Wednesday, June 21, 2006

IBM runs frozen chip at 500GHz


By Ben Ames, IDG News Service


IBM researchers have pushed a silicon-based microprocessor to speeds of 500GHz, more than 250 times faster than a typical commercial chip in a cell phone.

The research shows that chip makers can reach high speeds with low-cost manufacturing techniques and commercial silicon-based chip technology, said John D. Cressler, a professor at Georgia Tech's School of Electrical and Computer Engineering.

The new research, announced Tuesday by IBM, could also lead to more efficient chips, opening up new markets. Running at extremely high speeds, these chips could now find new applications in commercial communications systems, defense electronics, space exploration and remote sensing, according to IBM.

A team of scientists from IBM and Georgia Tech used an old hacker's technique to avoid melting the chip at such high speeds.

Extreme video gamers chill their chips with refrigerated mineral oil stored in the garage, but this team was able to make the chip much colder.

First, the researchers built a prototype silicon-germanium (SiGe) chip that ran at 350GHz at room temperature. IBM, in Armonk, New York, has been mixing germanium with silicon since 1998, using the mixture to make chips for cell phones and other mobile devices that demand reduced power consumption.

Then they used liquid helium to freeze their microprocessor to 451 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. Nature's coldest temperature, known as absolute zero, is just a few degrees lower, at minus 459.67 degrees Fahrenheit. With no risk of melting the chip, they pushed it to 500GHz.

By contrast, the latest commercial dual-core server chips from Intel and Advanced Micro Devices run at speeds between 2.5GHz to 3.5GHz.

The researchers now plan to return to their lab and find a way to push the chip even faster. IBM's computer simulations show that their chip could reach speeds of 1,000GHz, known as 1 Terahertz.

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Be OpeN Mind
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Adding 3D to Flash projects using After Effects

Adding 3D to Flash projects using After Effects

Rafiq R. Elmansy

Rafiq R. Elmansy

mmug-egypt.mxdj.com
beedesignstudio.com


When I started learning Adobe After Effects, I realized that it includes a number of features and effects that can not only give more capabilities to my Macromedia Flash projects but save me time because of how the two applications are integrated.

After Effects gives you a variety of ways to create video with alpha, animate your graphic in 2D or 3D space, and then export your animation with a transparent background, as well as apply a variety of effects and presets that differentiate your Flash work.

This article will help you understand how After Effects integrates with Flash. You'll learn how to benefit from these features in your Flash projects by using the 3D layer feature in After Effects to give a 2D Flash graphic some 3D properties. You will export a Flash graphic to After Effects, convert it to a 3D layer in order to give it 3D properties, and then animate it before finally bringing it back into Flash.


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h.o.s.a.m.r.e.d
Be OpeN Mind
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http://hosamred.blogspot.com

Saturday, June 17, 2006

POSTing via Java

The plethora of browsers in use turns the relatively simple act of performing POST-style HTTP requests into a bit of a pain. In this tip we shall provide the recipe for making POSTs simple again.

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