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Scientists have built the world's smallest magnetic data storage unit. It uses just twelve atoms per bit, the basic unit of information, and squeezes a whole byte (8-bit) into as few as 96 atoms.
Morrow’s three-dimensional arrangement of the magnetic and non-magnetic layers creates a material that exhibits promising magnetic properties for data storage and magnetic field sensing at room ...
Magnetic random-access memory based on new spin transfer technology achieves higher storage density by packing multiple bits of data into each memory cell.
German scientists have created the world's smallest magnetic data storage unit, which can store one bit of information using 12 atoms.
IBM creates data storage at the atomic level A new discovery by Big Blue researchers suggests that it's possible to store a bit of information in as little as 12 magnetic atoms.
Storing data on magnetic tape might sound delightfully retro, but it’s actually still widely in use for archival purposes thanks to its high data density. Now researchers at the University of ...
MUNICH, Germany — Scientists of the Juelich Research center have discovered a new magnetic switching method. The technology could be used to design extremely fast data storage devices. In disk-shaped ...
Tech News Magnetic Tape Data Storage Breakthrough Will Make Your Hard Drive Seem Tiny By Andrew Liszewski Published August 2, 2017 | Comments (0) 𝕏 ...
Traditional memory devices are volatile and the current non-volatile ones rely on either ferromagnetic or ferroelectric materials for data storage. In ferromagnetic devices, data is written or ...
IBM has been considering using digital magnetic tape, a storage medium that was first invented in 1952, as the method of the future.
Scientists from IBM and the German Center for Free-Electron Laser Science have built the world's smallest magnetic data storage unit. It uses just twelve atoms per bit, the basic unit of ...