A Planet Analog article, “2N3904: Why use a 60-year-old transistor?” by Bill Schweber, inspired some interest in this old transistor and how it’s commonly used, and if any uncommon uses might exist.
On Oct. 3, 1950, three Bell Labs scientists received a patent for a "three-electrode circuit element" that would usher in the ...
Leakage through parasitic body diodes in MOSFETs: Unintended current paths can form through transistor body diodes, ...
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST; Saudi Arabia) researchers have set a record in microchip design, ...
Researchers at Fudan University have built the world’s first fully functional memory chip made from a material only a few ...
An RGB LED module is a versatile lighting component that can produce millions of colours by mixing red, green, and blue light ...
Back in 1966, a suitable toy for a geeky kid was a radio kit. You could find simple crystal radio sets or some more advanced ...
An artificial vision sensor inspired by the human pupil adapts automatically to light, maintaining clear perception from ...
In a significant leap for India’s semiconductor ambitions, the country’s first commercially packaged multi-chip module (MCM) ...
A holistic approach that treats the stack as a coupled physical system helps overcome thermal, stress, and reliability ...
The rollout of Panther Lake, aimed at high-end, artificial intelligence-enabled laptops, is a major test of Intel's ability ...
A London-based startup has created the world's first full-stack quantum computer using a standard silicon CMOS chip ...