Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Kilby Jack S
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-100 of 107    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Kilby Jack S:     more detail
  1. The U.S. Patents of Harold S. Black, Jack S. Kilby and Robert N. Noyce by David Kraeuter, 2007-01-01
  2. The U.S. patents of Harold S. Black, Jack S. Kilby, and Robert N. Noyce (Pittsburgh Antique Radio Society monograph) by David W Kraeuter, 1999
  3. UNDERSTANDING DIGITAL ELECTRONICS ...Brings you basic understanding of the subject--written in everyday language. by GENE McWHORTER, 1984
  4. Jack St. Clair Kilby: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001
  5. Calculators: A Pocket-Sized Revolution: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Brenda Wilmoth Lerner, 2001
  6. The Development of Integrated Circuits Makes Possible the Microelectronics Revolution: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Giselle Weiss, 2001
  7. The Chip: How Two Americans Invented the Microchip and Launched a Revolution by T.R. Reid, 2007-12-18

81. Hilltopics E-Zine - Barton County Community College
“I think it’s nice for more and more students to know about jack kilby and thecontributions he made to science.” kilby created the first integrated circuit
http://www.barton.cc.ks.us/hilltopics/featurestories/thackerkilby04.htm
Hilltopics E-Zine
Barton County Community College
E-mail Comments to hilltopics@bartonccc.edu College News Feature Stories Alumni News ... Barton Home Interactive Science: High School Students Participate in First Jack Kilby Science Day At Barton By Pam Martin and Susan Thacker, Great Bend (Kan.) Tribune Reporters
Great Bend native Jack Kilby would have felt right at home at Barton County Community College Wednesday, Oct. 20, as local high school students spent a morning devoted to science. All county schools and several surrounding school districts participated in the event. Lou Kottmann, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences at Barton, said 171 students and 14 of their teachers enrolled. Towing their inventions with them, students arrived at the egg drop and balloon car contest ready to test their devices. Rules and guidelines were distributed to participants two weeks before the event. Pawnee Heights students Garret Blattner and Jacob Penrod worked on their cars powered by a balloon after school, making them out of what they had at hand. Their device was one of the more successful, but balloon cars made of plastic straws seemed to be the best designed to travel the farthest. A straw car made by Hoisington High School student Alan Collier traveled 25 feet before running out of power.

82. DeviceSoftwareOptimization.com (DSO) - In Memoriam Jack Kilby
DSO.com Strategies, Best Practices and Methodologies for Device Software Optimization.
http://www.dso.com/blog/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=164901771

83. The Tech | Visit | The National Medal Of Technology | Laureate Profile For Jack
One of jack kilby’s many inventions stands out beyond all others. He conceivedand built the first integrated circuit, or microchip. In 1958, kilby was
http://www.thetech.org/nmot/detail.cfm?id=83&st=awardDate&qt=1990&kiosk=Off

84. Texas Instruments - Inventor Of IC Kilby Dies
jack St. Clair kilby, a retired engineer with Texas Instruments who invented it was jack’s invention of the first IC,” says TI chairman Tom Engibous.
http://www.ferret.com.au/articles/e6/0c0313e6.asp
Home Suppliers
By Product Type

By Name
Products
By Product Type
Careers Electronics New Mining Food Metal Working Packaging ... What's this? Inventor of IC Kilby dies
Jack St. Clair Kilby, a retired engineer with Texas Instruments who invented the integrated circuit (IC) has passed away, aged 81, following a brief battle with cancer.
Kilby invented the first monolithic IC, which served as the foundation for modern microelectronics and drove the industry into a world of miniaturisation and integration that continues today. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2000 for his role in inventing the IC.
“If there was ever a seminal invention that transformed not only our industry but our world, it was Jack’s invention of the first [IC],” says TI chairman Tom Engibous.
Kilby was always quick to credit the thousands of engineers who followed him for their impact on growing the industry and changing the world. But for all the changes that the IC wrought—everything from mobiles to computers to PDAs—Kilby was more of a creator of the devices than a user.
“For a guy who started it all, he certainly wasn’t a fanatic about using it,” says Kevin McGarity, former senior VP at TI and a long-time personal friend. “He had no mobile phone, no PDA, and while he did use a computer he was better at describing what went on inside it than using it.”

