Scientific American on 3-D Chips 138
m5shiv writes: "Scientific American is running a feature on 3-D Memory Chips. These devices look like they will significantly reduce the cost of PDA's and other handheld devices as well as replacing analog film.
By stacking devices vertically, density goes up considerably. The company,
Matrix Semiconductor, appears to have some very interesting investors such as Kodak, Sony
and Microsoft."
Heat Dissipation (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Heat Dissipation (Score:1)
That's what things like the Crusoe [transmeta.com] chip are trying to do. There's a niche for such devices, but processor speed goes onward, and programs can do more cool things. Don't you like cool things?
But if you improve the cooling system--there's really no reason not to--you can get better performance. Everyone wants faster computers, right?
Re:Heat Dissipation (Score:1)
my god the heat (Score:2)
Fo one thing, if we go to a silicon cube, we will wind up having to heat sink 5 sides, not just the top.
There will like be a practical limit to cooling which means that we will not achieve a real cube in terms of proportions. For a long while with thinning layers will compensate for the increasing thinckness, so that even with hundreds of layers, it will likely be only as thick as many of the other earlier designs, say the 386 or 486. But the heat density is still going to be amazing.
The science fiction prediction imagines a story where computations are basically done by a pool of molten metal kept under high pressure to keep everything aligned.
Re:my god the heat (Score:1)
in memory heat won't be much of an issue as stuff doesn't all switch at once and bits are stored in capacitors anyway (DRAM). but in logic the heat could be bad and all stacked on top if itself. heat pipes or vias JUST for the heat may be necessary.
Boundary problems will probably go away (Score:1, Interesting)
If you are able to form grains larger than the transistor and at precise locations boundaries are not a problem even in thin film deposited silicon. Apart from that for the memory cell's the grain boundaries never were much of a problem anyway, as long as you can keep all the high speed logic at the bottom there isnt any problem anyway.
I think Matrix is only interesting because they are promising product soon
Re:Heat Dissipation (Score:2)
I guess people figure the initial cost of this type of energy-saving cooler would far outweigh its benefits? Still, it would just be a "gee-whiz" cool thing to have in your new PC - and might become more worthwhile as production increases and economies of scale take effect.
Re:Heat Dissipation (Score:1)
Re:Heat Dissipation (Score:1)
You couldn't really just power stuff from a thermoelectric generator, because the CPU barely runs above ambient temp while idling. (I've taken the heat sink off my k6-2 350MHz, and it barely gets warm to the touch while idling.) You'd have to let the power come from the power supply then.
However you went about it, it would not be a good idea to do this anyway. Thermodynamics dictates that the amount of power you can get is proportional to the temp difference between the heat source and its surroundings. You'd have to have a temperature difference across the generator, plus all the temp diff across the stuff that conducts the heat to the generator, and away from it. (With the small temp diff you'd be able to manage, the efficiency would be very low, so most of the heat would come out the other side anyway, and you'd have to get rid of it in the usual way.) You want to keep your CPU as cool as possible, so it doesn't burn out, so putting an extra thermal barrier in the way is not good.
Basically, you'd gain so little from generating power from waste heat that it would not be worth doing, besides the fact that doing it would have a direct negative effect on the cooling system.
The author may be a bit biased... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The author may be a bit biased... (Score:2, Informative)
he has been granted a total of 14 patents in the US, though.
Re:The author may be a bit biased... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:The author may be a bit biased... (Score:1)
If only dealing with Rambus were this easy.
Re:The author may be a bit biased... (Score:2)
Re:Duke NukeM 3D (Score:1)
How would you like to have a deathmatch in a beautifully rendered cathedral with huge numbers of polygons and some realtime raytracing? How about etherial enemies that look like something out of a movie special effects department? How about a mission to the power center of a Darco from SimCity, one that looked real?
Think about the future, and don't think small!
About the company (Score:2, Informative)
Eggs in many baskets (Score:2, Interesting)
Just curious.
Re:Eggs in many baskets (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Eggs in many baskets (Score:1)
Plus, it helps solve one of the problems in the world: the future is taking too long.
Re:Eggs in many baskets (Score:1)
Re:Eggs in many baskets (Score:1)
Re:Eggs in many baskets (Score:1)
Is Thomas H. Lee Alive? (Score:2)
Re:Is Thomas H. Lee Alive? (Score:1, Informative)
3D (Score:1, Insightful)
Next 3D games [3dgamers.com].
