IBM Researchers Create Device Which Uses Light for Communication Between Computer Chips
IBM scientists unveiled a significant step towards replacing electrical signals that communicate via copper wires between computer chips with tiny silicon circuits that communicate using pulses of light. As reported in the recent issue of the scientific journal Nature, this is an important advancement in changing the way computer chips talk to each other. The device, called a nanophotonic avalanche photodetector, is the fastest of its kind and could enable breakthroughs in energy-efficient computing that can have significant implications for the future of electronics. The IBM device explores the avalanche effect in Germanium, a material currently used in production of microprocessor chips. Analogous to a snow avalanche on a steep mountain slope, an incoming light pulse initially frees just a few charge carriers which in turn free others until the original signal is amplified many times. Conventional avalanche photodetectors are not able to detect fast optical signals because the avalanche builds slowly. The avalanche photodetector demonstrated by IBM is the worlds fastest device of its kind. It can receive optical information signals at 40Gbps (billion bits per second) and simultaneously multiply them tenfold. Moreover, the device operates with just a 1.5V voltage supply, 20 times smaller than previous demonstrations. Thus many of these tiny communication devices could potentially be powered by just a small AA-size battery, while traditional avalanche photodetectors …
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heres the old hype video from IBM:
watch?v=MIL5EMbzBjM&feature=related
I was just thinking the EXACT same thing, I saw this 2-3 years ago from IBM too!.
@rulta You’re a fucking retard.
lol.
electricity doesn’t have a speed lol
basically, yes. a massive quantum leap.
basically a quantum leap in FSB, or is there more to it?
if they encase the paths the photons travel down in a airtight tube or enviorment it might prevent that
You know I heard about this a long goddamn time ago. Infact just the other day I got an email from myself using one of those sites that holds an email untill X day and then sends it back to you. In the email (which was sent in like 2004) I said that I damned well better have one of these by now. Lol, and its just as far off today as it was then.
What happens if dust gets into that computer?
From the title i thought “Firewire” lol
Electricity goes at like 72 mps, while light goes at like 400,000 mps
Around there. So it’s extremely fast in comparison.
was just thinking of this yestersay i.e. using light instead electricity as they’ve done with fibre optic cables instead of copper for broadband connections.
its 300,000 m/sec
They don’t make money off sony.
well intel and amd make consumer level electronics, IBM focuses purely on the supercomputer crowd and other very high end applications. IBM developed cell-based architecture and licensed it to sony, so they make money off ps3, i’m sure IBM has many other IP patents and such, plus they’re developing the software for China’s high speed trains, etc etc (huge company doing shit all over the world).
Ahh…
Electricity is the flow of electrons.
Photons move at the speed of light
I will love to work with IBM
so basically its like light, but the metal slows it down..or watevr it goes thru?
It’s 300 000 Km/sec
They’ve been working on this shit for years. I think it will be the next big leap in technology and drive the computer industry again, similar to the 90′s when innovation was coming like crazy through the pipeline. Hopefully, because our economy should could use a boost again.
what happened
@333HELIOS
2/3 of that
eletric speed depends of material resistance.
40 gigabits per second DX Holy shit!!