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Monday, August 30. 2010The Bane that is the Ideas ManI attended a talk by Don Eigler, an IBM Fellow today; one of the things it reminded me of (other than Science is Cool) was how much I’ve come to loathe the notion of the “ideas man”. Dr Eigler, twenty years ago, became the first person to assemble something by moving an atom at a time; his most recent work is on a potential breakthough in replacing conventional silicon transistor techniques: he and his colleagues take carbon monoxide molecules and assemble them by standing them up in the (to use his metaphor) egg carton shaped surface of a slice of copper; by building a particular array of them, they can create a logic gate than provides all the logic and storage functions that can be produced with silicon transistors. Very, very interesting; and very impressive—this technique allows them to fit a single logic element that can produce AND, OR, and majority logic in a 12 nm by 17 nm space (for refence, the current smallest commercial silicon is around 45 nm for the smallest trace). If they’re successful in solving a variety of outstanding hard problems (this is, after all, basic research, not engineering), then it has the potential to offer as much as five order of magnitude improvements in computing density and power consumption over existing circutry. Possibly the coolest thing about the talk, though, was that Don started out by explaining the logic gate in terms of dominoes, discussing how you could use domino fans to create AND and OR gates. I thought this was a metaphor, but no: the carbon monoxide molecules, as I mentioned earlier, are stood upright on the carbon, one atom atop another. If they’re in a pair, they form a stable, upright construction. Add one, and the tower falls over, knocking down the next tower, and the next, and the next, and so on, until your atom-sized dominos have collapsed into the result you want. Dominoes aren’t a metaphor, dominoes is exactly what they’re doing—tiny poisonous dominoes. (Star Trek fans would doubtless be delighted to know that Dr Eigler could, when discussing real-world use of left-spin molecules to create cloaking devices, referr by name to the Federation-Romulan treaty which prevents the Federation from utilising cloaking technologies.) In 15 to 20 years, you might be able to buy something based on it. If everything goes well. Which takes me to the point I opened with. Ideas were tossed around about the sort of things you could do with this kind of improvement in computing densities: since we’ve had demos of using human cell processes to power electronics, a five order of magnitude improvement in power/computational density could presumably make meaningful (by today’s standards) computers be something that can be embedded in the skin and powered by doughnuts. Ideas are cheap. Ideas are easy. The kind of person who says, “I don’t do these things, I’m an ideas man” is not only most often a total waste of space—worse in fact, since the injection of “ideas” usually wastes the time of people with work to do—but is perversely proud of doing nothing, as though producing nothing more than a few suggestions places one above the hoi-polloi. But here’s the thing: Don Eigler was making major advances in the science of the very small twenty years ago, is still doing it today, and could easily work on solving the same group of problems for decades longer. His advances are a result of doing work-hard work that takes time, knowledge, and skill. A room full of moderately intelligent people who work in technical professions can listen to his lucid, articulate explanations of the principles of his work and feel that we understand it but, really, we wouldn’t even know where to begin to actually reproduce it, still less build on it. Ideas are cheap. Results are gold. Tuesday, August 17. 2010Mixed FortunesJe fauchée ma clavicule à judo la semaine denier; mon médecin mourait. Il n’est pas mauvais, ma fille gagner un prix por joueuse la jour á le foot! Saturday, August 14. 2010How not to run a CafeYou know, when your staff leave a child with second degree burns you’d think you could at least, I don’t know, proffer an apology to the parents and the kid and not, say, delete the negative review from a supposed restaurant review site (which makes me wonder; if Ernesto can get a review about them crippling a customer yanked, what else will DineOut pull? If you aren’t allowed to say bad things, what’s the point of the site?[1]) I don’t think I feel like playing Russian roulette with Ernesto any more; we’ve been there in the past, but when your response to leaving someone burnt enough to need morphine is to... attack the victim for posting a negative review, I don’t have any confidence that they give a shit about the safety of their staff or customers. Since they’re next to Espressoholic and over the road from Scopa, that’s not too hard. [1] Hoovering up donations from people under the misapprehension they provide a useful service, I guess. Tuesday, August 3. 2010BlurghA la semaine prochaine j’appris un nouveau lancer en judo; cette semaine ne pas venir à cause des gobelins du morve. FantasiesAda started working on the concept of a will recently; while she’s had the book Down The Back of the Chair for a while now, she’s clearly been mentally eliding the reference until she focused suddenly on it in the weekend. What is this “long-lost will of Uncle Bill”? How does it relieve the problem of not being able to afford to fix the errant car? After some explanation (“When people die, they don’t need their money any more, and they sometimes leave it to people”) the principle was firmly grasped. A little later in the weekend, Ada sidled up to me and said, “I wish we had a long-lost will. You would be able to stay at home more and play with me.”
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