Then Doritos 3D [doritos.com]
Now 3D-Memory Chips
What's the next?
Re:3D (Score:2)
At last! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:At last! (Score:1)
Re:At last! (Score:1)
Re:At last! (Score:1)
From the title of the /. post... (Score:3, Funny)
It will not replace your flash memory card... (Score:3, Informative)
Matrix 3-D Memory is a field-programmable, archival medium. Cards with 3DM are write-once and the programming can happen all at once or in parts over time. Once on the card, the data is secure for generations and can be read repeatedly.
So it's merely a writable-CD-on-a-chip. Maybe they will develop a rewritable version someday :-)
Re:It will not replace your flash memory card... (Score:1)
This permanent film thing may be the fix for some applications, such as insurance, where you're not allowed to take digital photographs for fear of altering the picture after the fact.
This might help people make the jump to digital imaging, too, if they have an analogue to film negatives (deletable, non-permanent files only on their PC may put some people off from the idea.)
But I won't use it in my digital camera, though, because of its recurring cost; my Microdrive is reusable, and I archive onto my PC (CD-R, as soon as I buy one, and CD-R media is much less expensive than this purports to be).
Re:It will not replace your flash memory card... (Score:2)
You would also know that they claim to have produced the more complex DRAMs and EEPROMs in the labs successfully.
Re:It will not replace your flash memory card... (Score:1)
A very informative article can be found here [matrixsemi.com]. I will quote a piece of that article:
Although the first product is a write-once variant of traditional reprogrammable Flash memory, it is reasonable to assume a fully reprogrammable part is a potential follow on product. The introduction date for this follow on is indeterminate at this time. Matrix has chosen to stay focused on putting the write-once product on designer's roadmaps instead of spreading their efforts into other areas where they could lose focus.
Matrix Semiconductor future developments (Score:1)
Although successful research has been done to rewritable technologies, they will focus on write-once memories for the time being:
The Matrix model brings a very low cost point into the picture but with a write-once approach. Instead of buying one or two reprogrammable cards for semi-permanent storage, consumers would use many of the write once cards for permanent storage and add cards as needed. The advantage is always having a permanent copy of the file that cannot be erased and is accessible on demand.
So? (Score:2, Interesting)
Moore's Hunch (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Moore's Hunch (Score:2)
Having been postponed or negated several times now
Nope, it hasn't. Fears of it running out of steam have however been postponed or negated several times now. However it must run out sometime. The physical universe has limits.
Interesting note is that that Ray Kurzweil has tracked this trend back to 1890s through several generations of technologies, and it holds all the way. Therefor there is no particular reason to believe that it will end when we move from silicon to something else. However, as I said, the physical universe does have lmits. It will end, likely sometime in the 20xx years, since it is doubling.
should we call Moore's law a postulation at best?
Moore's observation is probably the best term, since that's what it is: an empirical observation of what is happening, and was never intended to be taken as a law of nature, which it certainly isn't.
64Mb (Score:1)
Offtopic nagging about b vs B (Score:1)
B = byte
512 million bit does NOT equal 64 million bit.
64 MB.
Just be glad you didn't write mb, cause then I'd have to flog you as well!
Re:Offtopic nagging about b vs B (Score:1)
Re:Offtopic nagging about b vs B (Score:1)
Unless M or b are 0, in which case it would be true.
Re:Offtopic nagging about b vs B (Score:1)
Re:Offtopic nagging about b vs B (Score:1)
"The author states that the first generation of their chip will be a 512 million bit device. i.e. 64Mb. That doesn't seem like a lot to me..."
Since "million" and M[ega] is the same, you might not have written 512 Mb, but you might as well have.
Next up: 4D chips (Score:2)
Ending up down the wrong path (Score:3, Interesting)
But what we're really talking about is not 3-D, it's just stacked 2-D. In fact technically, all computer chips are 1-D.
Because of the limitation of the fact that the Silicon crystal needs to be monolithic, that is, a lattice of atoms completely ordered throughout the chip we've got to think outside the box, this guy's inside the box, but realistically, this is to save money, and he wants to see something before his great grand kids are born.
The heart of the problem is the crystal flat surface. What we need is a crystal that grows out and up in such as manner as to be a monolithic latice but also compartmentalized. A cube, with little windows and rooms and holes so that the dope can get in.
