Single Molecule Memory 134
techtrend linked us up to a paper from Mark Reed and James Tour on
single molecule memory which, if it comes about will pretty much make space irrelevant. They say the technology is 3-5 years off.
The finest eloquence is that which gets things done.
This Nice and All... (Score:1)
Some one should probably make some crack about running beowulf on molecular computers...
-Crutcher
Re:The ultimate? (Score:1)
Re:Figures (Score:1)
A few exeptions may be the advent of simple thinks like USB2, firewire, copper process, silicon on insulator, high density flash memory...
This molecular based memory sounds great but when will we see any of this in practice? But we can dream.
--
Limits of Computing [Off Topic] (Score:1)
It's a math heavy, but still accessible to the lay audience, and a fun read insomuch as Lloyd goes so far as to talk about outlandish theoreticals as black hole computers.
huh? (Score:2)
It's essentially, under high pressure, using a tungsten heating element run under some methane gasses in a non-combustible environment(nitrogen and stuff), and diamond will start to grow upon the surface.
I may have a few technical details wrong, but I think that's the process.
-AS
Incredible info, if you know where to look... (Score:2)
The problem is that most of the really exciting research results don't work above liquid nitrogen temperatures, and some don't even work above liquid HELIUM (4K) temperatures!
But I actually saw the quantum dot working, and helped perform some of the analysis of it (on some good old VAX hardware!) I also helped construct a custom I-V trace unit which used a wiggle voltage to produce better curve traces of the results. Some of these novel quantum semiconductor devices (see, for instance, the I-V trace of this one [yale.edu] are actually capable of operating in more than just one single state -- the multiple plateaus in the 9 T graph show that this device can operate as a trinary logic device if you know what you're doing. Then again, it requires a 9 Tesla field to bring out these characteristics...
As I've said before on /., we need to solve the temperature and interconnect issues. Interconnect may have a new solution, per that article on molecular computing posted a few days ago here. Our materials science friends, though, need to keep making progress on materials which possess these unique characteristics at room temperature.
Re:And rightly so ..... (Score:1)
Being able to build a few gates in the lab is one thing .... getting it to a mass market and cheaper than the existing technologies with all the momentum they have going for them is really hard. Not impossible mind you ..... just harder than most people think
Re:Incredible info, if you know where to look... (Score:2)
Re:Not sure... (Score:1)
Well, half a memory, anyhow.... (Score:1)
In other words, right now they can change the "memory" state of the molecule from 0 to 1 once, but they can't tell it to flip back, right? They need to develop the switch. And after that, they'll probably need to develop a general purpose way to read the memory (and write, of course). And it will probably take time to integrate this stuff with existing electronics.
Don't get me wrong, this is definitely exciting stuff! But don't expect to see the "general-purpose ultimate molecular computer" anytime soon.
--
Ernest MacDougal Campbell III / NIC Handle: EMC3
Re:640KB is enough... (Score:1)
Just curious, seeing as how its a memory related post to an article on memory.
Re:Ahh, how great it would be... (Score:1)
Clerk hands over a small flask, "That'll be five bucks."
If/when this comes to fruition, people will talk about today's paltry storage capacities the same way we currently talk about those "old 1K machines". Of course the downside is you'll probably need 500 or 600 mole-bytes to run everyone's favorite Redmond graphical shell.
(for those who don't remember their chemistry, a mole is 6.02e23 "things", i.e., molecules, atoms, minutes until class is over.... Compare that with a terabyte, which is roughly 1e12 bytes, and you're talking vast increases in capacity. As for how much is in a mole, take 18 mL of water and drink it. You've just swallowed a mole of water...feel full?)
Manipulating anything on this vast a scale, in terms of individually accessing each molecule, boggles the mind. But it's sure going to be fun.
Mmm.....years and years of MP3s stored in memory...
Re:Figures (Score:2)
I agree that "speculative science" usually ends up yesterday's "science fiction" and last week's "mad ramblings". On the other hand, no speculation, no progress. Without trying to reach forward, people have a habit of sliding backwards.
Re:What comes after terabyte? (Score:1)
Re:What comes after terabyte? (Score:3)
Re:640KB is enough... (Score:1)
Figures (Score:1)
--
640KB is enough... (Score:2)
Re:Figures (Score:1)
Still, I'd like to see virtuall unlimited memory before I'm thirty. I wonder how that'd effect programs? No more memory management?
