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Memristor and Memristive Systems Symposium (Part 4)

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Uploaded by on Dec 3, 2008

In 1971, Leon O. Chua published a seminal paper on the missing basic circuit element. Leon O. Chua and Sung-Mo Kang published a paper, in 1976, that described a large class of devices and systems they called memristive devices and systems. Just recently, Stan Williams and his research team at HP Labs unveiled a two-terminal titanium dioxide nanoscale device in Nature magazine that exhibited memristor characteristics.

This symposium will explore the potential of memristors and memristive systems as they advance state of the art nano-electronic circuits.
Program (Part 3)

Panel Discussion
Pushkar Apte, Moderator, Vice President of Technology Programs, Semiconductor Indsutry Association (SIA)
Jeff Welser, Director, Nanoelectronics Research Initiative (NRI), Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC)
Stan Williams, HP Senior Fellow and Director of Information & Quantum Systems Lab, Hewlett-Packard
Wolfgang Porod, Frank M. Freiman Professor of Electrical Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Notre Dame
Massimiliano Di Ventra, Professor, Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego
Rainer Waser, RWTH Aachen University at Research Center Juelich, Germany




The event is co-sponsored by UC Merced and UC Berkeley in cooperation with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The Symposium is funded by the National Science Foundation.

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LICENSE: Creative Commons (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works).

For more information about this license, please read: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/.

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  • At 26:31 it's my dad talking. oh yeah. WOLFGANG POROD AH YA

  • star trek here we come

  • gr8 videos. Thanks UC Berkeley for uploading them

  • Thanks.

  • Thanks for posting these videos. I find this really interesting. Memristors seem largely unknow so far so I feel priveleged to get a glimpse into the future. I realize many of the benefits of this technology but I'm wondering... will this tech also mean a big speed increase in raw processing speed? If so, in what kind of magnitude would those increases be?

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