Researchers at the University of Toronto have created a semiconductor device that outperforms today’s conventional chips — and they made it simply by painting a liquid onto a piece of glass.
The Olive Oil Computer
Researchers at the University of Toronto have created a semiconductor device that outperforms today’s conventional chips — and they made it simply by painting a liquid onto a piece of glass. Nanotechwire.com Related Posts:Farewell Benedict Kiely (The Sigla Blog)Hackers crack new biometric passportsStones, Bones and BeckettTributes to Two Great American PoetsStanford prof sues James Joyce’s [...]