IBM is using light, instead of electricity, to create ultra-fast computing
The company's researchers built a light-based tensor core that could be used, among other applications, for autonomous vehicles.
The company's researchers built a light-based tensor core that could be used, among other applications, for autonomous vehicles.
From a practical desktop perspective, the only Arm game in town right now is the Apple Silicon M1.
IBM Microelectronics is hitting the road with its new spin on silicon for making faster computer chips.
The constant flow of better gizmos may seem divinely ordained, but there's more to faster chips than just cranking the physics
I’m optimistic that we will see the programming breakthroughs in the next few years that will make it much easier to write efficient, correct, and modular programs for multi-core processors
Some say once all a ship’s parts have been replaced, after years of service, it’s no longer the same ship. Mac may not be Macintosh any more, but Apple’s revival of an old idea suggests history may not have changed as much as we think.
Tech companies are increasingly invading each other's turf, and with Intel stepping up its mobile efforts, Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs says he's ready for the battle ahead.
Before I get into the guts of this post, a special thank-you to the team at Texas Instruments (Bill Krenik, CTO of the wireless business unit, and Dave Freeman, Texas Instruments Fellow, Analog & Digital Power Control Products) who were patient enough to brief me weeks and weeks and weeks ago about the various ways that the company is addressing the call for reduced energy consumption across a spectrum of technology products.