What is a nanocomputer?

What is a nanocomputer?

A nanocomputer is a computer whose physical dimensions are microscopic. The field of nanocomputing is part of the emerging field of Nanotechnology . Several types of nanocomputers have been suggested or proposed by researchers and futurists. Electronic nanocomputers would operate in a manner similar to the way present-day microcomputers work.

What will the future nanocomputers look like?

Future nanocomputers could be evolutionary, scaled-down versions of today’s computers, working in essentially the same ways and with similar but nanoscale devices. Or they may be revolutionary, being based on some new device or molecular structure not yet developed.

Do biochemical nanocomputers exist in nature?

Biochemical nanocomputers already exist in nature; they are manifest in all living things. But these systems are largely uncontrollable by humans.

What is the difference between nanocomputers and nanobots?

However, with fast-moving nanotechnology, nanocomputers will eventually scale down to the atomic level and will be measured in nanometers. Nanorobot, or nanobots, will be controlled and managed by nanocomputers.

The term nanocomputer is increasingly used to refer to general computing devices of size comparable to a credit card. Modern Single-Board Computers such as the Raspberry Pi and Gumstix would fall under this classification. Arguably, Smartphones and Tablets would also be classified as nanocomputers.

What is nano IPS?

The nano particles are applied to the screen’s LED, where they absorb excess, unnecessary light wavelengths, realizing richer color expression for content from single images and video to CG, at virtually any viewing angle. Nano IPS covers 98% of the digital cinema industry standard DCI-P3 color space, and 135% of sRGB.

What is the nanocomputer Dream Team?

The NanoComputer Dream Team is also involved with the Video Media initiative to get all of the Nanotechnology field to start sharing Nano related video’s, graphics and text to expose to the world for educational and awareness informational purposes.

  • October 1, 2022