free web directory

Arts Business Computers Games Health Home Teens News Recreation Reference Regional Science Shopping

Looking for sites in Computers, Hardware, Components, Processors, Cellular Automata ? ActiPages covers a large variety of annotated web sites related to Computers, Hardware, Components, Processors, Cellular Automata. This category lists wide range of carefully selected web sites in Computers, Hardware, Components, Processors, Cellular Automata.

Google

See also:


    http://www.cse.nd.edu/~cse_proj/qca_design/   » Designing Ultra-Dense Computers with QCAs - Quantum Cellular Automata, a new technology, can make real computers orders of magnitude denser than the limits of CMOS, from molecule size devices; information flows by Coulomb interactions not electric current. Investigators, references. [Notre Dame Computer Science and Engineering]

    http://www.qcadesigner.ca/   » QCADesigner - Quantum dot cellular automata simulator and design layout tool. Can simulate millions of cells. Runs on Linux, Mac OS X, SPARC Solaris. [Free]

    http://www.mitre.org/tech/nanotech/quantum_dot_cell.html   » Quantum Dot Cells - Wireless quantum dot logic resources, nanotechnology context: tutorial, lecture summary, references. [MITRE Corp.]

    http://www.nd.edu/~qcahome/   » Quantum-dot Cellular Automata Homeworld - References, Java demonstrations, QCA links. [University of Notre Dame]

    http://hakware.oopsilon.com/wolfram-machine/   » The Wolfram Machine Project - Effort to make a computer architecture based on the mathematics proposed in Steven Wolfram book: A New Kind of Science.

    http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2006/02/70190   » New Microchips Shun Transistors - Story on magnetic quantum cellular automata research, non-volatile logic, at University of Notre Dame. Works via areas of magnetic orientation instead of transistors and wires. [Wired News] (February 14, 2006)

    http://www.moshesipper.com/pcm/   » Evolution of Parallel Cellular Machines: The Cellular Programming Approach - By Moshe Sipper; Springer-Verlag, 1997, ISBN 3540626131. Man-made systems can have traits seen in natural collective systems, which evolve by selection processes to have problem-solving abilities; via simple, versatile parallel cellular models, and evolutionary computing. (1997)


Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Soumettre un site - Open Directory Project - Devenir Editeur

Copyright © ActiPages