Örn Hansen wrote:
On May 02, 2007 09:27 AM, Clayton wrote:
True enough... my intent was simply to point out the absurdity of the
argument.
I worked in the semiconductor industry for a long time. I know the
subject well. Funny though, you never seem to see SUSE in the
industry... loads of Solaris based software though (running the wafer
steppers and wafer scanners).
Wafer scanners?
I've never worked with the technology myself, but as far as I can
understand, it is a laser that is blowing bubbles on a silicon dye? The
micro or nano technology referring to the size of the dye used? Where
do you use the scanners?
Micro- or nano- refers to the smallest dimension of a structure
created on the semiconductor wafer. Current state-of-the-art fpr
common commercial CPUs (Athlon 64's, Xeons) is around 65 nanometers.
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