The memristor ‘s come a long way since being hypothesized back in 1971.

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HP Labs teams up with Hynix to manufacture memristors, plans assault on flash memory in 2013
The memristor ‘s come a long way since being hypothesized back in 1971.
The memristor ‘s come a long way since being hypothesized back in 1971.

Go here to read the rest:
HP Labs teams up with Hynix to manufacture memristors, plans assault on flash memory in 2013
Looks like that flexible plastic display Hewlett-Packard has been talking up since 2008 is finally ready to hit the big time. According to Carl Taussig, director of information surfaces at HP Labs , the company is developing a wrist PC at the behest of the US military. Behind the display, a thin strip of metal-coated plastic (merely 50 microns thick) is printed with transistors for, you know, displaying stuff
Looks like that flexible plastic display Hewlett-Packard has been talking up since 2008 is finally ready to hit the big time. According to Carl Taussig, director of information surfaces at HP Labs , the company is developing a wrist PC at the behest of the US military. Behind the display, a thin strip of metal-coated plastic (merely 50 microns thick) is printed with transistors for, you know, displaying stuff

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HP developing wrist PC for military, finally putting that flexible display to good use
Looks like that flexible plastic display Hewlett-Packard has been talking up since 2008 is finally ready to hit the big time. According to Carl Taussig, director of information surfaces at HP Labs , the company is developing a wrist PC at the behest of the US military
Looks like that flexible plastic display Hewlett-Packard has been talking up since 2008 is finally ready to hit the big time. According to Carl Taussig, director of information surfaces at HP Labs , the company is developing a wrist PC at the behest of the US military
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HP developing wrist PC for military, finally putting that flexible display to good use
We’ve seen data centers use excess heat for greener purposes , but how’s about injecting a little green into the other side of that equation? HP Labs is on that very wavelength, going so far as to publish details on how these centers could be partially powered by none other than cow manure.
We’ve seen data centers use excess heat for greener purposes , but how’s about injecting a little green into the other side of that equation? HP Labs is on that very wavelength, going so far as to publish details on how these centers could be partially powered by none other than cow manure.

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