Gallery: Microscopic Art Hides Inside Computer Chips

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From the UTMC 5962R9657101VXC.
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Considering the expense, precision and difficulty of manufacturing computer chips, you would think the engineers designing them are pretty serious people.

But it’s not all business inside a chip fab, as these microscope photos reveal. In fact, the designers of microchips frequently hide tiny cartoons, drawings and even messages alongside the super-tiny circuits and semiconductors they create.

Chipworks, a company that analyzes microchips by peeling them apart and looking at them under microscopes, has discovered many examples of silicon art. We’ve selected a few highlights here from the firm’s extensive galleries of silicon art, but check the Chipworks website for more.

The images in this gallery are magnified 200 to 500 times.

As Chipworks explains, these drawings are made with the same processes used to assemble the rest of a computer chip. Designs are etched onto photolithography plates which are then used to “print” the chips’ circuitry, layer by layer, in thin films of silicon, silicon dioxide, aluminum and other materials. It’s a complicated process that takes hundreds of steps and millions of dollars worth of machinery, and it requires incredible degrees of precision and repeatability.

But if there’s a little unused space in a chip, why not fill that with an entertaining design? It’s not as if most of the chip companies’ customers will ever notice. The only people likely to see these designs are the chip engineers’ supervisors and analysts at companies like Chipworks.

“The mass production of these works of art as parasites on the body of a commercial IC goes unnoticed by most observers,” writes Chipworks. “Their existence is a tribute to human resourcefulness and creativity, surfacing from deep within a complex process.”


How to catapult an idea to success

Siege Toys is one of many tiny start-ups using a pledge marketplace to raise funding and collect pre-orders.

Originally posted at Rafe’s Radar

Meat and fish could get freshness status bar

Step aside, “best by” date. The risk of buying spoiled meat could be further diminished with a new sensor film from the Fraunhofer Research Institution.

Bodum’s Conical Charcoal Grill Is Hot, Hot, Hot

Bodum’s conical-shaped grill will attract a better class of people to your cook-outs

It is officially barbecue season or, for those to whom “barbecue” means burying a pig in a hole in the ground, “grill season.” And it is official because I had a barbecue up on the roof terrace this past weekend, and it was warm enough to stay up there for long enough to get properly drunk.

If only I’d had a Bodum Fyrkat grill, instead of the primitive homemade rig I usually use. It would have transformed my crude sausage-fest into a sophisticated soiree, full of beautiful people sipping cava instead of my dull friends chugging beer.

I could have marveled at the elegant conical shape of the kettle (and cleaned up easily thanks to the pointy ash-collecting base). I could have cooked the chickens evenly all around thanks to the hand-cranked rotisserie attachment (with an included but optional battery-powered motor). I could even have hung my tongs and other tools from the handy hooks on the side instead of just dropping them onto the filthy floor.

And even when not in use, the Fyrkat would keep a stylish presence on the rooftop, coming as it does in any of three candy colors or plain old black.

As it is, I cooked up lunch on a grill made from an old asbestos water tank, a satellite dish and a split and splayed metal basket. Don’t believe me? Here it is in action:

The ugliest damn grill in the whole world sits on my roof. Photo Charlie Sorrel

In truth, this is the best grill I have ever used, assembled from parts found on the roof some years ago. But for those of you who prefer to spend €200 ($284) on a metal bucket instead of on wine and food, the Fyrkat is available now.

Bodum – Fyrkat cone-charcoal grill [Connox via the Giz]

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Ubisoft’s Battle Tag lands at the FCC, we’re already out of breath

Remember when we just about passed out from exhaustion following a rather short demo of Ubisoft’s nouveau laser tag setup? Well, judging from its appearance over at the FCC, it looks like the RFID-packing Battle Tag is ready to play. Unlike some of our more fruitful dives into the commission’s archives, this one doesn’t uncover a whole lot about the product that we didn’t already know. Internal photos show an RFID reader, used to communicate with ammo packs for reloading, and a thorough examination of the game’s user manual revealed the accompanying software is compatible with Windows only. So, no, we won’t be exposing any big secrets here, but for laser tag aficionados, whoever they may be, today is a good day. A Battle Tag setup for two is now available via Ubisoft for $130.

Ubisoft’s Battle Tag lands at the FCC, we’re already out of breath originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 06:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rubber Pen Organiser Wraps Around Notebooks

This neat rubber strap keeps pens organized and notebooks closed

I don’t think I have ever seen a commercial product as ripe for home-made copying as the Journal Bandolier. Made by Etsy-er CleverHands in San Francisco, the bandolier is a strap that stretches around your notebook (the paper kind) and has loops and hoops for pens and pencils.

