FreeFlyFreaky 0 #1 April 2, 2002 Nanodrive Uses Insect Parts By John C. Dvorak If you thought that the Microdrive from IBM was cool, you'll be more impressed if IBM can get its new Nanodrive out of the lab. Developed at IBM's Almaden Research facility, and announced today, the new drive relies on what is termed a natural bio-actuator—in this case, an insect antenna—to actually control the head position of a nanoscale hard drive. The concept was developed by visiting IBM fellow, Latot Esnesnon, known by his colleagues as the Einstein of Lithuania. He was trained at Manchester and holds a professorship at Berkeley, although he spends most of his time at IBM's TJ Watson Research center working with insects, trying to find one that could be used for simple logic and genetically bred to make a biological computer. In the course of his investigations, he stumbled on what IBM calls the Esnesnon Effect—the movement by a precise distance of a specific insect antenna when a square wave impulse is sent into the insect's body. IBM has since developed a prototype nanoGMR head using ruthenium that is literally glued to the end of the antenna. The data itself will transmit across the outer layer of the antenna which is coated with gold plate approximately one atom thick. The pulse-code-modulated square wave that makes the antenna move is fed into a leg to deliver the data to the GMR head. The small hard disk itself can hold only 1KB of data, but IBM expects that eventually to evolve to 100 megabytes, then a gigabyte. IBM has been trying to develop organic technologies for the past 20 years. Commercializing the insect actuator would save millions of dollars according to the company, given that the parts could be bred and would mass produce themselves. In fact, do a quick Web search for "insect actuator" and you'll discover that Fujitsu actually developed a similar technology years before IBM. The Japanese abandoned the idea, however, apparently because of insect--desiccation issues that caused alignment problems. Fujitsu believes the problem cannot be fixed. But the Esnesnon effect itself seems to be maintained even when the bug is completely dried up. See AttachmentIBM says it can beat the alignment problem by using just the insect head instead of the whole body. Drying of the insect body seems to cause the alignment shift. The head is harder, and the desiccating effect is negligible. Unfortunately, the current IBM design (see picture) requires that the square wave be sent into the body of the insect by way of a leg that is soldered onto the chip substrate. Right now, there is no other way of getting the square wave into the insect head. And according to one skeptic at Seagate, there's the problem of oozing, especially when the head is cut from the insect body, which causes bug juice to flow over the silicon and short it out. Then we have the government. Apparently the FDA will have something to say about all this, and this seems to be the problem that Fujitsu ran into and may be why Fujitsu really stopped this research. Although incredible, the way the food and drug laws are written, there is a limit on the amount of insect parts that can be found in processed food. Apparently the FDA definition of "process" can be loosely interpreted to mean the process technology to make chips. Based on this loophole, the Ninth Circuit Court in San Francisco—laughable as this may sound—allowed an odd lawsuit against Intel to be heard. The action was brought by a group of disgruntled developers who used the loophole to sue over "bugs" in Intel firmware. The suit was eventually thrown out when no real insect parts could be cited. But since the case was heard in the first place, it opened the door for potential action against IBM. IBM thinks it can get the law modified while the product is in development, and the company says it will just pay the fines in the meantime. But according to one industry rumor, the government is going to ask for an injunction against any further testing because, as one source put it, "until this gets straightened out...the law is the law." I'm sure we'll see how this turns out by next April 1. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
quade 4 #2 April 2, 2002 I'm sorry. What day is it again?quadehttp://futurecam.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ChromeBoy 0 #3 April 2, 2002 I dated this girl once and she had big boobies! Not that girls I date must have big boobies though. I know girls with small boobies and I would still date them! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kmcguffee 0 #4 April 2, 2002 That is cool! I can't wait until we have full blown cyborgs. I want to hear that nanannaannaannana sound from the Six Million Dollar Man everytime I jump out of the plane. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
lummy 4 #5 April 2, 2002 I think once they make the 6 million dollar man, jumping will no longer be fun.. think about it, He (or she ) will jump outta the plane, swoop around getting 4-5 minutes freefall, then just Run out the landings with no parachute....Why bother?chrome, does your friend with small boobies have a friend?baby's hungry and the money's all gone. the folks back home don't want to talk on the phone. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SkydiveMonkey 0 #6 April 2, 2002 But if you get them to track into the ground, you have a new swoop pond !! When you participate in sporting events, its not whether you win or loose, its how drunk you get. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ChromeBoy 0 #7 April 2, 2002 Quotechrome, does your friend with small boobies have a friend?Yeah and I shag her too! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GrumpySmurf 0 #8 April 2, 2002 And then there will be Tree Huggers with nothing better to do than form 'PETI' - 'People for the Ethical Treatment of Insects'. Just wait and see. Don't see why the FDA would be upset over Insect parts, I mean we all used to eat bugs as toddlers Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites AggieDave 6 #9 April 2, 2002 You still do eat bugs and bug parts. You just don't always know it. Look at dust, yeah a lot of it in the home is composed of dead skin, but a good bit of it is insect parts and stuff. Sometimes entire insects, just small little buggers..."Homer Simpson, smiling politely." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites ChromeBoy 0 #10 April 2, 2002 BUGSI got bugs...I got bugs in my room.Bugs in my bed....Bugs in my ears....Their eggs in my head.Bugs in my pockets...Bugs in my shoes....Bugs in the way I feel about you.Bugs on my window trying to get in.They don't go nowhere. Waiting, waiting...Bugs on my ceiling...crowded the floor.Standing, sitting, kneeling. A few block the door.And now the questions...Do I kill them? Become their friend?Do I eat them? Raw or well done?Do I trick them? I don't think they're that dumb.Do I join them? Looks like that's the one.I got bugs on my skin. Tickle my nausea.I let it happen again. They're always taking over.I see...they surround me...I see...see them deciding my fate.That which was once, was once up to me. Now it's too late.I got bugs in my room...one on one.That's when I had a chance.I'll just stop now.I'll become naked and with them I'll become one.- Pearl Jam Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites Join the conversation You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account. Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible. Reply to this topic... × Pasted as rich text. Paste as plain text instead Only 75 emoji are allowed. × Your link has been automatically embedded. Display as a link instead × Your previous content has been restored. Clear editor × You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL. Insert image from URL × Desktop Tablet Phone Submit Reply 0
AggieDave 6 #9 April 2, 2002 You still do eat bugs and bug parts. You just don't always know it. Look at dust, yeah a lot of it in the home is composed of dead skin, but a good bit of it is insect parts and stuff. Sometimes entire insects, just small little buggers..."Homer Simpson, smiling politely." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ChromeBoy 0 #10 April 2, 2002 BUGSI got bugs...I got bugs in my room.Bugs in my bed....Bugs in my ears....Their eggs in my head.Bugs in my pockets...Bugs in my shoes....Bugs in the way I feel about you.Bugs on my window trying to get in.They don't go nowhere. Waiting, waiting...Bugs on my ceiling...crowded the floor.Standing, sitting, kneeling. A few block the door.And now the questions...Do I kill them? Become their friend?Do I eat them? Raw or well done?Do I trick them? I don't think they're that dumb.Do I join them? Looks like that's the one.I got bugs on my skin. Tickle my nausea.I let it happen again. They're always taking over.I see...they surround me...I see...see them deciding my fate.That which was once, was once up to me. Now it's too late.I got bugs in my room...one on one.That's when I had a chance.I'll just stop now.I'll become naked and with them I'll become one.- Pearl Jam Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites