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Politics : Israel to U.S. : Now Deal with Syria and Iran -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Nazbuster who wrote (3294)10/29/2003 6:38:59 AM
From: Scoobah  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22250
 
SHow me an arabian contribution to civilization and the improvement of soceity such as that brought to the world by the Jews:

29/10/2003 12:10 New processor by Israeli company computes at speed of light
By Reuters

Israeli start-up Lenslet has developed a processor that uses optics instead of silicon, enabling it to compute at the speed of light, the company said.

The company said its processor will enable new capabilities in homeland security and military, multimedia and communications applications.

"Optical processing is a strategic competitive advantage for nations and companies," said Avner Halperin, vice president
for business development at Lenslet.

"Processing at the speed of light, you can have safer airports, autonomous military systems, high-definition multimedia broadcast systems and advanced next-generation communications systems."

An optical processor is a digital signal processor (DSP) with an optical accelerator attached to it that enables it to perform functions at very high speeds.

"It is an acceleration of 20 years in the development of digital hardware," Lenslet founder and Chief Executive Officer Aviram Sariel told Reuters.

The processor performs 8 trillion operations per second, equivalent to a super-computer and 1,000 times faster than standard processors, with 256 lasers performing computations at light speed.

It is geared towards such applications as high resolution radar, electronic warfare, luggage screening at airports, video compression, weather forecasting and cellular base stations.

Lenslet said its Enlight processor, unveiled at the MILCOM exhibition in Boston this month, is the first commercially available optical DSP.

"Optics is the future of every information device," said Sariel.

Jim Tully, vice president and chief of research for semiconductors and emerging technologies at Gartner Inc, said most companies working with optics focus on switching optical signals for telecommunications rather than processing information optically.

"I'm not aware of any company that has taken it to the extent of processing optically," he said.

Lenslet has raised $27.5 million so far from such investors as Goldman Sachs, Walden VC, Germany's Star Ventures and Chicago-based JKiB Capital.

The company's prototype is fairly large and bulky but when Lenslet begins to supply the processor in a few months it will be shrunk to 15 x 15 cm with a height of 1.7 cm, roughly the size of a Palm Pilot.

"In five years we plan to shrink it to a single
chip," project manager Asaf Schlezinger said.

Tully said one issue is whether this technology
can be produced in volume the way silicon chips
are made.

"Because semiconductor manufacturing technology
is well developed, you can produce millions at
quite low cost," said Tully, who is not
familiar with Enlight.

Lenslet said its processor will be competitive
in price with a multi DSP board.

Sariel is negotiating joint projects with
companies and/or government agencies in the
United States, Europe and Japan to produce the
processor for specific applications. It already
has projects signed with the Defense Ministry
in Israel.

"We don't rule out licensing our technology to
others," Sariel said. "We are looking at a
virtual production line where production is
done by others and we provide testing
equipment."

Tully said semiconductor companies are working
on technology that would use optical channels
inside a chip to allow very high speed
communication from one part of a chip to
another.

"It's conceivable this technology could become
mainstream inside chips in 10 years time,"
Tully said.

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To: Nazbuster who wrote (3294)10/29/2003 2:07:19 PM
From: Elmer Flugum  Respond to of 22250
 
I do not consider that particular action defending their country. Its purpose seems to have been taken to keep Iraq destablized and to keep the occupying armies from completing the take-over of the country.

len