There is a near-infinite number of material candidates out there—and simply not enough time to hunker down in the lab and test them all. Thankfully, researchers have a variety of tools (such as AI) at ...
Absolics says its facility can currently produce a maximum of 12,000 square meters of glass panels a year. That’s enough, Lee estimates, to provide glass substrates for between 2 million and 3 million ...
A joint research team has reported for the first time that the resistive switching behavior of ion-motion-mediated volatile memristors, which are emerging as promising next-generation semiconductor ...
The hack occurred after a server at the Child Exploitation Forensic Lab in the FBI’s New York Field Office was inadvertently ...
By submitting an entry to the Texas Eats & Firstmark Credit Union Instagram sweepstakes (“Sweepstakes”), brought to you by KSAT 12 (“Sponsor”) and Firstmark Credit Union (the “Co-Sponsor”), entrant ...
Applied Materials said on Tuesday it has partnered with memory chip companies Micron ​Technology and SK Hynix to develop next ...
Making computer chips smaller is not just about better design. It also depends on a critical step in manufacturing called patterning, where nanoscale structures are carved into materials to form the ...
Applied Materials and Micron partner to boost U.S. AI memory innovation—DRAM, HBM, NAND & advanced packaging—via EPIC Center.
NbRe may be a long-sought triplet superconductor, offering zero-resistance spin transport and major advances in quantum computing.
A stunning new imaging breakthrough lets scientists see — and fix — the atomic flaws hiding inside tomorrow’s computer chips.
A coordinated campaign targeting software developers with job-themed lures is using malicious repositories posing as legitimate Next.js projects and technical assessment materials, including ...
The Computer and Technology group has plenty of great stocks, but investors should always be looking for companies that are outperforming their peers. Is Applied Materials (AMAT) one of those stocks ...