Elektor Ethics (551)

| Currently photolithography is used to fabricate chips. But when ICs are scaled down to 30 nanometers or less the cost of the technology is p...

| The American National Science Foundation fears we’re approaching the limits of the Internet as we know it. The NSF decided not to wait and s...

| An Internet of drones. That is what John Robb, inventor and military strategist, proposes to tackle the problems related to last mile delive...

| Using only permanent magnets and a light source Japanese scientists have succeeded in controlling the motion of a magnetically levitating gr...

| The end of the year is a good time to go introspective and ponder the ultimate question about life, the universe and everything. Where do we...

| The Exceptionally Hard & Soft Meeting (EHSM) explores the outer limits of open source hardware and software. The conference takes place in B...

| In 2003 Swedish philosopher Nick Bostrom raised the question: Are you living in a computer simulation? Now scientists say they can test whet...

| This article first appeared in the December issue of Elektor. The Internet of Things (IoT) is the merger of the physical and the digital wo...

| Rakshasa is malware buried deep inside the firmware of an Intel motherboard granting backdoor access to any outside party who knows what to...

| The struggle of the powers-that-be to get a grip on the most disruptive information technology since the invention of the printing press con...