Supply Chain
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Two New Photocouplers Reduce Threshold Input Current by 20%
The new photocouplers are housed in small, 2.3mm (max) low-height packages and meet various international safety standards, including UL1577 and EN60747-5-5.
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New 17-Qubit Superconducting Chip for Quantum Computing Launched
Intel announced the launch of a 17-qubit superconducting test chip for quantum computing to QuTech, Intel’s quantum research partner in the Netherlands.
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Sulfur is the Key to Safe Rechargeable Lithium Batteries
A team of Penn State engineers has developed a different type of lithium-sulfur battery that could be more efficient, less expensive and safer than today’s lithium batteries.
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New Wearable Sensor Ring Can Detect External Threats to the Wearer
Joseph Wang and his colleagues at the University of California, San Diego wanted to develop a portable, affordable and wearable sensor that would detect external chemical threats.
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New Pro Capture Cards Support Video Resolutions up to 4096x2160 at 60 fps
Magewell has announced two dual-channel 4K models in its Pro Capture family of PCI Express capture hardware.
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Strategy Defined to Bridge In-Car Software Domains
Cross-domain bridging is essential to ensure information or data generated in one domain is displayed and managed in another.
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New USB Type-C Battery Pack for Portable Devices Released
Silicon Labs has introduced a comprehensive reference design to simplify the development of USB Type-C™ rechargeable lithium ion battery packs used to power smartphones, tablets, laptops, headphones and other portable devices.
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The Next Dimension of Computer Chips is Here
Research collaboration between Osaka University and the Nara Institute of Science and Technology has used scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) to create images of atomically flat side-surfaces of 3D silicon crystals.
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New Generation of Pests are Resistant to Biotech Crops
Researchers at the University of Arizona in Tuscon have started to address this concern and discover why the pests adapted quickly in some cases, but not in others.
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Bacteria has Been Developed to Self-Organize and Build Working Sensors
Researchers from Duke University have turned bacteria into builders of useful devices by programming them with a synthetic gene circuit.
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Researchers Have Modeled 5G Mobile Communication of the Future
Scientists from RUDN University have created a mathematical model of reliable microwave communication for cell phones and other devices.
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Connected Healthcare and the Internet of Medical Things
Applications for direct integration of the physical world into computer-based systems are now rapidly expanding in the medical and healthcare sectors.
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New Technology Allows AI Systems to have an Awareness of Their Physical Surroundings
Twenty Billion Neurons, a deep learning pioneer, has debuted an artificial intelligence (AI) technology that is the world’s first to show an awareness of its environment and the actions that are surrounding it.
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New Optical-Solid-State Surface Array Laser Radar Released
GeniusPros Technologies (GPT) has revealed its new signature optical-solid-state surface array laser radar at a product release event at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA.
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New Joint Solution Allows for Nanometer Scale Production of 3D Structures
The joint solution involves SwissLitho’s novel NanoFrazor thermal scanning probe lithography system.
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New Near-Infrared Technology for Machine and Night Vision Applications Developed
OmniVision Technologies Inc. has introduced Nyxel™, a revolutionary near-infrared (NIR) technology that leverages novel silicon semiconductor architectures and processes to tackles challenges that plague existing approaches to NIR detection in image sensors.
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Watch: New Telescope Attachment Allows Ground-Based Telescopes to Observe New Planets
A new, cheap attachment to telescopes allows a previously unachievable precision in ground-based observations of exoplanets — planets beyond our solar system.
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Researchers Use DNA Metabarcoding to Check the Health of the Boreal Forest
Cutting-edge DNA metabarcoding technology, developed by the University of Guelph, can help speed up and improve the monitoring process, according to a new study.
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Supercomputers and Machine Learning Help Scientists Identify Brain Tumors
George Biros has worked for a decade to create accurate and efficient computing algorithms that can characterize gliomas, a common and aggressive type of primary brain tumor.
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New Virtual Reality Technology Uses Mouth Gestures to Operate
Researchers from Binghamton University State University of New York have developed a new technology that allows users to interact in virtual reality using only mouth gestures.