85. Jack S. Kilby, An Inventor Of The Microchip, Is Dead At 81 - New York Times
jack S. kilby, an electrical engineer whose invention of the integrated circuitgave rise to the information age, died Monday in Dallas.
http://plymouth.k12.ct.us/hsf/unified_arts/block/News/Jack S_ Kilby, an Inventor
@import url( http://www.nytimes.com/css/page_type/article/print.css ); var google_hints = "Deaths+(Obituaries),Computer+Chips,Nobel+Prizes,Texas+Instruments+Incorporated"; var google_ad_channel = "ar_business";
June 22, 2005
Jack S. Kilby, an Inventor of the Microchip, Is Dead at 81
by JOHN MARKOFF
Jack S. Kilby, an electrical engineer whose invention of the integrated circuit gave rise to the information age and heralded an explosion of consumer electronics products in the last 50 years, from personal computers to cellphones, died Monday in Dallas. He was 81. His death, after a brief battle with cancer, was announced yesterday by Texas Instruments , the Dallas-based electronics company where he worked for a quarter-century. The integrated circuit that Mr. Kilby designed shortly after arriving at Texas Instruments in 1958 served as the basis for modern microelectronics, transforming a technology that permitted the simultaneous manufacturing of a mere handful of transistors into a chip industry that routinely places billions of Lilliputian switches in the area of a fingernail. His achievement - the integration - yielded a thin chip of crystal connecting previously separate components like transistors, resistors and capacitors within a single device. For that creation, commonly called the microchip, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2000.

86. Microchip Pioneer Jack Kilby Dies At 81 (News)
It’s always sad to hear about someone passing on. Nobel laureate jack kilby,whose 1958 invention of the integrated circuit ushered in the modern
http://channels.lockergnome.com/hardware/archives/20050621_microchip_pioneer_jac
Gnomedex Mobile Network eBooks ... Home
E-mail Newsletters! Windows Fanatics
Linux Fanatics

OS X Fanatics

IT Professionals
... Google It
Nobel laureate Jack Kilby, whose 1958 invention of the integrated circuit ushered in the modern electronics age and made possible the microprocessor, has died after a battle with cancer.
Kilby died Monday at age 81 at his Dallas home, said Texas Instruments Inc., where he worked for many years.
Before the integrated circuit, electronic devices relied on bulky and fragile circuitry, including glass vacuum tubes. Afterward, electronics could become increasingly more complex, reliable and efficient: powering everything from the iPod to the Internet.
During his first year at Texas Instruments, using borrowed equipment, Kilby built the first integrated circuit into a single piece of semiconducting material half the size of a paper clip. Four years later in 1962, Texas Instruments won its first major integrated circuit contract, for the Minuteman missile. [Read the rest]
Lockergnome's Hardware Help
Recent Entries from Our Other Channels
MSNBC Launches Katrina Flyover
Dialing phones is for Nancy Boys!

87. Jack Kilby, Integrated Circuit Inventor, Dies (Misc News)
About the only thing that doesn’t have IC’s, or their descendents, Down inTexas, jack kilby was showing the very first integrated circuit to the world.
http://channels.lockergnome.com/news/archives/20050621_jack_kilby_integrated_cir
Gnomedex Mobile Network eBooks ... Home
E-mail Newsletters! Windows Fanatics
Linux Fanatics

OS X Fanatics

IT Professionals
... Google It
In the summer of 1958, while working at Texas Instruments, Kilby built the first electronic circuit in which all of the components were fabricated into a single piece of material. The device, about half the size of a paper clip, was the world's first integrated circuit. The microchip was later demonstrated on Sept. 12, 1958. This man made our entire world of computers possible. We all owe him a posthumous vote of thanks. Read more...
Lockergnome's Tech News Watch
Recent Entries from Our Other Channels
MSNBC Launches Katrina Flyover
Dialing phones is for Nancy Boys!

