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Showing posts with label IBM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IBM. Show all posts

Monday, October 29, 2012

IBM's next-gen chips may swap silicon for carbon nanotubes


IBM has hit a milestone in its quest to come up with a successor to silicon computer chips.
The company said Sunday its research into semiconductors based on carbon nanotubes,or CNTs, has yielded a new method to accurately place them on wafers in large numbers. The technology is viewed as one way to keep shrinking chip sizes once current silicon-based technology hits its limit.
IBM said it has developed a way to place over 10,000 transistors made from CNTs on a single chip, two magnitudes higher than previously possible. While still far below the density of commercial silicon-based chips—current models in desktop computers can have over a billion transistors—the company hailed it as a breakthrough on the path to using the technology in real-world computing.
The company made the announcement to mark the publication of an article detailing the research in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
Intel's latest processors are built using silicon transistors with 22-nanometer technology, and simpler NAND flash storage chips have been demonstrated using "1X" technology somewhere below that, but modern manufacturing is nearing its physical limits. Intel has predicted it will produce chips using sizes in the single digits within the next decade.

Guided by Moore's Law

An IBM scientist shows different solutions
containing carbon nanotubes.
The march toward ever-smaller transistors has produced chips that use less power and can run faster, but can also be made at lower cost, as more can be crammed onto a single wafer. The increasing number of transistors on a given amount of silicon was famously predicted by Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel, who predicted they would double steadily over time.
Carbon nanotubes, tube-shaped carbon molecules, can also be used as transistors in circuits, and at dimensions of less than 10 nanometers. They are smaller and can potentially 
carry higher currents than silicon, but are difficult to manipulate at large densities.
Unlike traditional chips, in which silicon transistors are etched into circuit patterns, making chips using CNTs involves placing them onto a wafer with high accuracy. Semiconducting CNTs also come mixed with metallic CNTs that can produce faulty circuits, and must be separated before they are used.
IBM said its latest method solves both issues. The company's researchers mix CNTs into liquid solutions that is then used to soak specially prepared substrates, with chemical "trenches" to which the CNTs bond in the correct alignment needed for electrical circuits. The method also eliminates the non-conducting metallic CNTs.
The company said the breakthrough will not yet lead to commercial nano-transistors, but is an important step along the way.
Before they can challenge silicon, however, they must also pass an often-overlooked part of Moore's law—affordability. His law applies to "complexity for minimum component costs," or what consumers are likely to see in the market.
Source: pcworld.com

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

IBM reports sluggish quarter

IBM generated less revenue in its third quarter than analysts expected

For its most recent financial quarter, IBM experienced declining revenue and flat income, though it still managed to deliver increased earnings per share.

In the third quarter, IBM generated US$24.7 billion in revenue, down 5 percent from the third quarter of 2011. That fell short of analyst estimates for the quarter, which ended Sept. 30. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters had forecast $25.36 billion in revenue.

Net income was $3.8 billion, approximately the same as in the third quarter of 2011. Earnings rose to $3.33 per share, an increase of 4 percent from the third quarter of 2011.

On a conference call with financial analysts, IBM Chief Financial Officer Mark Loughridge attributed the sluggish financial performance to a variety of factors. He noted that the first two months of the quarter tracked as estimated, but September suffered from an overall slowdown in customer spending. A handful of large software deals fell through in the last month, he reported, and the company's Global Business Services unit suffered significant declines in revenue as well.

Geographically speaking, a number of markets performed badly, including the Americas and Australia. Other factors contributed as well. The company paid a large one-time U.K. pension-related charge, which amounted to $162 million. IBM paid more than $400 million for workforce rebalancing. The company also closed the sale of its Retail Store Solutions unit to Toshiba, which resulted in an additional $280 million of net income, though the loss of the unit decreased revenue by an unspecified amount.

For IBM, revenue in the Americas was $10.4 billion, a 4 percent decline from a year earlier. Revenue from Europe, the Middle East and Africa was $7.2 billion, down 9 percent from a year earlier. The Asia-Pacific region held steady, producing $6.5 billion in revenue, an increase of 1 percent compared to the third quarter from a year earlier.

In the field of services, Global Technology Services logged $9.9 billion, a decrease of 4 percent. Global Business Services posted $4.5 billion in revenue, down 6 percent from a year earlier.

Software revenue totalled $5.8 billion, down 1 percent from a year earlier. Revenue from IBM middleware products, such as WebSphere, Tivoli and Lotus, were down 1 percent, to $3.6 billion.

Revenue from the Systems and Technology division totaled $3.9 billion for the quarter, down 13 percent. Total revenue from systems sales and service, not including retail systems, were down 8 percent from a year earlier. System Storage revenue decreased by 10 percent from a year earlier.

As Loughridge had stated, the middling financial results seemed to be caused by a number of different factors, said Gartner Research vice president Chris Ambrose. Over the past few years, service clients have been shifting the way they contract work, moving to smaller contracts across multiple vendors. The slack in IBM's service results could reflect this trend, Ambrose said. The relative strength of the dollar has also dampened European IT spending.

Ambrose also wondered if customers are now lengthening their IT buying cycles as a way to cut costs. However, he said IBM did not provide enough evidence to reach a definitive conclusion. In the investor briefing, Loughridge denied this was the case.


Sunday, October 14, 2012

Tech bets on Obama with campaign donations

Money and a new survey point favorably in Obama's direction

The tech industry's 2012 campaign donations show a clear preference for President Barack Obama, and industry executives believe he will win reelection, according to a new survey.

Obama has raised $5.07 million from the tech sector, with campaign donations coming from political action committees at tech firms, employees and even immediate families. Donors associated with Microsoft contributed $544,445; those related to Google, $526,000; and IBM-related contributions totalled $218,800, according to data collected by the Center for Responsive Politics.

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has received just over $2 million from the tech industry, with EMC Corp.-related donors contributing the largest chunk: $257,250.

In a survey of 222 C-level executives at tech firms, law firm DLA Piper found that 76% believe Obama will win the Nov. 6 election, with the balance, 24%, predicting a win for Romney.

This survey was conducted between Sept. 13 through Oct. 4, the day after the debate between Obama and Romney that Romney is widely seen to have won.

Of those responding, 33% were CEOs or presidents, 16% were senior vice presidents or vice presidents, and 31% were managing partners. The balance included general counsels and CFOs.

The companies ranged in size from under $10 million (33%) to over $2 billion (11%), with the balance falling in between. Along with tech companies, the survey pinged venture capitalists, entrepreneurs and consultants.

Peter Astiz, global co-head of the Technology Sector at DLA Piper, said that while the 76% prediction is about who will win, his personal interpretation of the result is that it also reflects the preference of the executives. "If you say you expect him (to win), that's probably what you want," he said.

That survey finding aside, 64% of the respondents believe Romney would be better for the technology economy.

The latter finding doesn't contradict Astiz's belief that the survey also reflects the voting preference of the executives in an election that is otherwise close. "There are a lot of other issues to elect a president beyond whether they're going to be good for the technology sector," he said.

A majority of respondents, 60%, believe the expiration of the Bush-era tax cut will hurt tech investments, while 33% see no impact on the industry. A few, 7%, think the expiration of the cuts will help.

Astiz said some of the feeling about Romney having a positive impact on tech may be due to the traditional sense that Republicans are less oriented toward regulations.