Re:Figures (Score:1)
"Then I'll tell the truth. We're allowed to do that in emergencies."
It doesn't say '3-5 years off' (Score:4)
But nothing in the article says that anything in this particular paper will be implimented any time soon.
Yet another two-state system. (Score:1)
can adopt two states, be they conformations,
oxidation states, spin states, whatever.
Making a bit has never been a problem.
The trick is reading and writing.
skeptical (Score:5)
we still dont have a decent way to transfer information through 1 molecule sized pathways...
(keep in mind, they have flipped the gate, and watched with a microscope... they did not do anything useful with it)
the gate/transistor can be that small, but if the path to get there is not, who cares
(electricity can't work well at that size, if the pathways are that small and at all decently near each other you will get massive electron tunneling, where they hop over to the next pathway ) (this is bad
optical pathways ahve not been gotten to work yet AFAIK, and even they would have problems at that level
on a more holistic level, fusion was supposed to be done 20 years ago, those incredibly large harddrives that are the size of my pinky were supposed to be done by now....
this is cool and all, but it is research that will not bear fruit for a LOOONG time
-RS
We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars --Oscar Wilde
slightly off topic.... (Score:2)
The ultimate reeally should be not storing bits. Seriously, whatever happened to fuzzy logic. I know that all conventional logic still holds true under the fuzzy rule sets so all software could be emulated.
For example::
-Analog music sounds better than sampled music
-People don't really use 1 bit logic in everyday life.
-fuzzy machines perform much better in real world tasks than traditional logic
Where are the attempts at hardware fuzzy logic? I know all of the obsticles in voltage regulation are staggering but.... you would think that there would be more research. The main reason we use the binary number system is to emulate a switch. I would like to see how fast a variable switch processor would be.
-Pos
The truth is more important than the facts.
What comes after a terabyte? (Score:1)
-lx
Re:Figures (Score:1)
What kind of molecule? (Score:1)
Re:Possible explanation on how it works (Score:1)
Re:Figures (Score:1)
But I agree with you otherwise, this isn't going to change any of our lives significantly.
"Then I'll tell the truth. We're allowed to do that in emergencies."
ask a silly question... (Score:2)
A: The answer depends on the physical system. There is no hard theoretical limit on computation speed (only unreliable estimates based on current and developing technologies).
2) How fast could molecular gates and molecular bits effect a computation?
A: The answer depends on the way these gates work. Who knows? Maybe they will use quantum tunneling to have a gate delay shorter than the time it would take light to pass through the space the gate occupies.
3) How do you estimate these numbers would translate into Teraflops?
A: Teraflops are meaningless out of context, and they are highly dependent on design. There is no limit to the teraflop rating of something made with current technology if you allow SMP.
Sorry, but the questions are just not answerable.
Re:skeptical (Score:1)
The materials being worked on are organic (rotaxane, etc.) which, of course, involve carbon. Hence, some of the advances over the last few years (carbon nanotubules or "Buckytubes", etc.) in carbon nanostructures would probably lend themselves nicely to the effort.
Kythe
(Remove "x"'s from
Just humor fodder (Score:2)
"Nobody move, I dropped my Cray!"
Even if memory could be made on the molecular level, and processors could flip electrons instead of bits, do you all think we could afford the Scanning-Tunneling microscopes we'd need for I/O? I mean, hell! I like having a big monitor. There's no way to plug it into a sugar-cube computer..
Every time you sneeze, you'd have to get new hardware.
A new meaning for "memory leak" (nt) (Score:1)
joke, not too if you're an engineer. (Score:1)
Re:Figures (Score:1)
James Tour (Score:4)
Finally, don't forget that you can see more about the Rice nanotechnology program at The Rice Quantum Institute [rice.edu] and The Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology [rice.edu]. Don't forget that Rice is where the Buckyball craze started, with Smalley and Curl winning the Nobel for the discovery of its shape.
Re:So what happens? (Score:1)
Re:Not much information here... (Score:1)
I'M NOT KIDDING! Take a look at the picture [aip.org]! However, this may only relate to his earlier work on molecular wires, but I assume, once you have figured out how to control the elves, the rest is rather straight forward.
Re:Yet another two-state system. (Score:1)
Self Assembly (Score:2)
They should talk to the guys at HP (Score:1)
Re:Theoretical limits of computing (Score:2)
I have no numbers, but I think there's a section in Applied Cryptography that discusses some theoretical maximums of computing power. My copy's at home - anyone have theirs handy?
