MIT researchers developed a more powerful magnetic transistor that could be used to design simpler circuits and create faster and more energy-efficient electronics.
MIT researchers with colleagues from the University of Chemistry and Technology in Prague have used 2D CrSBr, a van der Waals ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Using generative AI to diversify virtual training grounds for robots
Chatbots like ChatGPT and Claude have experienced a meteoric rise in usage over the past three years because they can help ...
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu will continue celebration of Nigeria’s 65th Independence anniversary on October 8, 2025 in Rivers State with formal commissioning of Nigeria’s first indigenous oil export ...
Many businesses are growing sceptical of AI/ML because they fail to see strong returns or solid fundamentals. Inora Organic ...
NASA's new recruits include scientists, fighter pilots, engineers, and even a former member of the USA Rugby Women's National ...
Abington Heights Abington Heights Middle School student Ernesto Vasquez was one of 52 middle school students chosen to ...
6don MSN
Meet NASA's newest recruits! Space agency introduces 10 new astronauts - with one set to be the...
NASA's new recruits include scientists, fighter pilots, engineers, and even a former member of the USA Rugby Women's National ...
The Office of Naval Research’s Naval Enterprise Partnership Teaming with Universities for National Excellence (NEPTUNE) program is aligning academic innovation with naval energy needs. Launched as a ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
MIT demonstrates magnetic transistor with 10x stronger switching and built-in memory
MIT engineers built a magnetic transistor from chromium sulfur bromide, promising smaller, faster electronics with built-in ...
MIT engineers developed a magnetic transistor that could lead to smaller, faster, and more energy-efficient electronics, using a magnetic semiconductor material.
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