Rambus a Big Winner in Chip Patent Case Royalties could amount to billions of dollars over next decade if Rambus verdict upheld. |
The Motley Fool April 21, 2005 Tim Beyers |
AMD Aims at Servers Three new 64-bit chips could give the upstart chipmaker a refreshing taste of growth. |
PC World May 28, 2002 Sumner Lemon |
AMD Opteron Off to Slow Start? Memo indicates 'low performance' in early tests of company's next-generation chip... |
Military & Aerospace Electronics September 2005 |
Column on heat issues misses the most fundamental solution Reader says recent editorial on the problem of chip heat was spot on, but missed the most fundamental solution to the problem: don't create the heat in the first place! |
This Old House Larry LeMasters |
Perfect Paint Show how your choice will really look on the wall. |
The Motley Fool February 14, 2006 Tim Beyers |
Security Gets the RFID Treatment The soon-to-go-public VeriChip makes implantable RFID devices. Chilling, you say? Even so, RFID remains big business with growth estimated to top $26 billion by 2015, up from just under $2 billion in 2005. |