
Today's NPR Talk of the Nation Science Friday radio program discussed the recent Memristor advances for the non-Electrical Engineer: "The possibility of such a circuit element, known as the "memristor," was first described in 1971, but no one was able to find a device with the properties of that missing element. Now, a group of scientists at HP Labs has found that in nanoscale materials, the "memristance" property becomes easier to see. The finding could lead to lower power, instant-on computers, as well as novel types of circuitry. HP Senior Fellow Stanley Williams, one of the discoverers of the modern memristor, talks about the find and its potential applications." The 13 minute program is
available online
Member since:
2005-07-20
A majority of modern CPUs boot in less than a second. Much less in most cases.
I speak of embedded devices, of course, which outnumber every desktop CPU on the planet.
In many of these designs, if an error is detected, instead of handling the error the system reboots and is running again without anyone noticing it happened.