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IEEE Spectrum February 2005 Singh & Thakur |
Chip Making's Singular Future Beleaguered chip makers are counting on single-wafer manufacturing, which makes ICs on one wafer at a time, to cut costs and get chips to market faster. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2012 David Schneider |
A Faster Fast Fourier Transform New algorithm crunches sparse data with speed |
IEEE Spectrum September 2010 Schow et al. |
Get on the Optical Bus IBM's light-powered links overcome the greatest speed bump in supercomputing: interconnect bandwidth |
IEEE Spectrum March 2006 Seema Singh |
Big Players in Chip Design Buy Into India India's position suddenly seems so strong in both market potential and engineering resources that it could soon be driving some of the major global developments in chip design. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2008 Sally Adee |
The Hunt for the Kill Switch Are chip makers building electronic trapdoors in key military hardware? The Pentagon is making its biggest effort yet to find out |
IEEE Spectrum February 2009 Schneider & Ross |
Antennas for the New Airwaves This month's planned shutdown of analog broadcast TV in the United States will bring antenna technology back into the spotlight. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2012 Tekla S. Perry |
John L. Hennessy: Risk Taker Stanford University's president predicts the death of the lecture hall as university education moves online |
IEEE Spectrum March 2007 Mouli & Carriker |
Future Fab If a billion transistors on a postage-stamp-size chip impress you, consider the fabrication facilities that put them there. How software is helping Intel go nano -- and beyond. |
Salon.com September 5, 2002 David Appell |
Math = beauty + truth / (really hard) Explaining what the winners of the world's top awards in mathematics actually do isn't as easy as adding 2+2. But we'll give it a try. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2008 Christensen et al. |
The New Economics of Semiconductor Manufacturing The Toyota Production System has been applied to chip making. The electronics industry may never be the same. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics March 2005 Tom Adams |
The shrinking-package approach to low-cost, robust sensor arrays One potential benefit of shrinking the sizes of microelectronics components is the potential to scatter a large number of sensors arranged as a distributed array over an area for surveillance. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2012 Rachel Courtland |
3-D Chips Grow Up In 2012, 3-D chips will help extend Moore's Law - and move beyond it. |
The Motley Fool December 11, 2006 Will Frankenhoff |
Taiwan Semiconductor: Making Profits Chip by Chip Taiwan Semiconductor should benefit from its leadership position in the semiconductor foundry sector and its attractive valuation versus its peers. The company also pays a dividend of roughly 3%. Investors, take note. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2009 Adams & Gurnett |
The Coming CMOS Imaging Revolution CMOS image sensors (common in video and digital cameras) are undergoing a qualitative change that will provide a stunning range of new products for consumers, as well as for military and aerospace users. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2013 Joachim N. Burghartz |
Make Way for Flexible Silicon Chips We need them because thin, pliable organic semiconductors are too slow to serve in tomorrow's chips. Seamless integration of computing into everyday objects isn't quite here yet. |
IndustryWeek August 1, 2003 John Teresko |
Fearing R&D's Flight Research and development is an increasingly crucial factor in sustaining the competitiveness of U.S. manufacturing amid rapid globalization. Yet experts warn that strategic missteps endanger U.S. technological preeminence. |
The Motley Fool July 12, 2006 Dan Bloom |
Ultratech Yields Bright Future The company is serious about helping chip makers achieve higher efficiency. The technology definitely looks interesting, but investors may want to wait. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics February 2010 Chris Sanders |
3D IC Integration is Poised to Drive the Next Generation of Military Imaging Sensors As military and aerospace design engineers develop imaging systems for the wired battlefield of tomorrow, they face the challenge of providing high-resolution imaging arrays that are light, small, and cheap. |
BusinessWeek January 23, 2006 Stephen Baker |
Math Will Rock Your World A generation ago, quants turned finance upside down. Now they're mapping out ad campaigns and building new businesses from mountains of personal data. |
Inc. April 1, 2002 Kate O'Sullivan |
I'll Take Manhattan A Silicon Valley start-up combats semiconductor sprawl by figuring out a way to build its circuits up rather than out.... |
The Motley Fool December 22, 2005 Dan Bloom |
Does ADE Pass the Test? ADE looks like a promising small cap in the chip-equipment sector. |
Salon.com November 13, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Silicon hogs A new study tars microchip manufacturing as wasteful and inefficient. Whatever happened to high tech's squeaky-clean image? |
IEEE Spectrum March 2012 Robert W. Lucky |
Is Math Still Relevant? The queen of the sciences may someday lose its royal status |