Tag Archives: process
Rare Mammoth Bones Exhibit at University of Michigan Highlights the ‘Ufolding Process of Discovery’
Terrifying Coral Bleaching Process Caught on Video for the First Time
The Joy Of Cooking
We live in times where cooking is no longer a joy and culinary arts are more appreciated in restaurants than at home. The COOCREATER is a concept that looks at offering a new way for cooking. It proposes to combine the concept of cooking with music creation, and the integration of emotions. It is an appliance that urges us to sense, taste, feel and hear, at one go.
Features:
- The music selection is influenced according to the scanned food elements and mixed accordingly.
- The time and temperature of heating on the workbench may influence the final results of remixing.
- People can post the pictures of their dishes and share their final work of music with their friends.
- COOCREATER is suitable for barbecue or picnic.
COOCREATER is one of the Top 100 Finalists at the 2014 Electrolux Design Lab. You can vote for this or any other project over here. Voting closes May 16th 2014.
Designer: Yu Yi
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(The Joy Of Cooking was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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Globalfoundries unveils 14nm-XM chip architecture, vows up to a 60 percent jump in battery life
Globalfoundries wants to show that it can play the 3D transistor game as well as Intel. Its newly unveiled 14nm-XM (Extreme Mobility) modular architecture uses the inherently low-voltage, low-leak nature of the foundry's FinFET layout, along with a few traces of its still-in-development 20nm process, to build a 14-nanometer chip with all the size and power savings that usually come from a die shrink. Compared to the larger processors with flat transistors that we're used to, the new technique is poised to offer between 40 to 60 percent better battery life, all else being equal -- a huge help when even those devices built on a 28nm Snapdragon S4 can struggle to make it through a full day on a charge. To no one's shock, Globalfoundries is focusing its energy on getting 14nm-XM into the ARM-based processors that could use the energy savings the most. It will be some time before you find that extra-dimensional technology sitting in your phone or tablet, though. Just as Intel doesn't expect to reach those miniscule sizes until 2013, Globalfoundries expects its first working 14nm silicon to arrive the same year. That could leave a long wait between test production runs and having a finished product in your hands.
Filed under: Cellphones, Tablets
Globalfoundries unveils 14nm-XM chip architecture, vows up to a 60 percent jump in battery life originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 23 Sep 2012 21:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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