Why would it be so great to make yourself? Because it uses old bike inner tubes and a strip of elastic, sewn together. The elastic puts the “band” in bandolier, and the rubber tube makes the pen-holding loops. The whole thing slides over a Moleskine or similar sized notebook. If you were making your own, you could also include a Velcro connection for taking it on and off more easily.

If you’re not up to making your own, or you just don’t want to go out and buy an expensive sewing machine just to put a strap on your journal, then you can buy one for $17. Also available in other fabrics.

Journal Bandolier — keep track of your pens and pencils [Etsy via Uncrate]

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HTC Pyramid to launch on April 12th under the name of HTC Sensation?

When HTC extended an invitation our way to come “see what’s next” on April 12th in London, plenty of you were already guessing that its long-rumored 1.2GHz Pyramid device would seize that opportunity to make its debut. Now Pocket-lint has apparently confirmed those inklings, with word from an insider affirming the new Android smartphone’s launch for that day and also adding that its retail name will be the HTC Sensation. HTC has already filed a claim to trademark that tandem of words, which lends an extra dash of credence to this revelation. Frankly, so long as all the mighty, EVO 3D-emulating specs we’ve been hearing about this device turn out to be true, we don’t care if HTC calls it the Watermelon. Actual availability in stores is said to be expected “in the coming months,” leaving a bit more waiting to be done whatever happens on April 12th. Ah well, they do say good things come to those who wait.

HTC Pyramid to launch on April 12th under the name of HTC Sensation? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 06:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ZoomReader for The Partially Sighted: Magnifies, Reads Text Aloud

ZoomReader not only magnifies text, it can read it aloud

The owner of the restaurant down the street from me has to hold the menu about an inch from his eyes to read it. I think he’d love this iPhone app. It’s called ZoomReader, and that’s exactly what it does: zoom and read.

Like the Eye Glasses app we covered way back in 2009, ZoomReader uses the iPhone’s camera and screen to magnify text. But thanks to the iPhone 4’s hi-res camera and display, and some rather clever options, it manages to be a lot more than just a neat gimmick.

Aim the camera at some small text — instructions, a medicine bottle label or a menu — and it can be magnified up to 4x, showing up crisp on the retina display. Colors of both paper and ink can be changed to make them easier to read. And then things get really interesting.

Hit the camera icon and it will snap the image in front of the lens, perform OCR (optical character recognition) and then read the result out loud using speech synthesis. You can control the app with your voice, too, if the icons are tricky for you to see.

Clearly this is useful just as a magnifier for those with poor eyesight. And if the OCR works well (quality can vary wildly in these things) then it could work even for the blind.

The app is in the App Store now, and costs a reasonable $20, a price that gives me some confidence that it contains a decent OCR engine.

ZoomReader product page [iTunes]

ZoomReader App Released for iPhone – the Ultimate Visual Assistance Tool [ZoomReader]

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Liquid-cooled Wii takes console mods to a ridiculous extreme

There are console mods and there are console mods… and then there’s this — a completely custom Nintendo Wii built from steel and cooled by two liquid-filled containers that would look more at home in a mad scientist’s laboratory. Not surprisingly, this mod took a long time to complete. Bit-tech forum member Angel OD began the so-called “UNLimited Edition” project way back in December, 2009 and, after a few diversions, finally finished it this past weekend. Be sure to hit up the links below for a look at the complete build process, and a few more shots of the finished product.

Liquid-cooled Wii takes console mods to a ridiculous extreme originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 05:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Isis NFC payment system gets its first market in Salt Lake City, Utah, launches in 2012

Like 3D on high-end HDTVs, NFC-based payment systems seem set to invade our mobile lives whether we like them or not. Isis, a collaborative venture between AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon and a bunch of banking big timers, has today announced the first market for its rollout of a contactless payment scheme, and it’s none other than Salt Lake City, Utah. That’ll surely raise eyebrows in locales that may consider themselves more tech-savvy, but we reckon starting off with a city of a smaller scale might be good for getting this “mobile wallet” system off the ground. And then there’s the added benefit of Isis snagging a deal to enable compatibility with the entire Utah Transit Authority footprint. If all plans are executed properly, that should mean that by summer 2012 the good people of SLC will be able to NFC their way around town with just their smartphone in hand, while also swiping it through checkouts like some form of highly advanced techno-humans.

Continue reading Isis NFC payment system gets its first market in Salt Lake City, Utah, launches in 2012

Isis NFC payment system gets its first market in Salt Lake City, Utah, launches in 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 04:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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