Free Chinese MS Office clone for the next 90 days

Podcasting for Marketers Interview with Rodney Rumford, PodBlaze.com: Part 1
...
Mapping Katrina
For Further Consideration
PiXPO v1.5 : Private, encrypted peer-to-peer sharing of photos is the future of picture albums. PiXPO provides the future now with one-click photo album creation, effective searching of high resolution image libraries in private or public albums, and controlled management of sharing permissions. P2P photo sharing changes the way we let distant relatives see the new baby, provides safe access to sensitive photos, and offers an interactive component not available traditional Web photo publishing. PiXPO users can create... [

88. Jack Kilby
Translate this page jack S. kilby (1923- ) kilby, quien vive en Dallas, Texas, declaró que “nohabía previsto esto y de hecho, creía que era muy improbable”.
http://www-etsi2.ugr.es/alumnos/mlii/Kilby.htm
Jack S. Kilby (1923- )
La investigación de Kilby condujo a la producción de los microprocesadores y echó los cimientos conceptuales y técnicos para todo el campo de la microelectrónica.
En su carrera, Kilby ha patentado más de 60 inventos que se han incorporado a la industria para el consumo, las fabricaciones militares y las aplicaciones comerciales de la tecnología de microprocesadores.

89. Jack Kilby, Integrated Circuit Pioneer, Dead At 81 | InfoWorld | News | 2005-06-
SAN FRANCISCO jack kilby, whose work in the late 1950s on the If you haven’tchecked out this week’s columns yet, let me be the one to break
http://www.infoworld.com/article/05/06/21/HNjackkilbyobit_1.html
var cType = "Article"; var section = "News"; var type = "News"; var subType = ""; var pkeys = new Array("Hardware"); var skeys = new Array("Processors"); var primaryAud = new Array("CIO"); var secondaryAud = new Array("CTO"); var companies = new Array("47374","47818"); About InfoWorld Advertise Subscribe Contact Us ... Store hbx.mlc="/news/hardware++";//MULTI-LEVEL CONTENT CATEGORY SPECIAL REPORTS RSS FEEDS Site IT Product Guide adCall("728","90","leader"); FREE TECHNOLOGY NEWSLETTERS Wireless Report
Government Channel Report
Jack Kilby, integrated circuit pioneer, dead at 81
Battled with Intel's Robert Noyce over patent claims
By Tom Krazit, IDG News Service
June 21, 2005 SAN FRANCISCO - Jack Kilby, whose work in the late 1950s on the integrated circuit paved the way for the modern computing era, died Monday in Dallas at the age of 81 after a brief struggle against cancer, Texas Instruments Profile Products Articles ) Inc. (TI) announced Tuesday. SPONSOR
SPYWARE INFOWORLD IT STRATEGY GUIDE
Sponsored by Sophos
SPONSOR
SOA for Government Spotlight: Access white papers and more
Sponsored by InfoWorld
adCall("336","280","imu");

90. Mersenneforum.org - R.I.P. Jack Kilby, Integrated Circuit Pioneer
jack S. kilby, an Inventor of the Microchip, Is Dead at 81 jack S. kilby, anelectrical engineer whose invention of the integrated circuit gave rise to
http://www.mersenneforum.org/showthread.php?p=56306

91. The "Chip" Inventors, Part 1
jack kilby’s invention of the Monolithic Integrated Circuit was conceptuallysimple, technically challenging, and socially pervasive.
http://www.livingstonmontana.com/access/dan/150thechipinventors-1.html
(part 1)
by Dan Murray
Published August 25, 1999
Two electrical engineers, working separately, each filed for patents for an invention called the Integrated Circuit (IC), and the electronic world would never be the same. The micro-chip It was 1959, and the transistor had been around for a dozen years. Vacuum tubes were in extensive use, still, in military mainframe computers and in consumer electronics, televisions, tape records and radios. Transistors, as amplifiers, were slowly replacing tubes. Solid-state circuits were superior to tubes in size, reliability, low power consumption. But prior to automation and robots, transistor circuits were still fairly expensive and complicated to assemble. This new thing, the size of a thumbnail, contained many component resistors, capacitors, diodes and transistors completely wired together. It was a self-contained complete circuit for a specific task. Jack Kilby and Robert Noyce were born four years apart from two distant places. Without either knowing the other, both invented the Integrated Circuit almost simultaneously. The significance of the chip could not have been realized then, but has since been recognized as one of the most important innovations and landmark achievements in the history of mankind.

