keyclone
03-26-2009, 02:27 PM
MIT Graphene Multiplier May Push CPUs to 1,000 GHz
‘MIT researchers have devised a graphene signal multiplier that produces a clean signal with low power.’ -
The computer industry is involved in a never-ending quest for the highest possible performance from computer components and other electrical devices. Over the years, there have been many advances that have boosted the computational power of computer systems from increasing the number of transistors to adding multiple processing
cores.
Researchers across the world are hard at work on building microprocessors and other electrical components using a material discovered in 2004 called graphene. A group of researchers at MIT announced on March 19 that new findings made could lead to much faster microprocessors ('http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2009/graphene-palacios-0319.html') in the future. The new findings could lead to cell phones and other communications equipment that can transmit data much faster than devices available today.
read the rest here (link ('http://www.insidetech.com/news/articles/4375-mit-graphene-multiplier-may-push-cpus-to-1000-ghz?referral=IT_nlet_20090326_members') )
--
maybe then i can 5-box at full res, full detail, and 100 fps for each client
:D
‘MIT researchers have devised a graphene signal multiplier that produces a clean signal with low power.’ -
The computer industry is involved in a never-ending quest for the highest possible performance from computer components and other electrical devices. Over the years, there have been many advances that have boosted the computational power of computer systems from increasing the number of transistors to adding multiple processing
cores.
Researchers across the world are hard at work on building microprocessors and other electrical components using a material discovered in 2004 called graphene. A group of researchers at MIT announced on March 19 that new findings made could lead to much faster microprocessors ('http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2009/graphene-palacios-0319.html') in the future. The new findings could lead to cell phones and other communications equipment that can transmit data much faster than devices available today.
read the rest here (link ('http://www.insidetech.com/news/articles/4375-mit-graphene-multiplier-may-push-cpus-to-1000-ghz?referral=IT_nlet_20090326_members') )
--
maybe then i can 5-box at full res, full detail, and 100 fps for each client
:D