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Record Setting Silicon Resonator Reaches 4.51 GHz 72

bibekpaudel brings news that researchers from Cornell University have developed a very small silicon microresonator that vibrates at the highest frequency ever recorded for such a device: 4.51 GHz. Typical quartz-crystal oscillators, commonly used in electronics as clock signals, are about a millimeter wide and operate in the KHz - MHz range. The newly developed microresonator measures 8.5 micrometers long and 40 micrometers wide, making it ideal for use in smaller circuits and microprocessing. Quoting: "One of the advantages of silicon microresonators is that they can be integrated directly into microchips using conventional manufacturing techniques, making them cheaper to produce and easier to fabricate small. Also, multiple resonators of different frequencies could be put on the same chip, says Ville Kaajakari, an assistant professor of electrical engineering at Louisiana Tech University. In a cell phone, for example, high-frequency resonators could filter out interference from other sources of radio signals."

Comment Proof of concept (Score 1) 163

I came up with this proof-of-concept idea for a similar site to Wikileaks, RecordQuest. I wanted reporters to more widely adopt BitTorrent as a protocol for sharing public records that they get during their reporting. I made a very puny Drupal install, thinking that I was going to work on it after I got my Master's (where I researched the idea). Then I got hired to run a corporate malfeasance wiki called Crocodyl, which has a similar feel, but we haven't gotten BitTorrent implemented yet.

I think a good revenue model could be to charge money for downloads, but offer the BitTorrent download for free. That way you are encouraging the public to use a free protocol to download public interest information, which should be free. You also could profit from people who want to get the information, but won't (for some reason) install a BitTorrent application. You could offer a really good text description of the contents of the documents (leaks, records or whatever) but if they want to see the original, they have to use BitTorrent or pay. Also, such a system should use Osprey, which if you haven't heard of it, is a BitTorrent tracker developed by ibiblio, and hosts a permanent seed on the server, thus negating the one fatal flaw of BitTorrent, which is not being able to get the file because no one is seeding.

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