92. EPN Legends: Jack Kilby Jack Kilby: We Had...
jack kilby We had to take it one bit at a time; they weren t going to getwidespread use overnight. We chose the applications to M/S 8710 75243 Dallas
http://www.epn-online.com/page/18805/epn-legends--jack-kilby-jack-kilby--we-had-
Welcome guest register / log in for extra features ) - document.write(messageDate); Search - Please Select - Companies Products For Find an article directly with its ref. number (Tips) Home Reader service Reader Offers ...
all articles
July 2005
Product group :
Product sub group :
EPN Legends: Jack Kilby
Jack Kilby: We had...
Jack Kilby: We had to take it one bit at a time; they weren't going to get widespread use overnight. We chose the applications to target very carefully. Aerospace and military were obvious places to try, and they offered an important starting point for us.
The design engineers back then had a very «Luddite" perspective, they wanted to protect the business they had and feared that your creation would put them all out of work when in fact it was exactly the opposite that happened. ICs became more affordable and meant that whole new markets were opened up. Have we gone too far in the other direction now? When the dot.com bubble burst, was it a sign that we needed to become a bit more cautious about laying better foundations on which to build new industry sectors?
J.K.:

93. Jack Kilby, Inventor Of The Integrated Circuit, Dies At 81
DALLAS, TX, June 21, 2005 – jack St. Clair kilby, retired TI engineer and inventor When a severe ice storm downed telephone and power lines, Mr. kilby’s
http://dssresources.com/news/829.php
Jack Kilby, inventor of the integrated circuit, dies at 81
His Legacy Shaped the Modern World DALLAS, TX, June 21, 2005 – Jack St. Clair Kilby, retired TI engineer and inventor of the integrated circuit, died yesterday in Dallas following a brief battle with cancer. He was 81. Mr. Kilby invented the first monolithic integrated circuit, which laid the foundation for the field of modern microelectronics, moving the industry into a world of miniaturization and integration that continues today. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2000 for his role in the invention of the integrated circuit. “In my opinion, there are only a handful of people whose works have truly transformed the world and the way we live in it – Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, the Wright Brothers and Jack Kilby,” said TI Chairman Tom Engibous. “If there was ever a seminal invention that transformed not only our industry but our world, it was Jack’s invention of the first integrated circuit.” A man of few words, Mr. Kilby is remembered fondly by friends and associates for being in every sense of the word a gentleman and a gentle man. At 6 foot 6 inches in height, he was occasionally called the “gentle giant” in the press. “Ever practical and low-key, with good humor and quiet grace, Jack was a man with every right to be boastful, yet never was,” said Mr. Engibous. Mr. Kilby was always quick to credit the thousands of engineers who followed him for their impact on growing the industry and changing the world. “For those of us who were fortunate enough to have known him, it’s that dual legacy for which I personally will always feel privileged to have known Jack – not only the quality of what he did, but the quality of who he was,” said Mr. Engibous.

94. ElectronicsWeekly.com - Inventor Of IC Jack Kilby Dies Aged 81
ElectronicsWeekly.com Analysis, research, reviews, opinions and news providedby the journalists of ElectronicsWeekly.
http://www.electronicsweekly.com/Articles/2005/06/22/35760/InventorofICJackKilby
ElectronicsWeekly.com
Bread Crumb Menu
Thursday 15 September 2005
Business
Business
Inventor of IC Jack Kilby dies aged 81
by Ed Sperling Wednesday 22 June 2005 Jack St. Clair Kilby, a retired engineer with Texas Instruments who invented the integrated circuit (IC) passed away Monday in Dallas following a brief battle with cancer. He was 81. Kilby invented the first monolithic IC, which served as the foundation for modern microelectronics and drove the industry into a world of miniaturisation and... Article Continues Below ... integration that continues today. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2000 for his role in the invention of the IC. “In my opinion, there are only a handful of people whose works have truly transformed the world and the way we live in it - Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, the Wright Brothers and Jack Kilby,” said TI chairman Tom Engibous. “If there was ever a seminal invention that transformed not only our industry but our world, it was Jack’s invention of the first integrated circuit.” But it was the man behind the invention that never ceased to amaze those who knew him. “Ever practical and low-key, with good humor and quiet grace, Jack was a man with every right to be boastful, yet never was,” Engibous noted.

