Intel Develops Silicon-based "Avalanche" Photonics

Posted by Muhammad Rashid Monday, July 13, 2009 0 comments


Researchers at Intel have developed a silicon-based Avalanche Photodetector (APD) that could be used to provide high-capacity optical communications between processor cores. The APD is a light sensor that achieves superior sensitivity by detecting light and amplifying weak signals as light is directed onto silicon. Intel used silicon and CMOS processing to achieve a "gain-bandwidth product" of 340 GHz -- the best result ever measured for this key APD performance metric, according to the company. Intel said this opens the door to lower the cost of optical links running at data rates of 40 Gbps or higher and proves, for the first time, that a silicon photonics device can exceed the performance of a device made with traditional, more expensive optical materials such as indium phosphide."These fundamental scientific advances made by our silicon photonics team give me confidence that for decades to come, we will have the communications and I/O bandwidths to match the continued increases in computing performance provided by Moore's law," stated Justin Rattner, Intel Senior Fellow, Vice President, Director, Corporate Technology Group and Intel Chief Technology Officer.

LIRNEAsia

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LIRNEAsia also publishes work on m-health topic quite often. Much of their work looks at running surveys and working with local communities to gather data and to test out the technologies. They also work with Carnegie Mellon university on Bio-surveillance work.
Of course when it comes to developed countries there’s a lot of emphasis on reducing cost and for providing connected services whereby automation and intelligence can make devices and testing smart. Here’s ATT vision for medical remote monitoring (source: Fast Company). A number of other companies are active in this area. There’s also interest in providing monitoring and emergency services for senior citizens.


Today's Wall Street Journal has a such as and
These services are typically ad-supported and allow consumers to watch short clips such as music videos on their cellphones. Some allow you to upload your own videos onto your cellphone or to store videos from YouTube and other sources as well.
I have also experimented in the past week with a few other technologies to load video on my BlackBerry, including from as well as BlackBerry video converters from and And yes indeed, I loaded and watched a handful of videos on my BlackBerry, including a , a few music videos and (allegedly a techie's holy grail) full-length TV shows. In some cases there were some problems with file-format errors or screen-resolution, but generally video on cellphones works.

Data Centers

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The Host Right Now Dallas datacenter is a Tier IV datacenter facility located inside the well known INFOMART telecom hotel near downtown Dallas. Specializing in datacenter and hosting facilities, INFOMART is home to multiple datacenters including MCI, Level 3, Equinix, Verio, Switch & Data, Verizon, Data Sides, and more. The building sits atop three redundant electrical grids from TXU delivering diverse power to each quadrant of the building. HVAC needs are supplied via five one hundred ton onsite water chillers to deliver N+1 cooling requirements. Home to over twelve switch sites and thirty-five different carriers, INFOMART houses technology and telecom related businesses in a complex communications ecosystem.


How do you see "social networking" and "social media" changing communication within companies, enterprises, etc.? How do you think blogs, wikis, etc. will change enterprise communication? What about Facebook and other similar sites?
What would you say on this topic to an audience at VoiceCon Orlando this week?
That's the task ahead of Irwin Lazar and I as we talk with Eric Krapf and Fred Knight in a keynote "conversation" from 10:30-11:00am on Wednesday. The panel, called "Social Networking Meets Enterprise Communication"has this for a description:


By ugesh sarkar, Section Telephone Posted on Thu Feb 19, 2009 at 10:04:28 PM EST
Telecom Consumers! National Consumer Helpline No: 1800-11-4000
The details of the above are available on TRAI'sWebsite http:// www.trai.gov.inAre You Aware of The Guidelines issued by TRAI..

ATVTX2

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- Project: ATVTX2
- version/date: v1.30 1999-Jan-25
- CPU used: PIC 16F84
- in package

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