Re:Space irrelevant? (Score:1)
Microsoft Office vs Sun's Star Office
uh wait...
Internet Explorer vs Netscape Navigator vs Hot Java
uh wait...
VB/VC/J++ vs Sun's Java
uh wait...
never mind.
Re:Not well endowed... (Score:2)
assuming 1 bit per molecule 6.02e23/2^50/8=
about 67 million
so you could store 67 million lifespans. APPROXIMATLY
in a mole...... shrugs.. thats not that much.. really windows 2050 will take atleast that. (even then.. imagine the load time.. though I guess you would buy memory preloaded with windows just never let it loose its power... assuming of course it works like that..)
Re:It doesn't say '3-5 years off' (Score:1)
exactly what i thought when i read the article. this is a trend at slashdot lately, by the way. since the article is only about one page long, i can only assume that mr. taco dosen't really even try to read the articles before coming up with a catchy blurb that invariably gets corrected by slashdot readers in the comments section. what's up guys, maybe you can try a little harder...
sh_
Re:2005: Typical Wintel system (Score:1)
Also, why don't you try listing requirements for Solaris 12 or Linux 10.9.5.3.1 and X12R3..or even better, Java, StarOffice, Netscape.
It was 3-5 years away 6 years ago. (Score:2)
moores law (Score:1)
Big deal... (Score:1)
Re:Probably more than "3-5" (Score:1)
Imagine.... (Score:1)
If the following conditions were met:
1. Sufficent Error Correction to over come things like electron tunneling and interference. (10 molecules per bit or whatever).
2. We had a decent way to interface to such memory and avoid interference.
3. It opereated at a speed comperable to current or future silicon RAM.
Then using the space current hard drives take up we could ahve a storage device holding petabytes of memory that is non volatile. Magnetic media becomes virtually useless. 1 Petabyte for nonvolatile storage and 1 petabyte for working space. No mechanical disk subsystem and IO speeds go completely through the roof. I for one would like to see it happen. You could scrub through a huge database with a processor slower that today's and it would still be faster once disk I/O is removed from the equation.
I would only have the following issues which would need to be addressed.
1. Microsoft style programmers could write even sloppier code as memory leaks would become virtually unnoticable unless they were huge.
2. Petabyte sounds like some wierd porkemon (yes thats PORK), character and I despise all these *mons that are coming out. All I hear out of my kids these days I WANT PIKACHEW. Five years from now it will be I WANT THE PETABYTE PIKACHEWBACCA!!
Help me please!!!
Re:Yet another two-state system. (Score:1)
Probably more than "3-5" (Score:2)
This made it sufficiently into public consciousness that Michael Crichton's book, Congo, had this as the "plot point" behind the search for "uniquely pure" diamonds.
19 years have now passed since the book was written; computers are not yet based on diamonds.
Thinking back only to 1998, IBM announced that PPC chips that used a copper-based production technique would provide massive performance increases; it is not clear that this is yet being deployed in present PPC systems.
I suspect that "single molecule" memory elements are more than 3-5 years away.
Re:The ultimate? (Score:1)
My question is if we find a way to compute more than reality itself then can we jump to a higher plane of being?
MEMS (Score:1)
Just add the transistors and the dream of powerful (like ~286/386 powered, or at least dragonball(palm v)) smart dust [berkeley.edu] will be a reality. (or smart cereal, just think, your daily internal diagnostic exam could happen over breakfast)
Re:Not much information here... (Score:1)
Re:640KB is enough... (Score:1)
Re:Ahh, how great it would be... (Score:1)
--
Does size matter? (Score:1)
Re:OK... (Score:1)
Re:Yet another two-state system. (Score:1)
Good Companion article in nytimes (Score:2)
The prof printed out copies for everyone.
You can find YOUR copy at:
http://www.nyt imes.com/library/tech/99/11/biztech/articles/01na
Usual free registration/login for nytimes.
Re:Possible explanation on how it works (Score:3)
It is not just a single bit that can be in a superposition of states, but all the bits of the computation. (A superposition of states can be described as probability distribution over all the possible states the system could be in). Thus, the limit on the number of parallel computations in a binary quantum computer is 2^N, where N is the number of quantum bits (qubits) used in the computation.
