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If you've ever read one of Iain M Banks's "Culture" novels you'll recognise the setting, except that this post-scarcity paradise was to be run on the advanced technology of the mid-20th century, rather than the science of a galaxy far, far away; spun up from artificial fibres and pneumatic mail and computers made of glowing radio-valves.
If you've ever read one of Iain M Banks's "Culture" novels you'll recognise the setting, except that this post-scarcity paradise was to be run on the advanced technology of the mid-20th century, rather than the science of a galaxy far, far away; spun up from artificial fibres and pneumatic mail and computers made of glowing radio-valves.
[photopress:jupitermouse.jpg,full,left]We talked about computers made of bamboo and mouses that heat your hands, but here's a little of column A and a little of column B. It's a wooden sphere that doesn't work like a regular mouse.
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Forget mechanics: the brain is not a machine, nor is it a computer made of meat.
One of his favourite ideas is a random computer made of "nanocubes"—essentially a pile of nanotubes.
"We have built a nanoscale computer made of biomolecules that is so small you cannot run them one at a time," said Prof. Ehud Shapiro of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, the leader of the research team.
Scientists have developed what they say could become the world's smallest medical kit: a computer, made of DNA, that can diagnose disease and automatically dispense medicine to treat it.
Included are a brown paper teepee covered with peace signs, a laptop computer made of Styrofoam and painted silver, an urn oozing a Play-Doh-like substance and a small figure urinating on a cracked mirror.
However, unlike transistors, the switches do not amplify electric signals, and a computer made of molecular switches would have to employ a different method for performing calculations, one that scientists are still working to devise.
Your house is a computer made of bricks and mortar.
Lloyd shows that a computer made of the most compressed matter in the universe--a black hole--would calculate as fast as a plasma computer.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com