95. Faculty Award Recipients
The IEEE jack S. kilby Signal Processing Medal was established by the Board ofDirectors in 1995 and may The medal is named in honor of jack S. kilby.
http://www.ece.cornell.edu/achievefac.cfm
site map search
Faculty Award Recipients
NSF Early Career
Recipient
Prize
Farhan Rana NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) : Farhan Rana has received an award of $400,000 for his proposal, "Semiconductor Lasers for Generating High Energy Ultrashort (sub-50 fs) Optical Pulses: From Nanotechnology to Ultrafast Optics." The NSF program is intended to support the early development of academic careers dedicated to stimulating discovery process, in which the excitement of research is enhanced by inspired teaching and enthusiastic learning. Sergio Servetto 2003 NSF Career Award : Sergio Servetto received a 2003 NSF Career Award for Fundamental Performance Limits of Large-Scale Wireless Sensor Networks. Alyssa Apsel NSF Early Career : CAREER: Designing with Light: Comparative Analysis and Design of Optical Interconnects for Chip-to-Chip Communication
College Awards for Outstanding Teachers
Recipient
Prize
Terrence Fine Outstanding Teacher : Recognition for great work in the classroom. It is based on exemplary performance, and reflects positively on both the professor and the school. C. Johnson Jr.

96. Tech Tidbit -- December 18, 2000
University of Illinois engineering graduate jack S. kilby wins 2000 Nobel Prizein Physics, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign in the News
http://www.alteich.com/tidbits/t121800.htm
Add a Tidbit of the Week
channel to your

Palm
Teich's Tech Tidbit of the Week
December 18, 2000
Technologist Wins Nobel Prize
Tidbit Archive
Last Week's Tidbit Happy Birthday, Silly Putty On December 10, the 2000 Nobel Prize in Physics was formally presented in a ceremony in Stockholm, Sweden. The award was shared, with one half given jointly to Zhores I. Alferov of the A.F. Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute, St. Petersburg, Russia and Herbert Kroemer of the University of California at Santa Barbara, California, and the other half awarded to Jack St. Clair Kilby of Texas Instruments Incorporated of Dallas, Texas. The Nobel Prize in Physics most often recognizes fundamental (and usually rather esoteric) discoveries in the field. For example, the 1990 prize was awarded for "pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics." What made the 2000 prize special was the fact that it directly recognized contributions to technology , specifically, computers and information technology.

97. WIBW | Kansas Nobel Prize Winner Dies
jack kilby died in Dallas after a battle with cancer at age 81. He grew up inGreat Bend, Kansas. In 1958 while working with Texas Instruments, kilby built
http://www.wibw.com/home/headlines/1615027.html
var js="0.0"; js="1.0"; js="1.1"; js="1.2"; js="1.3"; js="1.4"; js="1.5"; document.write(''); document.write(''); Featured Sections: Recipes Community Entertainment Restaurants ... CBS.COM Search All of WIBW Community Entertainment Home Jobs @ WIBW News Recipes Restaurants Schools Sports Station Info Weather
Education Works!
Meet the Team Sales News Blog ... Football Challenge document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); var clickTitle="Kansas Nobel Prize Winner Dies"; var partnerID=25126; Kansas Nobel Prize Winner Dies AP
The Kansas native who won the 2000 Nobel Prize for co-inventing the integrated circuits that ushered in the digital age of personal computers, cell phones and the Internet has died. Jack Kilby died in Dallas after a battle with cancer at age 81. He grew up in Great Bend, Kansas. document.write(''); In 1958 while working with Texas Instruments, Kilby built the first microchip. He's also credited with helping create the first hand-held calculator. Although he had officially retired in the early 1980s, Kilby continued to have a "significant relationship'' with the company until his death.