Completely revolutionized fabrication thinking. We'll see it in less than 50 years.
Re:Ending up down the wrong path (Score:2)
Strictly from a physical standpoint they are 3-D and this is best proven by the lack of widespread infinite memory capacity as between any two points there is an infinite number of 2-D planes and this can be proven mathematically.
1-D is just pure silly because even doing a flat representation of a modern chip requires a 2-D plane, and a rather filled up one it is for even a simple memory chip.. There is no way one could trace anything more complicated than series of capacitors, resistors or semiconductor junctions on a single line and even then it would physically 1-d only from the standpoint of path of electricity.
Re:Ending up down the wrong path (Score:1)
That's what I was talking about of course....
Anything tangible in this world is 3-D. But functionally, it may be 1,2,3, or n D.
Even my idea of a cubic wafer is still functionally 1-D. Anything discrete is 1-D.
Re:Ending up down the wrong path (Score:2)
(1) If the electron always travels the same path, than the output is always the same--not anybody's definition of a "computer"!
(2) Therefore, from (1), there must be more than one possible path for the electron to take.
(3) Any time the path branches, I'd imagine you've moved from the 1-dimensional world to the 2-dimensional world.
(4) Thus, from (2) and (3), logic arrays are conceptually 2-dimensional.
Or am I missing something?
Re:Ending up down the wrong path (Score:2, Informative)
the channels are so thin, and short that basically the electrons/holes just shoot across (short channel effects aside). the width is primarily used by logic designers to account for loading (like multiple lanes on the highway).
now, device people have to take all 3D into account, but they basically end up back in a 1D approximation that works.
As far as the process guy people are concerned it's all in 3D and your cube with little windows is how doping works now. One doesn't need little windows, the dopants are injected or diffused into it. The "windows" are then closed by reducing the temperature, or "activated" by annealing.
in this case it is just stacked 2D, there is lots of research in the area of stacked 2D, both for real-estate (some phones have stacked processor/mem chips in them now. they are just connected with traditional wafer bonds)
and some for performance (like Matrix Semi.)
"lattice of atoms completely ordered throughout the chip we've got to think outside the box, this guy's inside the box, "
: actually he IS outside the box he's trying to use little bits of single crystal Si and fit his devices inside each little piece. that is VERY difficult and requires insane processing technology and alignment. OR in his case, reduntant ckts and error checking.
crystals are grown in 3d. they jsut can't be grown ontop of other stuff, or even on itself very easily without getting massive dislocations, etc.
i hope this made sense.
-eric
Re:Ending up down the wrong path (Score:1)
If all that was in the chip was one long line of parts, then yeah that would make sense. It's not tho, the circuit is closer to a grid than a line. My vote's on 2D.
And whether it's produced by layering of 2D sections, or by some funky 3D fabrication process, I would say as the number of connections between layers approaches the number of connections on a layer (in one direction), it's closer to real 3D circuitry.
Re:Ending up down the wrong path (Score:1)
A grid is like an array, but still it's one dimensional. Look at computer language, arrays are always 1-D after compiled. If x is a 5x6 array, then x[3,2] really becomes x[3*6 + 2] = x[20]...
Circuits for chips are non-linear though, right?
Re:Ending up down the wrong path (Score:1)
aha! (Score:1)
"The second advance was a way to flatten each coat of new material so that the chips don't rise unevenly like towers built by drunken bricklayers."
building 3D chips one layer at a time (Score:3, Offtopic)
If 3D chip design proliferates, I predict that these two technologies will eventually merge. Sophisticated chips will be assembled one layer at a time, perhaps one layer of atoms at a time, with electronic pathways twisting and turning through a three-dimensional block of material designed to ferry heat away from the core of the device. The main advantage, of course, would be enabling shorter pathways from one part of the chip to another, improving further as design improves. Perhaps in time motherboards would be replaced by "motherblocks" and the entire computer will become far more portable.
Re:building 3D chips one layer at a time (Score:2, Informative)
in their form of 3D chips (lots of other ways to do this), they lay down layers of poly, then laser anneal to get bigger single crystal grains, then mask and etch just like conventional silicon. So it is sort of the same.
I think it is somewhat futile to try to combine them when they are already so similar and the outcome is already determined, and existing technologies exist. but it is an interesting parallel.