The degree of parallelism this implies is staggering. Some problems that are believed to require exponential time to solve on a classical computer could be solved in polynomial time on a quantum computer. This includes factoring (think RSA encryption).
Some people overgeneralize and think that a quantum computer could solve NP-complete problems in polynomial time. Unfortunately, that's not the case (or at least, hasn't been proven). To get an answer out of a quantum computer, you need to be able to get all of the exponentially many wrong solutions to somehow "cancel out," leaving the correct solution. Doing that in the general case is non-trivial and probably impossible. Quantum compilers are a long way off.
But so far, quantum computers have proven difficult to build. The problem is getting a useful computation without a "collapse" of the wave function. (A collapse is when the system rolls the dice or whatever it does, and settles on a single state to be in. Oops, there goes your parallelism!) The biggest quantum computer I've heard about has 2 qubits. An impressive achievement, but not quite ready to port Linux to.
qubits (Score:1)
to a point this has already been acheived. I was reading in new scientist about qubits and quantum computing.
It works like this... using an electron spin or photon polarisation, qubits allow you to represent both 1 and 0 at the same time. Using the physical properties of electon spins you can generate different states (00, 01, 11 etc). Read the full article here...
http://www.newscientist.com/nsplus/insight/quantu
http://www.newscientist.com/ns/980418/nquantumcom
Re:skeptical (Score:1)
Noone has gotten nanotubes to self
assemble, and more importantly
research into defects in nanotubes is
only beginning. Electromigration
is alsways an issue for ULSI.
And then of course cross-talk in the
form of tunneling or scattering is
an issue for these materials as well.
Lastly, (this is not a joke) at those
scales, information carriers have to travel
very fast, so fast in fact that special
relativity limitations become fundamental.
My guess is that it will be easy to get to
100 nm scale, hard to get to 10 nm scale
and virtually impossible to get to 1 nm.
I doubt we will move beyond 0.13 - 0.10 micron
technology in the next ten years.
So what happens? (Score:1)
Re:Figures (Score:2)
Interesting idea that you can control a single molecule. But can it be done fast? is it expensive? If not it won't be any good for hardrives or internal memory. The article doesn't go into detail on these issues.
Will it beat holographic storage and other interesting techniques?
Interesting times are ahead of us. I could have said that anytime during the last 100 years or so and I hope I can keep saying it for quite some time.
Cool Beans (Score:1)
Although I agree with the "Figures" poster that the 3-5 years always gets pushed back 3-5 years there seems to be an awful lot of tiny-device stuff breaking out these days, I think perhaps a change is at least somewhere in the next 10-20 years.
I do know that with the immense growth of databases such technology would seriously kick ass. You could run mega multiple instances of DB's on a single server which isn't popular now because of resident memory size (well - unless you have a crapload of memory).
I wanna know about disks though. I keep reading stuff about nanotechnology driven processors and now molecule memory - what is happening with disc technology, or rather semi-permanant technology like disks?
OK... (Score:1)
Hell, they pay the farmers to not produce certain crops in order to maintain higher prices for all. Something I think is so silly.
Make space irrelevant? (Score:2)
Now, for other purposes than individual users, this has interesting implications in terms of computational capabilities, especially if this memory can become quite fast.
Space may be irrelevant right now... (Score:1)
Have you seen the size of an average computer decrease anytime in the past ten years? I keep my 300 mhz AMD K6 with 12 GB of space in a box that used to belong to a 386. If something takes up less space, all this means is that they'll be able to stick more of it in the same case.
Programmer's sense of time (Score:1)
The ultimate? (Score:1)
They whole day of news comes together... (Score:1)
Yes, we could afford the STMs... (Score:2)
re: Congo (slightly OT) (Score:1)
Re:Theoretical limits of computing (Score:1)
Hope that helps (?). I'm not really qualified to answer the other parts of your question, so I won't. :-)
Re:Yet another two-state system. (Score:1)
The problem comes when people push the analogy too far and assume that spin means everything at the quantum level that it does at the classical level. For some reason I don't see anyone having the same conceptual difficulty when discussing other states such as charm or strangeness, but maybe that's due to the lack of a classical analog.
Couple of wrong assumptions... (Score:3)
We can go smaller, into atoms and energy and spin states of electrons in a shell, for example, both of which are different things entirely. So we haven't quite hit the limits of information and computing yet.