98. Nobel Prize In Physics 2000
jack S. kilby Button 1/2 of prize Button USA Button born 1923 Button CA TexasInstruments, Dallas, Texas, USA Button AA - Texas Instruments
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/library/nobel/nobel2000.html
Home About Contact
"for basic work on information and communication technology, specifically for developing semiconductor heterostructures used in high-speed-and opto-electronics"
Zhores I. Alferov
1/4 of prize
Russia
born 1930
CA - A.F. Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute , St. Petersburg, Russia
AA - A.F. Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute
WA - A.F. Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute
Additional Information
Herbert Kroemer
1/4 of prize
Germany
born 1928
CA - University of California at Santa Barbara , Santa Barbara, California, USA
AA - RCA Varian , Palo Alto, California, USA WA - RCA Varian Additional Information
"for basic work on information and communication technology, specifically for his part in the invention of the integrated circuit
Jack S. Kilby
1/2 of prize USA born 1923 CA - Texas Instruments , Dallas, Texas, USA AA - Texas Instruments WA - Texas Instruments Additional Information
Additional Information: Return to Top
Explanation of Institutional Affiliations: Current Affiliation (CA)
The Laureate's current or last affiliation.

99. Jack Kilby, Inventor Of The Integrated Circuit, Dies | CNET News.com
jack kilby, whose work on integrated circuits in the 1950s ushered in the digitalera, Sony VAIO T S series notebooks available at SonyStyle.com
http://news.com.com/Jack Kilby, inventor of the integrated circuit, dies/2100-73
CNET News.com
CNET tech sites: Track thousands of Web sites in one place: Newsburst Enterprise Hardware
Jack Kilby, inventor of the integrated circuit, dies
Published: June 21, 2005, 10:07 AM PDT By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
TrackBack Print E-mail TalkBack Jack Kilby, whose work on integrated circuits in the 1950s ushered in the digital era, died Monday after a battle with cancer. He was 81. In the summer of 1958, while working at Texas Instruments, Kilby built the first electronic circuit in which all of the components were fabricated into a single piece of material. The device, about half the size of a paper clip, was the world's first integrated circuit. The microchip was later demonstrated on Sept. 12, 1958.
Jack Kilby The prototype, which cut down on costs and engineering difficulties, paved the way for integrating electronics into a variety of devices. Prior to integrated circuits, engineers had to solder several parts together. Intel co-founder Bob Noyce came up with a similar integrated circuit a few months later. The work, which Kilby performed during the two-week period at TI when other employees traditionally took a vacation, ultimately led to a Nobel Prize for physics in 2000. When the news was announced at the Microprocessor Forum that year, the surprised audience gave him a standing ovation.

100. Business 2.0 :: Magazine Article :: Features :: Nobel Prize Winner Jack Kilby: W
jack kilby, the coinventor of the integrated circuit, and winner of the 2000 That’s what engineering is all about–making the impossible practical.
http://www.business2.com/b2/web/articles/0,17863,528311,00.html
Try an Issue Free Magazine Customer Service Subscribe to Business 2.0 Search B2 Home Current Issue Magazine Archive Web Guide ... Subscribe to B2
Nobel Prize Winner Jack Kilby: What's Next Jack Kilby, the co-inventor of the integrated circuit, and winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize for Physics, takes us on a ride through the next few years.
By Jack Kilby, September 29, 2000 It’s true that in some regards we are approaching the limits of silicon technology. Today, semiconductor chips can pack up to 100 million transistors. Features have shrunk to such tiny sizes that electrons can leak from one circuit to another. That’s a challenge chip manufacturers and designers have to face. It’s a challenge based on the fundamentals of physics and some say that makes it an insurmountable challenge. But we’ve faced insurmountable challenges before and continued to make progress at incredible rates. That’s what engineering is all about–making the "impossible" practical. Efforts will be aimed at producing faster processing speeds and lowering power usage. More accurate and powerful analog circuits will deliver a seamless connection between the digital world and the real world. These advances will put more technology in to your pocket than existed in the entire world 40 years ago.
Current Issue
Archive Columns Subscribe to Business 2.0

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 5     81-100 of 107    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter