Anonymous ID: 036042 Dec. 4, 2024, 9:31 p.m. No.22111082   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1125 >>1236 >>1257 >>1282 >>1323 >>1376 >>1377 >>1407 >>1548 >>1587 >>1649

'Accidental discovery' creates candidate for universal memory — a weird semiconductor that consumes a billion times less power

 

Scientists may have accidentally overcome a major barrier to smoothening the adoption of next-generation data-storage technologies.

 

Using a unique material called indium selenide (In2Se3), researchers say they discovered a technique for lowering the energy requirements of phase-change memory (PCM) — a technology capable of storing data without a constant power supply — by up to 1 billion times.

 

The breakthrough is a step toward overcoming one of the biggest challenges in PCM data storage, potentially paving the way for low-power memory devices and electronics, the researchers said in a study published Nov. 6 in the journal Nature.

 

PCM is a leading candidate for universal memory — computing memory that can replace both short-term memory like random access memory (RAM) and storage devices like solid-state drives (SSDs) or hard drives. RAM is fast but needs significant physical space and a constant power supply to run, while SSDs or hard drives are much denser and can store data while computers are turned off. Universal memory combines the best of both.

 

It works by toggling materials between two states: crystalline, where atoms are neatly ordered, and amorphous, where atoms are randomly arranged. These states correlate to binary 1s and 0s, encoding data via switches in states.

 

However, the "melt-quench technique" used to toggle these states — which involves heating and rapidly cooling PCM materials — requires significant energy, making the technology expensive and difficult to scale. In their study, the researchers found a way to bypass the melt-quench process entirely by instead inducing amorphization through an electrical charge. This slashes PCM's energy requirements and potentially opens the door to broader commercial applications.

 

"One of the reasons why phase-change memory devices haven't reached widespread use is due to the energy required," study author Ritesh Agarwal, a professor of materials science and engineering at Penn Engineering, said in a statement. The potential of these findings for designing low-power memory devices is "tremendous," he said.

 

The researchers' discovery hinges on the unique properties of indium selenide, a semiconductor material with both "ferroelectric" and "piezoelectric" characteristics. Ferroelectric materials can spontaneously polarize, meaning they can generate an internal electric field without needing an external charge. Piezoelectric materials, by contrast, physically deform when they are exposed to an electric charge.

 

While testing the material, the researchers observed that sections of it amorphized when they were exposed to a continuous current. What's more, this happened entirely by chance.

 

"I actually thought I might have damaged the wires, study co-author Gaurav Modi, a former doctoral student in materials science and engineering at Penn Engineering, said in the statement. "Normally, you would need electrical pulses to induce any kind of amorphization, and here a continuous current had disrupted the crystalline structure, which shouldn't have happened."

 

Further analysis revealed a chain reaction triggered by the semiconductor's properties. This begins with tiny deformations in the material caused by the current that triggers an "acoustic jerk" — a sound wave similar to seismic activity during an earthquake. This then travels through the material, spreading amorphization across micrometer-scale regions in a mechanism the researchers likened to an avalanche gathering momentum.

 

The researchers explained that various properties of indium selenide — including its two-dimensional structure, ferroelectricity and piezoelectricity — work together to enable an ultra-low-energy pathway for amorphization triggered by shocks. This could lay the groundwork for future research around "new materials and devices for low-power electronic and photonic applications," they wrote in the study.

 

"This opens up a new field on the structural transformations that can happen in a material when all these properties come together," Agarwal said in the statement.

 

https://www.livescience.com/technology/computing/accidental-discovery-creates-candidate-for-universal-memory-a-weird-semiconductor-that-consumes-a-billion-times-less-power

Anonymous ID: 036042 Dec. 4, 2024, 9:35 p.m. No.22111092   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1125 >>1236 >>1257 >>1376 >>1548 >>1587 >>1649

Trump picks investment banker Warren Stephens as UK ambassador

 

President-elect Donald Trump has nominated businessman Warren Stephens to serve as America’s ambassador to the United Kingdom.

 

“Warren has always dreamed of serving the United States full time,” Trump said in a statement on Truth Social. “I am thrilled that he will now have that opportunity as the top diplomat, representing the USA to one of America’s most cherished and beloved allies.”

 

Stephens, who is CEO of private Arkansas-based investment bank Stephens Inc, donated millions to Trump’s re-election campaign this year.

 

If his nomination is successful, Stephens will help to maintain the so-called “special relationship” between the US and the UK.

 

The two countries maintain close military, intelligence, and cultural ties.

 

Trump has vowed to rework the US’ relationships abroad, vowing to implement an “America-first” ethos to foreign policy.

 

The role of US ambassador to the UK is one of the most coveted diplomatic positions, and presidents have been known to bestow the role to prominent backers.

 

During his first term in office, Trump appointed Woody Johnson, a top Republican donor and owner of the American football team the New York Jets, as UK ambassador.

 

Barack Obama chose long-time Democratic Party fundraiser and lawyer Louis Susman as his first emissary to the UK - or the Court of St James.

 

Stephens did not always back Trump’s candidacies, however. In 2016, when Trump first ran for president, Stephens donated about $4m (£3.1m) to political groups that sought to stop Trump’s ascent, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported at the time.

 

The investment banker also donated over $2m to a political action committee that supported former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley as she unsuccessfully ran for president in 2024, the campaign finance watchdog OpenSecrets found.

 

When Trump ultimately triumphed in this year’s Republican presidential primary, however, Stephens threw his support behind him. Federal campaign finance data show he also donated to Republican groups and US Senate candidates this year.

 

In a statement, Stephens said he was honoured by the nomination.

 

"I have expressed to President Trump that I would be extremely proud to serve our country and his administration, working to implement the President’s agenda and further strengthen the long-standing alliance between the United States and the United Kingdom,” he said.

 

He and his wife also maintain a philanthropic organisation, the Harriet and Warren Stephens Family Foundation, which has donated to the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts, the University of Mississippi, and the Episcopal Collegiate School in Little Rock.

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c20e79nlpe6o

Anonymous ID: 036042 Dec. 4, 2024, 9:36 p.m. No.22111093   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1125 >>1136 >>1236 >>1257 >>1376 >>1548 >>1587 >>1649

Trump picks Billy Long to head IRS, Kelly Loeffler to lead SBA and Frank Bisignano to lead SSA

 

President-elect Trump announced Wednesday he is nominating former Missouri Rep. Billy Long to serve as commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in his new administration.

 

In a statement released Wednesday, Trump called the former congressman "an extremely hard worker, and respected by all, especially by those who know him in Congress." The president-elect also referenced Long's experience working as a tax adviser.

 

"Billy brings 32 years of experience running his own businesses in Real Estate and, as one of the premier Auctioneers in the Country," the Republican leader wrote in a Truth Social post. "He then served 12 years in Congress, because he ‘felt it was important for his constituents to have a Representative who has signed the front of a check'!

 

"Taxpayers and the wonderful employees of the IRS will love having Billy at the helm. He is the consummate ‘people person,’ well respected on both sides of the aisle. Congratulations Billy!"

 

Trump soon followed his announcement by naming former Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., to head the Small Business Administration (SBA). The purpose of the SBA is to provide small businesses with access to resources such as loans, government contracts and business counseling.

 

"Small Businesses are the backbone of our Great Economy. Kelly will bring her experience in business and Washington to reduce red tape, and unleash opportunity for our Small Businesses to grow, innovate, and thrive," Trump's Truth Social post said. "She will focus on ensuring that SBA is accountable to Taxpayers by cracking down on waste, fraud, and regulatory overreach."

 

Trump called Loeffler, a longtime ally and a co-chair of his inaugural committee, a "tremendous fighter" and cited her success in business.

 

"Prior to her tenure in the U.S. Senate, Kelly built a 25-year career in financial services and technology," Trump's statement said. "Along with her amazing husband, Jeff, she helped build a Fortune 500 company from 100 employees to over 10,000, as Executive VP. She and Jeff also helped me secure the Big Election Win in Georgia!"

 

Shortly after announcing Long and Loeffler, Trump announced he had picked Fiserv CEO Frank Bisignano to head the Social Security Administration.

 

"Frank is a business leader, with a tremendous track record of transforming large corporations. He will be responsible to deliver on the Agency’s commitment to the American People for generations to come!" Trump said in the announcement on Wednesday evening.

 

Bisignano previously was the CEO of First Data, the COO of JPMorgan Chase, as well as senior positions at Citigroup.

 

"Fiserv Corporation, the world’s largest payments and financial technology company that touches almost every American household each day. He has a long career leading financial services institutions through great transformation," Trump said. Frank previously served as Co-Chief Operating Officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co. Prior to JPMorgan Chase & Co., he held senior positions at Citigroup, including Chief Administrative Officer during 9/11, where he had responsibility for 16,000 employees in Lower Manhattan."

 

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-picks-billy-long-head-irs-kelly-loeffler-lead-sba-latest-nominations

In the first two years of Trump's first administration, the SBA was led by Linda McMahon, who resigned in 2019. Trump tapped McMahon, the former CEO of WWE, to serve as secretary of education in November.

Anonymous ID: 036042 Dec. 4, 2024, 9:42 p.m. No.22111106   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1125 >>1236 >>1257 >>1376 >>1548 >>1587 >>1649

Collin Rugg

@CollinRugg

NEW: NYC mayor Eric Adams defends Daniel Penny for protecting subway passengers, blasts the media for portraying Jordan Neely as an "innocent child."

 

Adams said Penny did what New York City "should have done as a city."

 

"You have someone on that subway who was responding, doing what we should have done as a city in a state of having a mental health facility."

 

"It seemed like it was a young, innocent child who was brutally m*rdered, and it gave that impression."

 

"When you look at the photo that was being used, it wanted to set up in the minds of people that we were dealing with a young, innocent child, just a Michael Jackson imitator that was just brutally assaulted."

 

https://x.com/CollinRugg/status/1864476912795410576