Re:building 3D chips one layer at a time (Score:2)
You start with a silicon wafer, and then variously apply masks, metal layers and doping the silicon underneath.
You'll end up with a wafer that has a thin layer of SiO2 but with windows cut in it. Copper or Alu interconnects are applied onto that.
Of course we are only talking about a few layers here, not very 3d when you consider the area of the die versus the thickness of the active circuitry.
The most interesting thing... (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, think about it.
If we're going to reach the limit of how small we can make these transistors by say 2020 (by which time we'll most likely be up to around 30Ghz processors), that's a major limitation in this industry.
The way I see it, it could go one of two ways:
1. We reach an inescapable limit of electronics, and the entire computer semiconductor industry implodes because it can't keep up with it's own reputation for performance increases.
2. Before that deadline occurs, some new fantastic and mindblowing technology is created. By this I don't mean some 'chip-stacking-bastardisation' of electronics but some true breakthrough.
Whichever way it goes, it's going to be very exciting, and I'm glad I'll be around to see it. Considering how much our lives are impacted by electronics these days, it could be the modern-day equivalent of the industrial revolution.
Re:The most interesting thing... (Score:1)
Re:The most interesting thing... (Score:1)
These could be a far more feasible revolution in processing than 30GHz processors. Not to mention that I'd hope we see processors at least equivalent to 30GHz in less than 18 years. Assuming that it took ~7 years to go from 133MHz to 2GHz it seems feasible according to Moore's law that it should be less than a decade to get to 30GHz.
Later this year... (Score:3, Funny)
... They've got to hurry. There's only 20 days left...
A few notes (Score:2, Interesting)
Seeing xxx layered cpu's seems unlikly untill designtools can handle 3d strucures efficiently. This will certainly take a long time.
2. Moores law is dependet on shrinking the transistors so more can be fittet on the same amount of space, 2d -> n^2
If the transitors are shrinked in height as well, the possible amount of transitors in a cube would be increased by n^3.
(This won't work in practise yet, they've got it working with 12 layers, but would be cool)
Re:A few notes (Score:1)
anyway, cadence and others can do stuff in 3D. you just make another layer that will be used as an interlayer via and line them up so they don't hit stuff just like in the classical method. you can even stick in your own design rules so that they aren't too close, etc. just make one design for one layer, another for the other layer, superimpose, align, via, connect, and BAM! yer done.
(yes i've done this before)
Re:A few notes (Score:1)
and another thing, they DO strink vertically, as the gate oxide is thinned the electric field grows, thus sucking the channel in tighter to the top. so we don't need as much S/D capacitance, etc. Look at SOI for technology which harnesses this.
What about Heat (Score:1)
This is an interesting idea, and I think that it will probably have applications in packages where not processing power but sizes are the issues. Perhaps in several years we will have cell phones with 3D chips in them, but I don't think that it will have a large impact on CPU markets until the heat issues are resolved.
Interesting morning read... (Score:3, Insightful)
This initial size doesn't bother me. As it's perfected and costs go down that would grow fast enough. Being WORM media is another issue though. I understand that this is a stepping stone to dynamic media, but at the moment I can get CD-Rs for around $.50/unit that are a proven media, hold much more data, and are already widely supported. And guess what: there are CD-RW already too (he can't do that yet). The heat thing could also be/not be an issue. Perhaps since it's stacked vert it will cool better. It's certainly harder to cover all surfaces in 3D. I have this vision of a cube with a heatsink on it's five exposed sides, only to have a core meltdown.
Memory != Film (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Memory != Film (Score:1)
The similarity with chemical film is, that the 3D-Memory device can be used once, until it's full. It's a write-once-read-many (WORM) device, unlike the CF, SmartMedia and Memory Stick devices, which are non-volatile RAM devices and can be re-used (Flash memory technology). Maybe a future development of the 3D-Memory technology will incorporate re-writable memory devices. So far, they are not even on the market.
Also, I'm not impressed by the memory sizes they are offering. The article says 64MB, which is readily available nowadays. Perhaps the price will make the difference. It must be cheap, no-one is going to buy a one-time-use device unless it's -say- 10 times cheaper than a comparable re-useable device.
