The Thailand floods have been making the news lately, the consequences extending to the IT sector as much as anywhere else, but Microchip, for one, is not suffering too much.
Indeed, while Western Digital and Seagate, directly or indirectly, have to face the prospect of product and component shortages, Microchip ... |
29 October 2011 06:15 GMT |
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The age of undersized computer systems seems to actually be upon us, as a team of scientists from the University of Michigan have actually created a chip measuring a single cubic millimeter.The problem with making small computer systems is that, besides the fact that they can only pack so much processing power, they... |
24 February 2011 06:58 GMT |
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A Norwegian company had the idea of creating a chip that will make sending blood analysis or cancer cell samples to the laboratory obsolete.The MicroActive project is part of the European Union's 6th IST Framework Program, to develop an instrument for molecular diagnostics that can be used in the doctors’ ... |
13 December 2010 06:47 GMT |
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Don't know about you, but I for one eagerly await the times when we won't require to recharge our devices anymore, all the necessary power needed for them to function being zapped right trough the air, but until that day comes we will have to make do with the Powercast and Microchip wireless power developme... |
28 October 2010 04:14 GMT |
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Microcontroller and analog semiconductor specialist Microchip Technology Inc. announced the addition of TechEn. Inc. to its list of Medical Design Partner Specialists, which already included more than 14 members. Microchip plans to leverage its new partners' expertise in the areas of low power medical electronic... |
9 December 2009 07:50 GMT |
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Worldwide provider of microcontrollers and analog semiconductors Microchip Technology Inc. was revealed today to have received no less than three different awards in three different countries for its technology, which excels in the area of low-power consumption. Microchip's portfolio is comprised of products tha... |
4 December 2009 06:50 GMT |
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In 1965, Gordon E. Moore, co-founder of Intel, predicted that the processing power of computers will double every two years, meaning that the number of transistors placed inexpensively of a microchip will increase exponentially. Moore's law, as it is currently known, describes pretty accurately the computing adv... |
14 January 2008 07:20 GMT |
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