So lets say we use a stable lithium ion as a storage 'bit' where we can flip the electron's spin to indicate 1 or 0. We ignore the two inner s orbital electrons and concentrate on the single valence electron. You'd prolly flip it with a single photon of light. How? Beats me. Anyway, you can actually calculate the energy of the photon required to do so, and the time it takes to flip as well( ~instantaneous?) and that is some sort of limit, but there are still levels beyond that with which we could play information games, I'm sure.
You could go into multi-bit storage by including energy level as well as spin; bump up an electron 1, 2, 3 or 4 levels, and flip it's spin in either direction and we get a 3 bit storage out of a single atom. If you play with two electrons in such a system, you could conceivably get a 5 bit system, or something like that. With a complex enough atom, you could prolly get 6 or 7 bits of data off a single atom!
-AS
Apple's Cu based PPCs... (Score:2)
Both are already in the market, with more on the way with future G3 PowerBooks, and quite possibly even SOI and Cu based G3s and G4s.
Computers are not yet based on diamonds because they don't provide any performance improvement over silicon, over the past 19 years. They are definitely part of the research on optical computing, but silicon, in theory, still has another 8 to 10 years of life still at which point an alternative technology may take over. Like optical.
-AS
Re:Not much information here... (Score:2)
My guess is that they have fabricated a molecule with a high capacitance that can store charge in a similar fashion as conventional DRAM. However, such a molecule cannot be used in a memory array until a switch (molecular-sized transistor) can be fabricated. That should come soon. However, the above is only speculation on my part.
If you want some good introductory information on molecular electronics in general including both memory, switches, and higher level logic architecures (AND, OR, XOR, etc.) in molecules, download this paper:
"Architecture s for Molecular Electronic Computers" [mitre.org] by James Ellenbogen and J. Christopher Love
The research in that paper was performed at the MITRE Corporation, which is also in the process of developing molecular electronic architectures. I contributed a large portion of the computational data to the above paper.
Re:Self Assembly (Score:1)
Self assembly of "macromolecules" has existed for over half a century. (Examples: nylon, teflon, etc)
Also, I haven't seen anything which mentions the SIZE of any of these molecules. Are we talking about molecules with 20-80 atoms, or are we talking about protein sized monsters. Storing one bit per protein would be an enormous waste of space. The value of this technology really depends on how big the molecules are.
Re:Figures (Score:1)
3-5 Years to what? (Score:2)
Even if we end up with individual memory cells 1 molecule big, we still need to design circuits on about the same scale, not much point having some ultra dense memory array when you don't have an efficient way of connecting to it...
I'm guessing it'll ve using some really low voltages, so shielding out interferance would be tricky.
Moderate that post up! (Score:1)
Thank you for your informitive post. But...
Could you possibly give us some answers to my original questions (speed, availability, etc.)? And perhaps tell us your opinion of the viability of this technology? Not just "Can it work?" but "Can it compete against hologramatic storage and other new technologies coming down the pike?"
Anyone else remember Magnetic Bubble Storage?
Jack
Re:slightly off topic.... (Score:1)
Read "Fuzzy Logic" by Daniel McNeill and Paul Freiberger. As well as a good description of fuzzy logic itself, they mention some of the history, including info on fuzzy logic hardware.
The book says that, at the 1987 2nd annual International Fuzzy Systems Association conference, "Dr. Hirota of Hosie University displayed a fuzzy robot arm that played two dimensional ping-pong in real time".
Also at that conference, Takeshi Yamakawa demonstrated a fuzzy system that balanced an inverted pendulum. He got it to balance a flower pot on top of the pole, too. Keep in mind that this was 1987, so digital computers were not fast enough to have that good balance!
even more amazing,
Now that is cool :) The book also mentions that some Japanese companies are using fuzzy logic in their washing machines. ( while( dirty(water) ) wash(); ) This uses less soap and energy than conventional stuff.
#define X(x,y) x##y
Re:Theoretical limits of computing (Score:1)
These are the currently understood maximums for info storage and retrieval, whether these will ever be attainable is a different question but this is what your question 1 asked.
Re:Imagine.... Offtopic (Score:1)
Diamond. (Score:1)
Re:The ultimate? (Score:1)
Okay, so who's got a good compression system for reality itself?
Run-length encoding looks pretty good for the vast emptyness of space, to me. :-)
Or alternatively, are weird quantum effects the result of reality itself being stored using lossy compression?
