A computer that you never have to boot?

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In the not-too-distnt-future you may never need boot your computer agin.
Sure, you'll still turn it off and on when you like, but if HP has its way,
the computer will remember exactly where it was and return there instantly
when the power is switched back on.

Check out this story found at
http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssTechMediaTelecomNews/idUSN3055073520080430.

Scientists develop new type of memory circuit
Wed Apr 30, 2008 6:16pm EDT
By Julie Steenhuysen

CHICAGO, April 30 (Reuters) - It took about 40 years to find it, but
scientists at Hewlett-Packard (HPQ.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said on
Wednesday they discovered a fourth basic type of electrical circuit that
could lead to a computer you never have to boot up.

The finding proves what until now had only been theory -- but could save
millions from the tedium of waiting for a computer to find its "place," the
researchers said.

Basic electronics theory teaches that there are three fundamental elements
of a passive circuit -- resistors, capacitors and inductors.

But in the 1970s, Leon Chua of the University of California at Berkeley,
theorized there should be a fourth called a memory resistor, or memristor,
for short, and he worked out the mathematical equations to prove it.

Now, a team at Hewlett-Packard led by Stanley Williams has proven that
'memristance' exists. They developed a mathematical model and a physical
example of a memristor, which they describe in the journal Nature.

"It's very different from any other electrical device," Williams said of his
memristor in a telephone interview. "No combination of resistor, capacitor
or inductor will give you that property."

Williams likens the property to water flowing through a garden hose. In a
regular circuit, the water flows from more than one direction.

But in a memory resistor, the hose remembers what direction the water (or
current) is flowing from, and it expands in that direction to improve the
flow. If water or current flows from the other direction, the hose shrinks.

"It remembers both the direction and the amount of charge that flows through
it. ... That is the memory," Williams said.

The discovery is more than an academic pursuit for Williams, who said the
finding could lead a new kind of computer memory that would never need
booting up.

Conventional computers use dynamic random access memory or DRAM, which is
lost when the power is turned off, and must be accessed from the hard drive
when the computer goes back on.

But a computer that incorporates this new kind of memory circuit would never
lose it place, even when the power is turned off.

"If you turn on your computer it will come up instantly where it was when
you turned it off. That is a very interesting potential application, and one
that is very realistic," Williams said.

But he said understanding this new circuit element could be critical as
companies attempt to build ever smaller devices.

"It's essential that people understand this to be able to go further into
the world of nanoelectronics," referring to electronics on the nano scale --
objects tens of thousands of times smaller than the width of a human hair.

"It turns out that memristance, this property, gets more important as the
device gets smaller. That is another major reason it took so long to find,"
Williams said. (Editing by Maggie Fox)
 
Re: A computer that you never have to boot?

____/ jim on Friday 02 May 2008 09:43 : \____

> In the not-too-distnt-future you may never need boot your computer agin.
> Sure, you'll still turn it off and on when you like, but if HP has its way,
> the computer will remember exactly where it was and return there instantly
> when the power is switched back on.
>
> Check out this story found at
>

http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssTechMediaTelecomNews/idUSN3055073520080430.

This assumes your computer/system is properly built and doesn't leak memory.

Much of this can already be done a little more slowly by restoring RAM from
media that's not volatile.

--
~~ Best of wishes

Roy S. Schestowitz | "ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI"
http://Schestowitz.com | RHAT GNU/Linux | PGP-Key: 0x74572E8E
10:00:06 up 17 days, 8:12, 3 users, load average: 2.44, 2.04, 1.94
http://iuron.com - help build a non-profit search engine
 
Re: A computer that you never have to boot?

* Roy Schestowitz peremptorily fired off this memo:

>> In the not-too-distnt-future you may never need boot your computer agin.
>> Sure, you'll still turn it off and on when you like, but if HP has its way,
>> the computer will remember exactly where it was and return there instantly
>> when the power is switched back on.
>>

> http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssTechMediaTelecomNews/idUSN3055073520080430.
>
> This assumes your computer/system is properly built and doesn't leak memory.
>
> Much of this can already be done a little more slowly by restoring RAM from
> media that's not volatile.


I'd like to know what happens if your computer wakes up in a new Network
Neighborhood (shades of Mr. Rogers!), and with different equipment now
plugged into it.

--
Stolen's a strong word. It's copyrighted content that the owner wasn't paid
for. So yes. -- Bill Gates, On his use of YouTube to watch videos. "Bill Gates
on ...the Competition" in The Wall Street Journal (19 June 2006); also quoted
in "Bill Gates' piracy confession" at ComputerWorld.com
 
Re: A computer that you never have to boot?

jim wrote:

> In the not-too-distnt-future you may never need boot your computer agin.
> Sure, you'll still turn it off and on when you like, but if HP has its
> way, the computer will remember exactly where it was and return there
> instantly when the power is switched back on.
>
> Check out this story found at
> http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssTechMediaTelecomNews

idUSN3055073520080430.


The memristor is a fantastic progress for electronics
For example, a 100 billion element cross bar switch
has been made on a 1cm square pad.

Thats enough to wire 100,000 person to any other
person in a telephone exchange 1cm square. And do it ten times over
without multiplexing. And if you were to multiplex, you
could make that a few million.

That kind of technology and power was inconceivable one or two years back.
Its at least a 1000 fold increase in performance without penalty.
It is definitely not on the Moore's 'Law' road map!!
This is a quantum leap into the future and Moore's 'Law'
has been completely outflanked by this new technology.

It is also definitely not a HP invention - its originators
are Samsung and others because I heard about that device's
discovery years ago in the far east!!! The press have gotten
all gullible over the technology and fails to credit its true
inventors properly.

The device is not difficult to visualise.
The device is simply household white paint (titanium dioxide) sandwiched
between two plates. The plates are about 5nm apart which is the
kinds of distances when its function gets interesting.

In the next two to five years this technology could
find itself in every chip because it really is paint
and some metal prods. All of a sudden
even simple embedded processors will be cheaper and more
powerful than today's quad cores with the equivalent
of hard disk, flash, codecs and graphics processors
all rolled into one chip that is easy to produce
complete motherboard and PC at a lower cost than todays chips.
A modern datacenter will fit into a shoe box. As will
a telephone exchange.

And the great thing is that anyone can R&D it and put
together a lab to produce chips with minimal outlay
and start selling asap. It doesn't require much
in the way of technology to get things going.
Who ever has got devices to sell, there will be massive
demand for it because of its efficiency.
At that rate you could start 10 factories and
one of them is bound to be a success.
 
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