http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/11/technology/11CND-CHIP.html?ei=5062&en=1b6aaeff0746d271&ex=1077166800&partner=GOOGLE&pagewanted=print&position=

Intel scientists say that they have made silicon chips that can switch
light like electricity, blurring the line between computing and
communications and presenting a vision of the digital future that will
allow computers themselves to span cities or even the entire globe.
The invention demonstrates for the first time, Intel researchers said,
that ultrahigh-speed fiberoptic equipment can be produced at personal
computer industry prices. As the costs of communicating between
computers and chips falls, the barrier to building fundamentally new
kinds of computers not limited by physical distance should become a
reality, experts said.

The advance, described in a paper to be published on Thursday in the
scientific journal Nature, also suggests that Intel, as the world's
largest chipmaker, may be able to develop the technology to move into
new telecommunications markets.

It will free computer designers to think about the systems they create
in new ways, making it possible to conceive of machines that are not
located in a single physical place, according to scientists and
industry executives. It will also make possible a new class of
computing applications based on the possibility of transmitting
high-definition video and images hundreds or even thousands of times
faster than possible on today's Internet.

"Before, there were two worlds � computing and communications," said
Alan Huang, a former Bell Labs physicist, who has founded the Terabit
Corporation, an optical networking company in Menlo Park, Calif. "Now
they will be the same and we will have powerful computers everywhere."

One potential application, he said, would be an interactive digital
television system allowing viewers to watch a sporting event from
multiple angles, moving the point of view at will while the game is
being played. With only a limited number of digital cameras, it might
be possible to synthesize a virtual moveable seat any place in the
stadium. Such a feature exists currently in video games, but it is far
beyond the capacity of today's digital television transmission
systems.

Intel said the technical advance, in which the researchers use a
component made from pure silicon to send data at speeds as much as 50
times faster than the previous switching record, is the first step
toward building low-cost networks that will move data seamlessly
between computers and within large computer systems.

"This opens up whole new areas for Intel," said Mario Paniccia, a an
Intel physicist, who started the previously secret Intel research
program to explore the possibility of using standard semiconductor
parts to build optical networks. "We're trying to siliconize
photonics."

The device Intel has built is the prototype of a high-speed silicon
optical modulator that the company has now pushed above two billion
bits per second at a lab near its headquarters in Santa Clara, Calif.
The modulator makes it possible to switch off and on a tiny laser beam
and direct it into an ultrathin glass fiber. Although the technical
report in Nature focuses on the modulator, which is only one component
of a networking system, Intel plans on demonstrating a working system
transmitting a movie in high-definition television over a five-mile
coil of fiberoptic cable next week at its annual Intel Developer Forum
in San Francisco.

"If Intel and other semiconductor technology companies can develop
silicon optically as successfully as they have electronically, then
silicon is certainly set to grow in stature as an optical material,"
Graham Reed, a physicist at the University of Surrey, wrote in a
commentary on the Intel paper in Nature. Dr. Reed is the holder of the
previous 20-megabit silicon optical switching speed record that Intel
shattered.

With this breakthrough, Intel researchers said, they have shown that
it should be possible to build optical fiber communications systems
using Intel's conventional chipmaking process without resorting to
either the exotic materials or hand-assembly techniques that are now
the standard in the fiberoptics networking industry.



xponent

Photon Finish Maru

rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to