Large Improvement in Graphene Photosensitivity Realized 71
alphadogg sends in a writeup in NetworkWorld about promising new research with graphene. From the article: "Two Nobel Prize winning scientists out of the U.K. have come up with a new way to use graphene – the thinnest material in the world – that could make Internet pipes feel a lot fatter. University of Manchester professors Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov ... write in the journal Nature Communications of a method of combining the carbon-based material with metallic nanostructures to use as photodetectors that could greatly increase the amount of light optical communications devices could handle. This advance in graphene light harvesting and conversion into electrical power could lead to communications rates tens or even hundreds of times faster than today's, the researchers say."
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I don't think i want spam delivered tens or even hundreds of times faster.
You should go back to dialup then, I'm sure you want spam delivered to you tens or even hundreds of times slower
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Re:Sometimes i wonder... (Score:4, Funny)
Yay! Darker Fiber! (Score:2)
The problem isn't the fiber. We have a crap ton of it running everywhere. It's really cheap to run fiber. This technology could make us better able to increase the rates further, but seeing as none of that gets to end users our internet will still suck. We have such a glut of fiber that a 100x communication boost means we'd just use less of the already huge amount of fiber. So rather than using only 2 of the 100 fibers we have, we'll use 1 and send even less light down that series of tubes.
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According to Mr. Izzard.
Re:And? (Score:4, Funny)
Don't be in such a hurry to use up all the bandwidth, leave some for your grandchildren!
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What, you aren't looking forward to hitting your monthly cap in less than a minute?
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Well, there will probably always be some kind of cap, just because a tiny minority of users (invariably pirates) tend to use whatever bandwidth they have available. But the question is how big is that cap and what does it cost you?
In any consumer ISP network there are several bottlenecks, and in many cases it's not actually the "last mile", it's in the core network. The issue isn't actually the fibre itself - good, modern optical cables can easily carry terabits/sec of data. The problem is switching and rou
feel? (Score:1)
does this mean I can break out my 56k modem and have it feel like a cable modem?
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What?!? Those blinking red lights on the front aren't trying to tell me something?
Worst robot friend ever!
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summery said "could make Internet pipes feel a lot fatter" said nothing about optical anything in that statement.
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Yea? And internet pipes being faster has nothing (well, directly) to do with your local bandwidth. This is backbone shit.
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Um, I know this is slashdot, but did you even bother to read the whole summary*? It specifically said "... a method of combining the carbon-based material with metallic nanostructures to use as photodetectors that could greatly increase the amount of light optical communications devices could handle" (emphasis mine). Sure that particular sentence didn't mention it, but taking it on its own seems a bit "quote-miney" to me. Then there's the title of course, which seems pretty clear to me.
*It's summary, not su
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And?
The summery suggested that all that would make all internet pipes feel faster.
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I don't know about you but I feel faster already.
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That depends on how you rub on it.
Sounds good for core networks (Score:2)
This sounds promising for backhauls. I don't see it improving last-mile thoroughput, however, since practically nobody has optical fiber going to their house.
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This sounds promising for backhauls. I don't see it improving last-mile thoroughput, however, since practically nobody has optical fiber going to their house.
Nope, way more common to have that pesky slow audio fiber.
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Yeah, those rusty old tin cans don't make for much of a pipe, now do they? :)
Now I'm forced to wonder if anyone ever used acoustic modems via tin-cans and string... The answer may surprise you [youtube.com]. Or not.
-l
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If it's in Nature, it's probably not going to be commercialised any time soon. Think of the article as engineering shop talk and not a sales pitch from your cable company.
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It wouldn't matter if it were a ready-for-market product. The only way the cable and telecoms would roll it out is if the government gave them another enormous handout to pay for it. No way they are cutting into their bottom line for infrastructure improvements.
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Longer if the government decides to get involved. Possibly never at that point, just like how they got involved in aviation and killed the flying car (like six separate times).
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Maybe they could stick lots of cheap graphene together and somehow make pencil leads?
I'm sure people would buy Nano-Pencils TM just because of high-techiness.
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If you need me, I'll be making the spool for my space elevator.
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"Could" does not mean "will" (Score:3)
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When the government grants monopolies, helps collect taxes, and ensures high service fees in exchange for those monopolies yet refuses to force the utilities to upgrade their infrastructure, for which they have been paid and is part of their charter, yes, absolutely, without any doubt, it is an absolute failure of government. Part of government's primary role is to protect the interests of the people in exchange for those monopolies. That's not happening. So who can you blame? Corporations who are being tol
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Fiber optic technology that can deliver 100Mbps and even gigabit speeds over wide area distances has been around for years, so the reason it hasn't reached your doorstep yet isn't because it hasn't been invented yet. What's been standing in the way of progress all this time are the large telecom corporations that exploit all those local loops out there, those last miles of ancient copper that they're always promising to replace with something better, but always find a reason not to. No, as far as they're concerned it's always better to squeeze the last dime possible out of your investment if you can, especially when there's no real competition (something most of us can also thank our local governments for).
If you need a bit of leverage, take my local government. I thank them profusely for what they've done for us (well, the Public Utility District). I also thank California, for allowing us to rape their pocketbooks some 10 years ago for selling them cheap power at ridiculously expensive prices.
But seriously, the fiber to the home is very possible, very doable. If anyone in the decision-making process/government is trying to tell you it can't be done, just point them to Grant County PUD. My actual bandwidth,
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those last miles of ancient copper that they're always promising to replace with something better, but always find a reason not to.
The reason is called MONEY.
Internet pipes fatter? (Score:3)
Since graphene is so strong you could build a pipe 20 metres across. Not only would it be able to carry data, but also semi trucks. You could order stuff from Amazon with instant shipping, and get physical purchases as fast as digital downloads.
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Great... (Score:2)
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Yea, because it's totally the fault of the technology and research, and not the greedy bastards who won't just fucking implement it.
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Isnt todays technology (Score:1)
already much faster than that. I mean yea its not been consumerized but neither has this.
Gots to be said. (Score:2)
Can't wait to greeze them pipes.
Use in solar panels? (Score:2)
This advance in graphene light harvesting and conversion into electrical power
Can this be used to improve solar panel efficiency?
Changed source material (Score:2)
routers? (Score:2)
Is there not more of a issue with routers not keeping up with the raw bandwidth of fiber then the fiber connections right now?
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the bottle neck is the long haul links.
Fatter pipes... Someday? (Score:1)
After a good rainstorm you could pick up the phone, hit any number to kill the dial tone, and listen to a half dozen conversations leaking across the wet paper...
The telephone and cable companies will drag their feet for as long as consumers let them...
MY Internet connection is on a point-point ra