Posted on 04/04/2018 12:27:23 PM PDT by LibWhacker
IBM has developed the worlds smallest computer, which could help track objects, foil counterfeiters, and boost efficiency.
A computer as big as a grain of salt could transform shipping that crisscrosses the planet, said IBM researchers who recently unveiled the experimental device.
Using blockchain technology that would provide a secure and efficient log of physical objects tagged with the tiny computers, shippers could track goods at every step of extended supply chains, foiling counterfeiters and upping efficiency, Dan Friedman, senior manager of communication circuits and systems at IBM Research, told Seeker.
Thats what we want to do something that would get you more security than a paper barcode, said Friedman. This thing is capable of having a digital signature. There will actually be a cryptographic identification.
IBM researchers unveiled what they billed as the worlds smallest computer at Think 2018, the companys big annual conference, in Las Vegas on March 19.
As powerful as an x86 processing chip dating from 1990, the tiny computer wont help NASA put astronauts on Mars anytime soon. But it has enough computational and communicative power to interact with systems tracking it.
Blockchains resist tampering they work via dispersed networks where alterations appear simultaneously everywhere but until now the technology has been applied mostly to virtual currencies, not physical objects. IBM researchers realized they had found the interface between blockchain technology and the physical world, said Friedman.
Now, conceivably, he and his colleagues had discovered a way to prove the authenticity of things that have passed through many countries on the way to consumers. The world's smallest computer from IBM Research is an ultra-compact, low-cost computing device with several hundred thousand transistors, storage, power, and communications capabilities all packed into a footprint about the size of a grain of salt. | IBM Research
The total value of counterfeit goods was estimated to be $1.8 trillion in 2015, said Andreas Kind, an IBM researcher, at the Think 2018 conference.
Lets take your car. You bring it to the garage. It turns out the brakes are run down. When you get your car back, can you be sure that the new brakes are actually original? asked Kind. Can you be sure your car will brake on the highway as its supposed to? In certain regions of the world, 40 percent of the parts in the automotive aftermarket are actually fake.
The same principle could be applied to medications and other items with life-threatening consequences, he added.
Privacy advocates might issue a note of caution at this point, Friedman admitted. After all, if businesses could track a crate of oranges from Beijing to Miami, the government could conceivably track innocent citizens who have ingested one of the devices.
I think with all of these things we need to think about the ethics, he said.
But Friedman downplayed those concerns.
Hurdles remain before the tiny computer hits the market, he said. A system for reading the computers information and transferring that data to a blockchain for safekeeping has yet to be perfected.
More importantly, Friedman said the tiny computers are not like GPS trackers, and blockchains stymie hackers if anyone could access them somehow.
They are not that easy to communicate with, said Friedman. Certainly, inside your body nobody would be able to communicate with that. The range is limited. You would have to successfully complete the cryptographic identification.
Older tech like social media networks and our mobile phones already give away more data on ourselves, he added.
I don't think the capacity of this system is such that it really provides the same window of opportunity for mischief as our cell phones do and our online presence does, he said.
Geez...and I hate typing on my laptop because it’s too small!
Will it play Doom?
How big is the usb port ?
I'm sure the NSA has a program that is working on this right now...looking forward to the day when everyone gets one implanted. Could this be why the Gubmint is pushing flu shots for everyone?
Dang! Now I have to upgrade my XT.....................
To download data to a desktop you’ll need a chord with a tiny plug on one end and a normal size plug on the other end.
And heaven in a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
and eternity in an hour.
.
Red Badger unplugged!
Throw 'em all away!
Live like a free man again!! .
.
Don't look at me lol.
As Steve Jobs(?) once said, “”Having tamed the lightning, we are now teaching sand to think.”.................
Is that a fine grain, or a course grain?
Typing on the tiny keyboard is a b*tch, though.
It uses Ultra Small Bits, so the port is no longer needed.
It sounds like a broad definition of computer as most people would think of computer.
It's more like a 'smart' electronic programmable tracking barcode.
It has a place and function in business.
Aren't these more or else equivalent to chips you implant in pets?
How well will Lotus Notes run on it?
What about printer drivers?
The printer takes sand paper.
Nevertheless, the really tiny USB connector is pretty tough.
Interesting development. Now it’s up to someone to come up with groundbreaking way of using it. You could be the next computer genius.
When are they going to shrink us all to fit?
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