Submitted via IRC for Bytram
The vast majority of computing devices today are made from silicon, the second most abundant element on Earth, after oxygen. Silicon can be found in various forms in rocks, clay, sand, and soil. And while it is not the best semiconducting material that exists on the planet, it is by far the most readily available. As such, silicon is the dominant material used in most electronic devices, including sensors, solar cells, and the integrated circuits within our computers and smartphones.
Now MIT engineers have developed a technique to fabricate ultrathin semiconducting films made from a host of exotic materials other than silicon. To demonstrate their technique, the researchers fabricated flexible films made from gallium arsenide, gallium nitride, and lithium fluoride—materials that exhibit better performance than silicon but until now have been prohibitively expensive to produce in functional devices.
The new technique, researchers say, provides a cost-effective method to fabricate flexible electronics made from any combination of semiconducting elements, that could perform better than current silicon-based devices.
"We've opened up a way to make flexible electronics with so many different material systems, other than silicon," says Jeehwan Kim, the Class of 1947 Career Development Associate Professor in the departments of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering. Kim envisions the technique can be used to manufacture low-cost, high-performance devices such as flexible solar cells, and wearable computers and sensors.
and see https://phys.org/news/2018-10-cost-effective-method-semiconducting-materials-outperform.html#nRlv for a more readable summary
Source: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41563-018-0176-4
(Score: 1, Offtopic) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Tuesday October 16 2018, @12:35PM (1 child)
I'm working my way through Wikipedia's list of gubernatorial races. When I get those done I'll take a break by visiting some of Rupert Murdoch's properties, also a few Websites Of Ill Repute:
Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 17 2018, @01:55PM
new to this dns-lookup-intercept technique and have been using some list by "some one who cares" for a while now.
the "127.0.0.1" or "0.0.0.0" doesn't sound "right" for me: why would i direct all those bad domains to myself?
my solution was to pick one "real" IP (in my case the toss of a coin decided it would be 8.8.4.4) and then blackholed it at the default-gateway-router.
also, it seems that "drop"-ing packets sometimes gives cramps to certain web-programs ("why won't you answer me?WAAAHHH! let's try again!" and again and again) so "reject"-ing them gives better performance.
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as for the topic: the "peel" is a mirror image ... "police" or "ambulance" is hard to read if you're not looking out the rear-mirror sometimes.
not sure, but if you get two (2) "expensive" originals but mirror copies of each other, then make cheap film copies(R-L) and layer them "correctly" the "logic" might be build vertical instead of horizontally? if square, you could also turn them 90, 180, 270 deg during layering? R-0 / L-90 / L-270 / R-180 / etc ...?