Tag: hardware

Decrypting with radiation

The attack sends a few carefully-crafted ciphertexts, and when these are decrypted by the target computer, they trigger the occurrence of specially-structured values inside the decryption software. These special values cause observable fluctuations in the electromagnetic field surrounding the laptop, in a way that depends on the pattern of key bits. The secret key can be deduced from these fluctuations, through signal processing and cryptanalysis.

!!!

7nm Transistors

As the industry adopts FinFETs as the transistor for 16nm and 14nm, researchers are looking into the limits of FinFETs and solutions for the 7nm node and beyond. 2 approaches, namely Gate-All-Around Nanowire (GAA NW) FETs, which offer significantly better short-channel electrostatics, and quantum-well FinFETs (with SiGe, Ge, or III-V channels), which achieve high carrier mobility, are promising options.

Open Hardware

A 180nm implementation of the J2 design costs around 3 cents per chip, with no royalties required. “That’s disposable computing at the ‘free toy inside’ level.

a completely open hardware design can be produced cheaply.
2015-07-13:

Instead of running in fear of obsolescence, open-source hardware developers now have time to build communities around platforms; we can learn from each other, share blueprints and iterate prototypes before committing to a final design. The extra time also allows hardware product development to be leaner — one doesn’t have to burn money to meet a tight schedule. A team of 2 can now take 3 years, working mostly in their spare time, to build a laptop from scratch as a hobby. This is a great time to be developing hardware products, particularly open-source ones.

the only benefit of the slowdown of moore’s law i’ve ever heard of

Microbatteries

A high-performance 3D microbattery that could be integrated into microchips at production volumes has been developed by researchers. Miniaturizing a battery to fit in a microchip is a major challenge, but it would be important for providing power to microscale devices such as actuators, distributed wireless sensors and transmitters, and portable and implantable medical devices.

Antikythera Mechanism

By examining the structure of the gears, the numbers of teeth, how they interact with each other, and the inscriptions, the AMRP confirmed that the device was an incredibly detailed astronomical calendar that could predict eclipses, calculate the dates of the Olympics, the positions of the sun, moon and planets in the solar system and more. There is nothing else like it known from antiquity, and no other mechanical device would even come close to its complexity until the Middle Ages. “It was not a research tool, something that an astronomer would use to do computations, or even an astrologer to do prognostications, but something that you would use to teach about the cosmos and our place in the cosmos. It’s like a textbook of astronomy as it was understood then, which connected the movements of the sky and the planets with the lives of the ancient Greeks and their environment.” It is pure luck that we fished this thing out of the Mediterranean in 1901. The alternative possibility is that antiquity had many more such exotic devices. We don’t have a very good idea of what antiquity was like.

2022-09-18: Reflections on the mechanism

WHETHER OR NOT sphaerae technology survived until the Renaissance remains unclear. I am inclined to follow Price, who believed it did, but a case can also be made for loss and reinvention. The technology might have been suppressed for religious reasons in later Roman days—certainly its suppression would only have been hastened if the sphaerae were associated with astrology. All that is known is that the technology persisted in Europe until at least 500 CE, and elements seem to have been reintroduced later through the Arabic world.
It is clear that Renaissance scholars knew the Greeks had made mechanical astronomical displays. This is attested, for example, by Giovanni de Dondi, who constructed an elaborate astronomical clock in approximately 1364 CE by Kepler in his letters around 1605 CE and in the writings of Conrad Dasypodius, who designed the Strasbourg astronomical clock around 1571–74 CE.
Given that the Greeks could build the Antikythera mechanism, a common question is what other devices they might have created. Some aspects of the technology can be seen in surviving medical instruments, including small-bore tubes and worm gears. Although the Greeks had elementary lathes, files, and bronze-casting ability, the limited accuracy achieved in the manufacture of gears may explain why there is no evidence of calculators for financial or surveying use. Another deterrent to calculators being designed may have been the ready availability of labor skilled in the abacus and other basic counting devices.
It was the lack of escapement technology that prevented the development of clocks, although some wheelwork was apparently used in clepsydrae. The use of large and crude wooden lantern gears continued in mills and other applications, but further development of practical mechanisms using small metal gears seems to have stalled. In explaining the lack of a classical industrial revolution and the emergence of precision manufacturing technology, many other considerations also come into play, in particular the abundance of slave and other labor, as well as the nature of pre-gunpowder military weapons.

Memristors, perhaps

this will enable very interesting architectures. something to keep ourselves busy with while we mourn the passing of moore’s law.

The Machine is a hyper-dense collection of computing hardware that could be used in anything from a data center to a mobile device. It has terabytes of storage and a much smaller power draw than today’s computing devices—all because of memristor-based memory and optical interconnects.