--
This comment was brought to you by And Clover.
Re:Does size matter? (Score:1)
//rdj
Re:And rightly so ..... (Score:1)
If you are curious about the "bigger picture" of molecular electronics, this paper should answer your questions:
"Architecture 's for Molecular Electronic Computers" [mitre.org] by James Ellenbogen and J. Chistopher Love
I actually contributed a large portion of the computational results to the above paper. See my post in the next thread for some more information.
And rightly so ..... (Score:2)
What is needed is an infrastructure that goes on top of this .... how do you put the molecules into the states you want, how do you sense their state, how do you get that information to the outside world.
And once you get it out what do you do with it? put it into a molecular computer? .... then probably you're using the same technologies you fabbed the ram with .... put it into a 'traditional' silicon computer? then you need a whole other bunch of technologies/infrastructure that allows these molecular structures to be fabbed alongside silicon ones ....
In other words there's a lot of work to be done!
It'll happen one day .... probably not next week, or next year
Oh yeah and noise/cosmic rays/quantum effects etc etc you have to be able to handle all those other things that can cause these molecules to change state when you don't want them to - with ram you can do heavy ECC and scrubbing to get reliability .... for random logic in, for example, a CPU it's a whole different, and much harder, problem
Not much information here... (Score:3)
I read the article and came up with more questions than answers... How does it work? What are the 'off' and 'on' states? How do you read/write it? How fast can you cycle it?
I followed the link from the article to 'Mark A. Reed', one of the scientists mentioned. A quote from his personal site [yale.edu] (deep breath): "My areas of research are quantum electron device physics; tunneling and transport phenomena in semiconductor heterojunction and nanostructured systems; reduced dimensionality effects in nanostructures; resonant tunneling transistors, circuits, and novel heterojunction devices; investigations into the physics and technology of quantum-confined electronic devices; investigation of resonant tunneling physics in a variety of heterojunction systems and materials, including 0D quantum dots and resonant tunneling transistors; and molecular electronics, nanotechnology."
...wheeze...
OK, now I know as much as I did before, and am buzz-worded to death besides. So I drilled deeper into the site and found some pictures of his current work [yale.edu] that do give some clues. Most interesting is the illustration titled "Molecules in nanopores."
And, of course, there is his List of Publications [yale.edu] which I probably wouldn't understand anyway. Even if they were online... Perhaps someone more competent can read these, and peruse the 'Break Junction Lab' [yale.edu] description for us.
My take at this point is: the guy probably knows what he is talking about, but I still don't have enough information to determine if the end result would work well enough to actually be useful in '3 to 5 years'. The thing is, there are plenty of technologies that work. But only a few of them have survived the true test of fitness in the marketplace.
Jack
Not well endowed... (Score:3)
Space irrelevant? (Score:1)
maybe it would be a better idea to
a) all switch to linux
b) learn microsoft something about not wasting memory
---
Probably it will be more like 3 molecule memory (Score:2)
Then there's the problem of wiring up this memory, addressing it, and there's no discussion performance versus current memories.
Also, any speculation of having working implementations in the next few years needs to do a reality check versus the real time it takes to investigate new technology.
Ahh, how great it would be... (Score:3)
You walk into your local PC parts store.
"I want 96 petabytes of memory, please."
"That's it? That will be $6.28."
Theoretical limits of computing (Score:3)
1) How fast can a computation happen (in a physical system) in thoeory.
2) How fast could molecular gates and molecular bits effect a computation?
3) How do you estimate these numbers would translate into Teraflops?
Possible explanation on how it works (Score:4)
Quite simply, you use the spin of a single electron to determine whether you have a 0 ('down' spin) or 1 ('up' spin) for that given atom. These are read with lasers, and I believe this can be done rather quickly.
If this is the same thing, then the theory has existed for maybe three years, but they seem to have found a practical application for it. Before that, all they could do was use some sort of awkward prototype filled with lens for interferometry.
If this is indeed the same thing, it also leads to a spiffy thing: fuzzy logic. Since quantum mechanics is essentially a matter of statistics, it means an electron may be in a probabilistic state between 0 and 1. For instance, it could be:
How this can lead to more efficient calculations, I have no clue. Still, it's cool to think of a single bit as "maybe 0 but most probably 1".
Again, not sure if this is the same technology. It may just not be; but regardless, the idea remains a really cool one.
"Knowledge = Power = Energy = Mass"