IBM's Millipede Storage Marches Over Hannover
News IBM researchers in Zurich have affectionately named the device the Millipede, because it has thousands of very fine silicon tips that can "punch" individual bit patterns onto a thin film of polymer. The Millipede uses the tips to create "pits" or...
[March 14, 2005, 12:30]
IBM's Millipede Storage Marches Over Hannover
Talkback Nice fakes at www.atomchip.com Next time get someone with some more PhotoShop experience.
[March 17, 2005, 13:55]
IBM's Millipede Storage Marches Over Hannover
Talkback http://www.atomchip.com
[March 16, 2005, 11:42]
IBM's Millipede Storage Marches Over Hannover
Talkback Everybody's got a piece of kit to reach the TB size, but always a research project. When will I get my hands on it.
[March 14, 2005, 16:26]
IBM Labs Unveil Nanotech Storage 'punch Card'
News Just as important, Millipede will likely be relatively inexpensive to manufacture because the chips can be made through existing manufacturing techniques. The experimental prototype, part of an ongoing nanotechnology-research project code-named...
[June 11, 2002, 8:44]
Ovonic Memory A Reality At Last?
News IBM's Millipede, for example, writes data by heating thousands of microscopic spikes to 300°C. Researchers at Royal Philips Electronics say they have devised a material that could replace existing types of computer memory through a technique that...
[March 17, 2005, 9:05]
Fujitsu Siemens Lays Out Nanotech Roadmap
News In the storage area, Reger spoke positively about IBM's millipede technology, which allows more data to be stored in a certain surface area by writing data to the disk mechanically, rather than electronically.
[March 10, 2005, 15:20]
HP Uses Nanotechnology For New Circuit
News IBM researchers, for example, have created a nanotechnology memory device they call Millipede that could hold up to 10GB of data for a device such as a cellphone. Researchers at HP Labs announced on Monday that they have created a new kind of...
[September 10, 2002, 6:27]
IBM Tech Pushes Storage Limits
News He added that there have already been discussions about developing nanoparticle media for use on Millipede, a project at IBM's Zurich Research Laboratory that uses an atomic-force microscope to read data.
[March 17, 2000, 14:46]
Magnetised Protein Globules Talk In Binary Code
News The concept is similar to IBM's Millipede technology, but it relies on different processes to change the underlying media and uses fewer probes, Knight said. Molten silicon, designer molecules, and protein globules from a cow.
[July 26, 2004, 10:45]

