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March 1978 | Vol. 153, No. 3
80 Micro October 1987
The little house on this issue’s cover led into a very technical article about one of the competing schemes for pushing past “the 640K barrier” of MS-DOS, one that would work even with the 8088 microprocessor in most Tandy 1000s. Readers still holding on to their TRS-80 Model 4s got an article with a hardware hacking project to install 320K in their computers, offering five banks of memory for their eight-bit Z80s.
Rediffusion advert. 'For there is nothing inherently sinister about a silicon chip'. 1982 Scientific American
13.3-inch MacBook Pro to be first device with Apple silicon chip
13.3-inch MacBook Pro to be first device with Apple silicon chip
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San Francisco: As Apple shifts from Intel processors to homegrown silicon chips for its Mac computers, famed analyst Ming-Chi Kuo who closely tracks the company has said that the 13.3-inch MacBook Pro similar to the current 13.3-inch device is likely to be the first Mac to get an Arm-based silicon chip designed by Apple.
In a research note with TF International Securities, Kuo said the…
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Beat the Heat
It’s estimated that as much as two-thirds of energy consumed in the U.S. each year is wasted as heat. Take for example, car engines, laptop computers, cellphones, even refrigerators, that heat up with overuse.
Imagine if you could capture the heat they generate and turn it into more energy.
University of Utah mechanical engineering associate professor Mathieu Francoeur has discovered a way…
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'Tsunami' on a Silicon Chip: A World First for Light Waves
‘Tsunami’ on a Silicon Chip: A World First for Light Waves
A collaboration between the Sydney Nano Institute and Singapore University of Technology and Design has for the first time manipulated a light wave, or photonic information, on a silicon chip that retains its overall ‘shape’.
A tsunami holds its wave shape over very long distances across the ocean, retaining its power and ‘information’ far from its source.
In communications science,…
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