

Arthur Kimes
363.9K posts

@ComradeArthur
Executive Co-Blogger - AceofSpadesHQ. LET'S RUIN BASEBALL for a 3rd year! ⚾️😁😁⚾️ #Dodgers Your one stop shop for Dis/Mis/Mal-information! My Brain Trembles






Introducing Ⓛ 𝗟𝗔𝗖𝗘 𝗟𝗜𝗧𝗛𝗢𝗚𝗥𝗔𝗣𝗛𝗬 A novel approach to chip-making that can extend Moore's Law 10x beyond what is possible with light — to atomic resolution. News today: "Manufacturers use light-based lithography systems made by the Dutch company ASML, which dominates the market. Lace has developed a new approach. Instead of light, Lace's engineers have made a form of lithography that uses a helium atom beam. With that, the Norwegian company will be able to create chip designs that are 10 times as small as what is currently possible" "The main advantage of the helium atom beam is the industry could create features such as transistors, the building blocks of modern chips, an order of magnitude smaller to an "almost unimaginable" degree, according to John Petersen, Scientific Director of Lithography at Imec, a research and innovation hub for the chip industry. The beam Lace will use to make chips is about the width of a single hydrogen atom, or 0.1 nanometer. ASML's lithography tools use a beam of light that is about 13.5 nanometers; a human hair is about 100,000 nanometers wide. Smaller transistors and other features would give chipmakers the ability to ramp up the performance of advanced AI processors well beyond the current capabilities. Lace's technology would enable chip manufacturers to print wafers at what is "ultimately atomic resolution" — reuters.com/world/asia-pac… Now hiring in Bergen and Barcelona: LaceLithography.com


He rolled dice 10,000 times over 17+ hours and documented the results, an almost perfect normal distribution.






Sen. Hirono: “If a non-citizen illegally votes in a federal election they could be prosecuted and sentenced up to 5 years in prison. Who’s going to commit this kind of fraud knowing they could be imprisoned?”



The day the Affordable Care Act passed was one of my proudest moments as president, because it meant that millions of Americans would have access to health care, some for the first time. The ACA also prevented insurance companies from denying people with pre-existing conditions coverage, allowed young people under the age of 26 to remain on their parents’ plan, expanded Medicaid, and so much more. But the ACA was always meant to be a first step. We still have to do more to expand access and make health care more affordable for everyone.