Re:Memory != Film (Score:2)
Now, we obviously need to improve the CCD until we can squeeze billions and trillions of pixels first, but the limiting factor beyond that is gonna be storage space. A little 16MB cf card doesn't exactly cut it when you're talking 8,000x8,000 images. 3-D memory will (in theory) allow such great density that a camera could contain gigabytes or more of memory. Assuming the rest of the hardware advances continue, THIS is the only way we'll ever replace film fully.
Re:Memory != Film (Score:1)
Moreover, if a breakthrough in CCD's was going to be made, it would occur first in the professional market, of course. In this market, carrying around a 2.5" 20GB hard drive is not a big deal; it's smaller than many of your lenses! I really don't see that storage space is, in any way, a limitting factor in todays digital photography.
Re:Memory != Film (Score:1)
In my opinion digital camera's already surpassed analog camera's with 35mm film. See for example the new Canon 1D [imaging-resource.com] camera. It will take a little longer for medium-format film camera's to be replaced but I think this will be a matter of 2-3 years.
Patent held by a computer program (Score:2)
Oh well, a number of science fictiony people have been talking about this technology for quite some time, and dreaming up amusing applications for it in fields like processing, mass storage, I/O, etc. The idea of a cherry-sized chip with the computing capacity of a human brain is pretty common in those old books.
Of course, three or four layers of memory is a big step from thirty or forty thousand layers of processor.
Damn expensive real estate (Score:2, Funny)
That's the first time I've seen real estate more expensive than in Japan.
Re:Damn expensive real estate (Score:1)
Needless to say they've fallen a bit since then, to around $9000/sq ft. A steal at 400 million an acre!
Moore's law is not an accident (Score:2, Interesting)
The guy does not understand Moore's law.
Moore's law is shaped by economic forces. Silicon chips don't "wear out" like metals and plastics. If the industry fails to obsolete the previous generation, what do they have to sell?
At any stage along the way, there are dozens of potential avenues for reaching the next cost/performance milestone. They simply "do what it takes" to get there.
3D could have been pursued long ago, but there was no real need. The advantage of making transistors smaller is that the speed increases while the voltage and heat decreases. If you can make a transistor smaller, you aren't going to pursue any other course.
Moore's law has not "drooped". There has always been something right around the corner to rescue Moore's law, and this article just adds to the evidence that nothing much has changed.
The significant event at the present time is that leakage current has become sizeable relative to peak operating current. Shrinking transistors is no longer a free lunch.
I think 3D will succeed in applications where wire latency is a bigger problem than heat dissipation. The biggest advantage of 3D is that it lets you cram more stuff closer together.
Re:Moore's law is not an accident (Score:2)
Eventually, ambient radiation deposits fixed charges in gate oxide that damages CMOS circuitry. But the process takes a while, unless you are in space and get hit by a Solar Flare.
I used to make these (Score:2, Funny)
I'm not sure this is gonna make digtal cameras che (Score:2)
According to the article the plan on making storage that can hold 300 or so 1Mpixel digital images. I have a ComapctFlash card that holds about 200 3Mpixel images, it cost me $110 (on sale ). I figure they hold about the same amount of data as the 3D chips are intended to. So this new technology can make a $110 CF card even cheaper, but not by more then $110. Realistically, probably not more then $100 or $80 cheaper...
And it won't make cameras cheaper at all since camera makers seldom include CF cards of a useful size at all (my latest camera came with a 8M card, enough to hold fewer then 8 normal pictures, maybe 3 raw format ones -- less then a second of shooting at full speed!).
It might even make the cameras slightly more costly as venders finally decide to ship "useful" sized CF cards (which is not as good as one may think -- would you want to pay $30 extra to get a 340M CF card when your real plan is to pay $60 for a 1G CF card?)
Cost savings not so simple (Score:3, Informative)
In particular, there is a suggestion that there are cost savings in part because the surface area of a "3d chip" is less than "1d chips" since 1d chips have more surface area there is a greater chance a defect will happen within that area. (Thus "small yield.") This is a spurious suggestion for the following reasons:
1. Each layer of the "3d" chip is subject to abnormality risk. (Thus real risk is LAYERS x AREA x RISK. For 1d chip AREA is bigger, but LAYERS = 1.)
2. The chip is mechanically "ground flat" after each layer to prepare for the next. I'm sure this works and I am also sure there a failure rate greater than zero for this operation.
