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Australian thin king

January 6th 2012 05:48
:  
bikini atomic power plant
A picture of a woman in a bikini in front of a Russian atomic power plant. This picture is only vaguely related to the story below.
Many years ago I heard a marvellous story involving political intrigue, back-room diplomacy and technological marvel.


It was a story from the 1980s and involved an American scientific breakthrough, the development of a filament so thin that it could only be seen under a microscopic. It was way thinner than the cables commonly used at that time to carry stuff like electricity. It was the thinnest filament ever produced by man.

Well, American man.

In those pre-Google (and pre-Wikileaks) days, information was a scarcer commodity and international borders were thicker. Perhaps the two things were related.

Thicker borders meant fewer firm friends and less knowledge of what everyone else was doing. What the Americans needed was a second opinion, a trusted, knowledgable friend who could confirm that they really had invented the world's thinnest filament.

So they contacted their best friend, the British, and said, "Have a look at this, would you, and tell us what you think."

The Brits took the filament and showed it, hush-hush-like, to a few of their best scientists, and all agreed that they had never seen anything so thin.


The world's a big place, however, especially without Google, and the Brits had an idea. The Japanese were getting quite a reputation, in the early 1980s, for technological innovation, and the Brits and the Japs were getting along quite well at the time. So what about asking for a third opinion? The Japanese need not know the filament came from America, and the Americans need not know the Japanese had been consulted.

Is this the thinnest filament ever invented, the Brits asked the Japanese. Could, indeed, anything thinner ever be created?

The Japanese had a look, and sent the filament back to the Brits with a hole drilled through the middle.

The story was probably an urban myth, one of those yarns which don't let the truth get in the way of entertainment, but it came vividly to mind this week with the news of a breakthrough by scientists at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. They have invented a filament four atoms wide and one atom thick.

This is no urban myth. If you don't believe me, Google it.

You'll all want to know the details, so here they are in plain words: they did it by adding phosphorous to silicon crystal, thereby breaking through the resistivity issues they'd been having below the 10 nanometre level.

The Aussie scientists are pretty pleased, but we suggest they don't send an example to the Japanese. They'd probably send it back with a hole drilled through an atom.

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Do not adjust your sets

March 18th 2009 20:14
freeview television TV plasma LCD

As a service to the people of Melbourne, Australia, I would like to say this: do not throw your plasma and LCD televisions in the rubbish bin.

It is not clear at this point just how many Melburnians have thrown out their expensive televisions, but they have been pretty much invited to do so by the city's biggest-selling newspaper, the Herald Sun.

The issue is Freeview, a new and repackaged collection of TV channels to be offered by the free-to-air broadcasters, one assumes as a way of competing with the growing cable presence.

Freeview, which has been heavily promoted for several months, will launch on May 1, and the Freeview people were shocked on Monday of this week to read a Herald Sun report claiming that millions of plasma and LCD televisions would become obsolete on May 1 due to changes in the way broadcasters transmit.

The Herald Sun is a major daily newspaper with a long and reasonably proud tradition and it is possible that, in the course of that long history, they have never gotten their facts so utterly mangled as they have in this case.

For the record, all existing plasma and LCD televisions and digital set-top-boxes will continue to work beyond 1 May, 2009, receiving Freeview and everything else without problems.

What existing televisions will not do is receive MPEG4 transmissions, a future platform, capability for which is being built in to the Freeview infrastructure in preparation for a time when we are deemed ready to advance from the current MPEG2 capability. When that time comes, you will need an adapter box. No point in getting one now because no-one is even sending MPEG4 signals yet.

From that little collection of tech-speak, the Herald Sun contrived to squeeze blood from a stone and come up with the obsolete television story.

They say newspapers are dying. Cutting their throats may be more accurate.



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