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Small miracle as Australian experts make atom-sized switch

Small Intel chips add muscle to ultra-thin laptops
San Francisco (AFP) May 24, 2010 - Intel Corporation on Monday rolled out a line of small chips designed to beef up performance and battery life in ultra-thin laptop computers. Intel Core Ultra-Low Voltage microprocessors were tailored for laptops less than an inch (2.5 centimeters) thick and weighing as little as two pounds (0.9 kilograms). "Consumers crave laptops that offer style and performance," said Intel PC Client Group vice president Mooly Eden. "Not only are laptops becoming ultra-portable, but with the new processors inside, users will see faster response times and less waiting." Intel said the processors also reduce power consumption, resulting in "great battery life."
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) May 24, 2010
Australian scientists Monday unveiled the world's smallest electronic switch measuring just a few atoms, which will shrink microchips and revolutionise computing speeds.

The seven-atom transistor, measuring four-billionths of a metre and embedded in a single silicone crystal, is the first step in a "quantum computer" which will make calculations millions of times faster than existing devices.

Lead researcher Michelle Simmons said the technology has major implications for code-breaking, financial transactions and weather forecasting, which involve testing enormous numbers of possible scenarios.

"You'll be able to solve problems that would take longer than the life of the universe with a classical computer," she told AFP.

The University of New South Wales' Centre for Quantum Computer Technology (CQCT) and the University of Wisconsin-Madison created the transistor by manipulating atoms using a special microscope.

The breakthrough promises to reduce the size of microchips, which contain billions of transistors, by up to 100 times, simultaneously accelerating processing speeds "exponentially."

"Australia's first computer was commissioned in 1949. It took up an entire room and you could hold its components in your hands," Simmons said.

"Today you can carry a computer around in your hand and many of its components are more than 1000 times smaller than the width of a human hair.

"Now we have just demonstrated the world's first electronic device in silicon systematically created on the scale of individual atoms."

Simmons said commercial applications for the technology were about five years away. Her team is now working towards the first ultra-fast quantum computer, predicted to be the size of a current silicone chip.



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CHIP TECH
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