Nanotube chip could hold 10 gigabits
By Will Knight
A computer memory chip based on carbon nanotubes has passed a manufacturing milestone, according to the US company developing the technology.
The prototype chip would store information using hundreds of billions of nanotubes with a theoretical capacity of 10 gigabits of data, says Nantero,
based in Boston, Massachusetts.
Nanotechnology is going to be "big". The future ramifications of this are daunting, to say the least. This technology will cover almost ever
scientific and medical field with resounding effects.
With things in this world heading towards "lack of room" scenerios, etc., this will create whole new avenues of "minaturization" and
"micro-sizing".