3. Perfect alignment of the layers is required otherwise one of more parts of the "cube" will fail. They are working on fault tollerance issues right now, and they should.
Bottom line is that every bad chip drives up the final production cost. This is true for 1d and 3d. Seems like all the risks of 1d apply to 3d and now there are a few more. How will this be cheaper in the short run?
Let's not get into the heat issue that has not been resolved.
I hope they succeed, but the oversimplifications made trying to sell this thing bug me.
Re:Cost savings not so simple (Score:2)
By having a physically "thinner" chip with the same transistor count, the quality of the optics required is reduced, and at UV wavelengths that is serious money saved.
SMACK! (Score:2)
Superconductivity and heat dissipation (Score:1)
But is it a win? (Score:3, Insightful)
Modest, he's not.
The problem, as someone else pointed out, is yield. This involves running the chip through all the steps of lithography, deposition, and etching many times, usually losing a few devices to process flaws on each pass.
That's why this guy talks about needing redundancy and error recovery. That's nothing new; as far back as the 1970s, chips have been designed with redundant parts that were bypassed during tests, like bad spots on disk. This works well for memory, badly for more complex logic. Historically, the semiconductor industry has considered redundancy, but the wafer fab people always got the yields up to where it wasn't necessary.
It's clear that this will make memories smaller, but not necessarily cheaper. The number of fab steps per bit fabricated is equal or higher, not lower. Yes, there's a savings on the raw silicon, but that's not a big fraction of chip cost.
There's also the fact that RAM doesn't take up a significant volume in most current products. Maybe 1% of a PC's case volume is RAM chips. This guy is thinking not of PCs, but portable applications, which is probably right. There's also more price headroom on things like "memory sticks" and "flash cards" than on commodity RAM for computers.
Notice that he's also thinking of slow, low-duty-cycle applications, like storing music and video. That cuts the heat dissipation. Cooling the gates in the middle layers will be tough.
Irvine Sensors (Score:2)
Stacked memory devices? You mean like the ones Irvine Sensors [irvine-sensors.com] have been making for 20 years?
To their credit, Matrix Semiconductors acknowledges that they weren't the first ones to do this; but rather that they (supposedly) are the first to have mass production capabilities.
Re:Irvine Sensors (Score:3, Informative)
A digital camera is one application where density may count more than price, and I don't see how the Matrix chips can be beat for density. In conventional IC's, most of the silicon is below the active areas and only provides mechanical support. Stack those IC's, and you have many layers of non-functional silicon. The Matrix chip has just one.
Stacked chips have limited vertical interconnects -- either you connect them only at the edges, or you drill holes through the chips (much bigger than other IC fixtures) and metal-plate those as vertical wires. The Matrix chips can have true 3D interconnects, at the size of other IC features. This may not mean much to a plain memory chip, but it could be very important to other applications...
Re:Irvine Sensors (Score:2, Informative)
Not that new (Score:2, Informative)
Check out http://www.thinfilm.se (Score:2, Informative)
Analog film? (Score:1)
Re:Analog vs. Digital (Score:1)
Re:Analog vs. Digital (Score:1)
most people use don't even resolve that. Full
frame 35mm is 24mm x 36mm so typical 35mm quality can be reached with 8 megapixels. Only the very
best 35mm single focal length lenses at their best aperature and the slowest high quality films resolve 200 lines/mm. In theory you would need 30 megapixels to equal this but that is well beyond typical 35mm quality.
Re:Analog vs. Digital (Score:1)
Another post suggests that the write-once capability of the 3D memory chip will be some kind of magic to prove that a photo hasn't been retouched. But why couldn't I get a writer for these memories in my PC, and store an image to it after I run gimp/photoshop? This problem can be solved by having the camera digitally sign its images---after you load it in your photo editor, you can't write out another file with a valid signature. (But is Kodak or anybody else prepared to create a tamper-proof digital camera and adequately protect the digital signing key that would be built into such a camera?)
Now that there are high-quality digital photographic printing processes, 300-600dpi onto photo paper, is somebody working on 3000-6000dpi printing onto photographic negatives? The same technology that makes our digital prints look good should also let us make awesome fake negatives! So much for the faith of people in the photographic negative...
Re:great but why can't they work on more irq's... (Score:1)
I have a feeling that if they want to make a better BIOS, this may be helpful pretty soon.