Researchers at the UCLA have developed a graphene-based transistor running at 300GHz.
Gareth walks us through some simple and fun Arduino projects.
HP has teamed up with Hynix to bring its "memristor" technology to market.
Researchers at Rice University have discovered a method for shrinking chips using silicon oxide.
Intel has confirmed its plan to purchase Infineon's wireless division for $1.4 billion.
The first rootkit capable of attacking 64-bit Windows builds has been spotted in the wild.
Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, is suing eleven companies over alleged patent infringement.
The MPEG LA has revoked its deadline, meaning H.264 is now free for streaming services.
AMD's up-coming netbook chip, based on Bobcat, will also appear in low-power servers.
IBM has details what it claims is the world's fastest processor, running at 5.2GHz.
The National Museum of Computing has played host to an interesting experiment in retro coding.
Tests of Google's WebM video codec by a videoconference firm show it beating H.264.
ARM has announced that the Cortex A 'Eagle' design will include virtualisation extensions.
Intel and Nokia have teamed up to launch a research and development centre for mobiles.
ViewSonic has hinted at a 10in Intel-based slate which will run both Windows and Android.
A newly-discovered patent filed by Apple details methods of detecting jailbroken iPhones.
The latest beta of Firefox 4 includes support for Direct2D hardware acceleration on Windows.
Intel has bought anti-virus vendor McAfee in a $7.68 billion deal - but the big question is why?
AMD has announced that its MMX rival, 3DNow!, will not appear in future processors.
Adobe has released an emergency patch to fix a selection of security vulnerabilities.
SanDisk has announced the integrated SSD, a 64GB chip smaller than a postage stamp.
Intel-Micron Flash Technologies has unveiled new NAND chips based around TLC technology.
Toshiba has announced a breakthrough that could lead to a five-fold boost to storage density.
October 14 2021 | 15:04